Project Management Foundations vs Excel Essential Training (Microsoft 365)
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
Project Management Foundations
LinkedIn Learning · Dennis Taylor · Business & Marketing
Excel Essential Training (Microsoft 365)
Per-criterion
The course covers the full project lifecycle — initiation, planning, execution, monitoring, and closing — with a dedicated chapter on PMI's PMBOK 7th Edition changes and a section on Agile alongside the dominant waterfall approach. Learners call the structure "comprehensive" and "well-organized", and appreciate that most videos come with exercises built around a healthcare-IT case study. One reviewer noted the initial two or three chapters were "a little redundant and long", but the remainder of the content was consistently rated as clear and practical.
Bonnie Biafore is the most praised element across every feedback source found. A PMP-certified blogger who reviewed the course called her "a clear, no-nonsense teacher", while learners on the official course page describe her explanations as concise, practical, and directly applicable. With nearly seven million total learners across her LinkedIn Learning catalog, Biafore's authority in the project management space is not in question. Even reviewers who found the content beginner-level singled out the instructor as the reason to take the course.
The course is included in a LinkedIn Learning subscription (~$39.99/month monthly, lower on an annual plan, and often free through employers or libraries), not sold individually. If you use the broader catalog the value is strong; if you need only this one course, the subscription model is a common sticking point. Capterra reviewers flag the subscription cost as "far too high" for light users, while career-focused learners who use the platform regularly report it as good value, especially given the certificate that auto-populates on the LinkedIn profile.
LinkedIn Learning provides no direct instructor interaction or live Q&A — there is no community forum, no peer discussion, and no way to ask Biafore a question. Reviews across Capterra and other aggregators note that "customer support is slow and not helpful" and that the absence of community features is the platform's biggest structural gap. The course includes exercise files and chapter-end quizzes, which partially compensate for the lack of human feedback, but learners who want mentorship or guided feedback will need to look elsewhere.
Clear, well-paced and current — the 2025 Microsoft 365 refresh covers PivotTables, charts, multi-sheet formulas and Microsoft Copilot inside Excel. Depth stops at "essential," so power users wanting Power Query, dynamic arrays or VBA outgrow it quickly.
Dennis Taylor has taught Excel on this platform since the Lynda.com era. Reviewers reach for the same words — calm, clear, methodical. The 4.7-star aggregate from 8,000+ LinkedIn Learning ratings reflects unusually consistent praise for delivery.
Bundled in the LinkedIn Learning subscription (~$40/month or via LinkedIn Premium). HN commenters repeatedly flag that most US public libraries offer free LinkedIn Learning access via library card — which moves this to effectively free for many readers.
Coherent walkthrough of the daily Excel surface — data entry, formulas, formatting, charts, PivotTables, multi-workbook references, Copilot prompts. Stops short of the analyst-grade stack — Power Query, Power Pivot, dynamic arrays, LAMBDA — driving modern Excel work.
Excel is one of the most universally job-applicable skills in business, and Taylor's coverage maps cleanly onto what finance, ops, marketing and admin touch daily. Ceiling — data-analyst roles still need Power Query and deeper pivots this course barely touches.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.