CourseVerdict

Negotiation Foundations vs The Modern Marketing Workshop

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 · Business & Marketing

Negotiation Foundations

4.3/ 5 · 22 opinions
17 positive3 neutral2 negative/ 22 total

Seth Godin (Skillshare) · Business & Marketing

The Modern Marketing Workshop

3.9/ 5 · 24 opinions
17 positive5 neutral2 negative/ 24 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.4 / 5

The course is organised into six tight modules — The Basics of Negotiation, Getting Ready, Engaging Your Allies, Getting Through and Past No, Essential Tips and Strategies, and Negotiating at a Distance — all delivered in just over 65 minutes. The breadth-to-depth ratio is intentionally beginner-to- intermediate: Lisa covers mindset shifts, anchoring, framing, labeling, tactical empathy, and diagnostic questioning, supported by downloadable worksheets and a glossary. Research from social psychologist Adam Galinsky (cited in the course) grounds the teaching in evidence rather than anecdote. The main limitation flagged by learners is depth: advanced practitioners seeking multi-party or cross-cultural negotiation tactics will find the material too introductory. Released in 2018, some examples feel dated relative to AI-assisted negotiation contexts, though the core frameworks remain timeless. At nearly 700,000 viewers, the engagement signal is strong for a sub-70-minute course.

Instructor4.6 / 5

Lisa Gates brings rare cross-domain credibility to this course. She co- founded She Negotiates with attorney-mediator Victoria Pynchon in 2010, served as a TEDx speaker with over 1.8 million views, authored "Courage, Clarity, and Confidence," and has been featured in CNN, NPR, The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Atlantic, and Glamour. Her coaching certification from The Coaches Training Institute and her background in mediation mean she approaches negotiation as communication design rather than combat — the exact mindset shift learners praise most. Described by the University of Toronto Alumni as a "leadership coach, negotiation expert, and author," she teaches with a conversational, story-driven style that reviewers call approachable even when covering tactics that feel initially confrontational (anchoring, diagnostic pushback). Her five LinkedIn Learning courses have collectively reached over 200 million learners, and Negotiation Foundations stands as the breakout title. The only minor criticism: delivery occasionally feels polished to the point of feeling scripted, which some learners contrast unfavourably with more spontaneous instructors.

Value for money4.0 / 5

Negotiation Foundations is bundled inside the LinkedIn Learning subscription at $39.99/month or $239.88/year (~$19.99/month). Individual courses can be purchased separately in the $35–$40 range. Many US learners access the full LinkedIn Learning catalogue free through public library cards (New York Public Library, for example, lists this course specifically). A 30-day free trial is available with no charge if cancelled before the trial ends. LinkedIn also includes the course in its Negotiation Professional Certificate learning path. Considered purely on a per-course basis, $40 for 65 minutes of quality instruction on a skill that can directly recover thousands of dollars in salary is a strong proposition. The subscription model delivers higher value if you plan to take multiple courses; if you only want this one, the library or trial route is the smarter play. LinkedIn's own business-value research cites a 695% three-year ROI for organisations using the platform — a headline figure, but the learner-level math on salary negotiation upside is similarly compelling.

Practical frameworks4.2 / 5

The course delivers several named, repeatable frameworks that learners can apply immediately. The interest-based negotiation model reframes every request as a "problem-solving conversation" rather than a zero-sum battle. The diagnostic questioning framework (prompted by research showing 93% of negotiators skip open-ended questions) gives learners a concrete script: "What in my qualifications makes you think I'm not worth [target amount]?" The anchoring-and-framing module teaches how to set the first number strategically, and the labeling technique — borrowed from FBI-style tactical empathy — provides a specific verbal formula for de-escalating impasse. The remote negotiation section adds a phone/email/text framework rare in foundational courses. Downloadable worksheets reinforce each module. Where the frameworks fall slightly short is in customisation guidance: learners in highly specialised contexts (procurement, M&A, international trade) note the examples skew toward individual workplace negotiations (salary, promotions) rather than commercial or multi-party deals.

Real-world use4.4 / 5

The course was recommended by Yale School of Management Career Development, embedded in the University of Toronto Alumni LinkedIn Learning Course Club, and adopted by Brown University's CareerLAB and Texas Southern University's Career Pathways Center — endorsements that reflect genuine practitioner confidence in its transferability. Learner outcomes from Lisa Gates' broader coaching practice (documented on shenegotiates.com before its closure) include a client who secured a 31% salary increase and a new title using the frameworks she teaches, and another who used the course directly to prepare for meetings with clients and employees. She Negotiates' own research cites that women and men can lose up to $1 million over a career by failing to negotiate first salaries, positioning this course as genuinely high-stakes and high-return material. LinkedIn Learning's own blog article drew on Gates' five negotiation "hacks" as practitioner-endorsed, real-world guidance. The only applicability gap: learners who need sector-specific scripts (healthcare, law, real estate) will need supplementary resources.

Content quality4.0 / 5

Roughly three hours of video across four units plus 75+ pages of ebooks and worksheets. Reviewers praise the conceptual framing — the four building-blocks and 50+ marketing terms — but note it is mindset and strategy, not tactics. There is no channel-specific how-to (no ad-account walkthroughs).

Instructor4.5 / 5

Godin's credibility is the strongest column. Independent operators call themselves fans of his clarity, and HN readers cite his "smallest viable audience" framing as genuinely useful. The teaching is opinionated and quotable rather than step-by-step.

Value for money3.9 / 5

Originally a $19 one-time class; today it is included in the Skillshare subscription (~$168/yr). Mitch Joel called the original price "as close to free as you can get" given the author. As bundled subscription content it is strong value if you already pay, weaker if you subscribe solely for it.

Practical frameworks3.6 / 5

The workshop is built around a project — a real marketing plan — with hard worksheet questions a student-reviewer described as "really hard, but so useful." The frameworks are durable (positioning, permission, tension) but abstract; you supply the channel specifics yourself.

Real-world use3.7 / 5

Best for reframing how a team thinks about marketing rather than executing a campaign tomorrow. Reviewers report applying the smallest-audience and story-first ideas to consumer and SMB marketing; the gap is the absence of measurement, paid-acquisition and modern channel mechanics.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.