Writing Foundations vs Business Writing
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
LinkedIn Learning · Academic Writing
Writing Foundations
Coursera · Academic Writing
Business Writing
Per-criterion
Writing Foundations follows the pedagogical pattern Judy Steiner-Williams has refined across her entire LinkedIn Learning catalog — a pattern that has earned her courses ratings of 4.6 to 4.7 stars across thousands of learners. The course is organised around the foundational competencies that professional writers most commonly lack: understanding audience expectations, achieving clarity and concision, applying grammatical correctness without becoming overly formal, and structuring documents so readers can navigate them efficiently. Steiner-Williams draws on the same 10 Cs of business communication she teaches in her Business Writing Principles course — Complete, Concise, Concrete, Correct, Coherent, Clear, Courteous, Credible, Creative, and Considerate — and introduces them here at a level accessible to learners who have never encountered a formal framework for professional prose. Learners who have taken Steiner-Williams's adjacent courses on LinkedIn Learning consistently praise the content's practicality. One reviewer of her Business Writing Principles course noted a "clear, structured approach to mastering grammar and sentence construction" with "detailed explanations of why concise writing creates stronger professional communication." The same structural discipline is evident in Writing Foundations: the content does not wander into stylistic theory but stays anchored to practical rules that learners can apply to the next document they write. A student at Aberystwyth University who used Steiner-Williams's LinkedIn Learning writing courses to improve academic assignment grades described them as "professionally made" and credited them with helping him eliminate "grammar mistakes, poor referencing and an uneven structure" from his essays. The main content limitation is the course's deliberate introductory scope. Reviewers who arrive with prior professional writing experience — those who already know the difference between active and passive voice, or who can self-diagnose sentence structure problems — frequently report that the content covers ground they already hold. A reviewer of the broader LinkedIn Learning platform observed that "most courses are too short and lacking in-depth learning for comprehensive skill mastery," which applies here: Writing Foundations introduces the principles convincingly but cannot, in its format, take learners to advanced fluency. The content quality for its stated audience — beginners and early-intermediate writers — is genuinely strong; the score of 4.3 reflects this, with a deduction for the ceiling effect that limits the course's usefulness beyond the foundational level.
Judy Steiner-Williams brings a 30-plus year teaching career at Indiana University's Kelley School of Business to every LinkedIn Learning course she produces. Her areas of expertise — English, business communication, and adult education — are directly aligned with the subject matter of Writing Foundations, and learners consistently note that her on-screen presence communicates genuine command of the material rather than scripted delivery. She co-authored an e-text on effective business communication strategies and has delivered workshops and seminars to a wide range of professional audiences, which gives her examples a credibility anchored in real workplace contexts rather than classroom abstractions. Learner feedback across her catalog describes a teaching style that is warm, authoritative, and practically oriented. Reviewers of her Business Writing Principles course describe her instruction as easy to follow and engaging even for learners who typically resist formal writing instruction. One learner on LinkedIn Learning's platform called her course "a great refresher," while another noted the instruction's ability to make "writing mistakes stand out" in their own drafts — an indication that the teaching creates observable changes in how learners read and revise. Jeffrey Clark, an English Literature student at Aberystwyth University who used Steiner-Williams's LinkedIn Learning courses during a difficult academic period, credited the courses with improving his grades and reducing the stress of editing — a real-world outcome that speaks to the instructor's effectiveness at translating writing principles into actionable habits. The main caveat on instructor quality is structural rather than personal: LinkedIn Learning's format is one-way video delivery with no mechanism for Steiner-Williams to respond to individual learner questions within the course itself. Unlike Udemy, where instructors can reply to discussion board posts, LinkedIn Learning's writing courses offer no direct instructor interaction. A reviewer on Capterra explicitly identified this as a platform-level limitation: "Lacks hands-on practice opportunities." This does not reflect on Steiner-Williams's competence but does limit the depth of instructor presence that learners experience. The 4.6 score reflects a highly qualified and engaging instructor whose format-constrained delivery is nonetheless excellent within its genre.
Writing Foundations is accessible through a LinkedIn Learning subscription priced at $39.99/month or $239.88/year ($19.99/month). The course is not available as a standalone purchase — it is part of a catalog of 21,000-plus courses, which means the value-for-money calculation is always relative to how much of the broader library a learner plans to use. For a professional who is actively seeking to develop multiple skills — writing, data literacy, project management, communication — the subscription represents strong value. For a learner who wants only a writing foundations course, the monthly cost of $39.99 compares less favourably to Udemy courses that can be purchased individually for $10–$15 during frequent sales. The strongest value argument for Writing Foundations within LinkedIn Learning is the platform's profile integration. When learners complete the course, the certificate of completion appears on their LinkedIn profile and is visible to recruiters and hiring managers. For early-career professionals using LinkedIn as a job-search tool, this visibility has a practical value that a Udemy certificate displayed on a personal website does not match. Multiple reviewers identify this integration as a key reason to choose LinkedIn Learning over alternatives: one reviewer on the Skillsupskill platform noted that it "significantly increased interview calls" for a software engineer who used the platform for skills signalling. For a writing course specifically, demonstrating professional communication competence on a platform that recruiters actively monitor has real career utility. The platform's one-month free trial means learners can complete Writing Foundations at no cost and evaluate the full library before committing to a subscription. The main value caveat is the inaccessibility of completed courses after a subscription lapses — one reviewer noted that "once you end your subscription, you have no access to those courses you have already completed, even to the certificate," which contrasts with Udemy's lifetime access model. At its annual subscription price and with active use of the broader library, the value is strong; as a standalone purchase for a single course, the monthly subscription model is less compelling.
The practical orientation of Steiner-Williams's teaching is the defining quality of Writing Foundations' real-world applicability score. The course does not build toward a hypothetical writing scenario; it addresses the specific communication failures that occur in professional documents every day — unclear topic sentences, verbose phrasing, grammar errors that undermine credibility, and structures that bury the key message. The before- and-after writing samples that Steiner-Williams uses throughout her LinkedIn Learning catalog give learners concrete models of the difference between weak and strong professional prose, and the 10 Cs framework provides a diagnostic vocabulary that learners can apply immediately to any document they are revising. Learner outcomes reported across Steiner-Williams's courses support the applicability score. The Ventura County HR department included multiple Steiner-Williams courses in their "Maximize Your Communication Skills" playlist for employees — an institutional endorsement that reflects workplace- level confidence in the practical value of her instruction. Jeffrey Clark's academic use case demonstrates cross-context transfer: the writing skills developed through LinkedIn Learning's writing courses improved both his essay grades and his professional communication, suggesting the principles are not domain-locked. A reviewer of a related Steiner-Williams course noted that the instruction gave them "detailed explanations of why concise writing creates stronger professional communication" — a meta-level understanding that, once internalised, applies across document types. The real-world applicability ceiling is the same as the retention ceiling: the course delivers principles but not practice, and the transfer of principles to real-world output requires the learner to do the application work independently. For learners who are already writing in professional contexts — drafting emails, reports, proposals, or academic papers — the principles from Writing Foundations map directly onto live tasks and show results quickly. For learners who are studying writing in a vacuum without concurrent output to apply the principles to, the applicability is less immediate. The 4.2 score reflects strong principle-to-practice relevance for active writers, with a deduction for the lack of structured application exercises that would close the gap for passive learners.
Writing Foundations, in common with all LinkedIn Learning courses, is structured as a video-only learning experience with no writing assignments, no peer-review exercises, and no graded quizzes requiring learners to produce original prose. The knowledge-check elements available on the platform — brief multiple-choice questions after select video segments — test conceptual recall rather than compositional skill. This is the most significant structural gap for a writing course: writing is a motor-cognitive skill that improves through deliberate practice and feedback cycles, and a course that delivers only instruction without practice necessarily creates a lower retention ceiling than a structured MOOC with assignments. Multiple reviewers of LinkedIn Learning writing courses note this limitation explicitly. One reviewer on the Upskillwise platform noted that "some courses sourced from the older Lynda.com library lack interactive elements," while the Capterra analysis identified "limited depth for advanced learners" and "lacks hands-on practice opportunities" as recurring platform-level themes. A PeerSpot reviewer observed that "all courses are pre-recorded" with "no live instructor sessions," which means the feedback loop between learner output and expert correction simply does not exist in this format. For Writing Foundations specifically, this means learners receive a well-organised conceptual framework but must self-direct the practice that would cement it. The retention outcome for Writing Foundations depends heavily on what the learner does after watching the videos. Learners who immediately apply the course's principles to live writing projects — a professional email they need to send, a report they are drafting, an academic essay due for submission — report tangible improvement in their output. Jeffrey Clark's experience is instructive here: he used the courses alongside active assignment writing and saw grade improvements as a direct result. Learners who watch the videos without a concurrent writing context are less likely to retain the principles. The 3.4 score reflects a course that teaches well but whose format structurally limits the practice dimension that skill retention requires.
The course is structured across four logically sequenced modules that cover the complete writing lifecycle: foundational principles of effective communication (clarity, ownership of ideas, avoiding pretentious language), organisational structure using the "scaffold" framework, grammar and mechanics including common errors with pronouns, modifiers, commas, and apostrophes, and an advanced module on activating voice through simplicity, brevity, and active sentence construction. The content is tightly focused and free of filler, with 13 videos in the first module alone — each short enough to sustain attention while packed with immediately applicable advice. Learners consistently praise the course for making complex concepts about written communication feel accessible. One reviewer noted that the module on organisation alone is worth the course, and the recurring message that "the most important element of good writing isn't good writing — it's good organisation" resonated deeply with students across 165 countries. The course materials were described as "clear, practical, and immediately usable" by multiple reviewers. A recurring criticism, however, is that the course may be too introductory for writers with any prior formal training or professional experience. Several three-star reviewers noted they were looking for coverage of longer documents, report writing, and advanced rhetorical techniques that the course does not address. The course is explicitly designed for beginners and intermediate learners, which it serves extremely well — but sets expectations accordingly.
Dr. Quentin McAndrew is the primary instructor and consistently receives the strongest praise of any element in learner reviews. She holds a BA and MA in English from Stanford University and a PhD in English from the University of Colorado Boulder, where her students have ranked her among the best instructors at the university. She brings over a decade of corporate writing experience to her teaching, which gives her examples a grounded, real-world quality that distinguishes the course from purely theoretical writing instruction. Reviewers repeatedly describe Dr. McAndrew as engaging, down-to-earth, and exceptionally skilled at breaking down abstract writing principles into memorable, practical rules. Multiple learners used phrases such as "passionate," "clear," and "no-nonsense" to characterise her delivery. One reviewer wrote that "after taking this course, writing mistakes stand out to you like a karate kick" — crediting the instructor's memorable analogies and high-energy teaching style. The course also features two other instructors covering graphic design and presentation skills, which a small number of reviewers found tangential to their goal of improving writing. Dr. McAndrew's own modules, however, receive near-universal praise across all demographic groups and experience levels.
The course is available for free audit through Coursera, meaning all video lectures and most written materials can be accessed without payment. The paid certificate option is included in Coursera Plus (approximately $59 per month) or available as a standalone purchase. For learners already subscribed to Coursera Plus, the marginal cost is zero. Given that the course covers approximately 10 hours of high-quality instructional content from a research university with strong corporate grounding, the value proposition is strong. Over 30,000 students and 70+ companies have used the techniques taught in this course, suggesting that the certificate carries some professional credibility. The one caveat is that Coursera's subscription model has drawn criticism on consumer review platforms regarding billing transparency and refund policies. Learners who wish to access graded assignments and the certificate should factor this into their decision. For those who only need to audit the content, the value is essentially unlimited at zero cost.
The course includes 28 AI-graded assignments and 2 peer review exercises, giving learners multiple opportunities to practise the principles taught in each module. The AI grading provides immediate confirmation of whether learners have absorbed specific concepts, while the peer review components allow for authentic feedback on written samples. However, the peer review system received mixed assessments in learner feedback. Some reviewers noted that peer feedback is "inconsistent" in quality and depends heavily on who is enrolled at the same time. With a global learner base of varying language proficiency and writing experience, the quality of peer evaluation can fluctuate considerably. This is a structural limitation of large-scale MOOC peer review and not specific to this course, but it does affect the depth of feedback learners receive on their actual writing. The AI-graded quizzes embedded within videos are widely praised for reinforcing comprehension and maintaining engagement, but they cannot substitute for substantive editorial feedback on full-length documents. Learners seeking detailed critique of their writing style, voice, or advanced rhetorical choices will not find that level of personalisation here.
This is the course's defining strength according to the learner community. The principles taught — clarity, conciseness, logical structure, active voice, and purposeful organisation — are foundational to both professional and academic writing at all levels. One reviewer described being able to apply the techniques to work emails within the same week they were taught, and Rosa Zhou's detailed learning notes (published on Medium) document a similar immediate-applicability experience. The "scaffold" organisational framework taught in Module 2 is particularly praised for translating abstract concepts about structure into a repeatable, practical tool. Learners from engineering, law, business, and graduate study all describe the framework as directly usable in their writing contexts. The grammar and mechanics module (Module 3) received similar praise for addressing the exact errors that cause confusion in professional and academic settings — pronoun agreement, modifier placement, comma usage — with clear explanations of why these rules matter rather than just cataloguing them. Reddit discussions echo this applicability: one commenter working in email communication recommended the course specifically as a tool for improving day-to-day professional correspondence, noting that "it's less about writing for business and more about writing succinctly" — which is precisely the skill that transfers most broadly to academic contexts as well.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.