Figma UI UX Design Essentials vs Google UX Design Professional Certificate
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Skillshare · Design
Figma UI UX Design Essentials
Google (Coursera) · Design
Google UX Design Professional Certificate
Per-criterion
111 lessons span UX/UI basics through advanced auto layout, components, variants and interactive prototyping. Comprehensive for a subscription course; slightly capped because Figma ships new features faster than course updates follow.
Daniel Scott is Adobe-certified with 14+ years of teaching experience and founder of Bring Your Own Laptop. His methodical, shortcut-dense style is consistently praised by independent reviewers as clear, practical, and professional.
The Skillshare subscription (~$14/month) also unlocks the companion advanced Figma course at no extra cost. No completion certificate and the rising subscription price are the main drags on value.
Real desktop and mobile projects produce shareable portfolio pieces with genuine creative latitude. Depth of feedback is limited compared to mentored programmes; learners self-assess their output.
Auto layout, components, variants, constraints and prototyping are exactly the skills hiring managers test for. The frames-over-groups discipline and shortcut density transfer immediately to professional Figma workflows.
A broad, well-sequenced beginner survey of UX process — empathy, research, wireframing, prototyping, usability testing — with a recent AI-in-UX update. Reviewers flag it as surface-level versus CMU or GA tracks and light on UI craft.
Multiple Google practitioner-instructors deliver a calm, clear, beginner-friendly style. The trade-off is no live mentor, no industry feedback on portfolio work, and a slightly Google-centric perspective on what UX looks like at a large consumer tech company.
At ~$49/month with a 4-6 month completion window, all-in cost lands around $200-300 — among the lowest paid UX paths. Google brand, a 7-day free trial and Coursera financial aid push value clearly above Designlab or CareerFoundry.
Three end-to-end portfolio projects (mobile app, responsive site, cross-platform) are the program's strongest feature and produce a real shareable artefact. Reviewers flag prompts as synthetic and Sharpen-generated briefs as disconnected from real client work.
Gives you the vocabulary and process to talk like a UX designer; Coursera reports 75% positive career outcomes. Reviewers temper this — entry-level hiring is tight in 2026, peer-only feedback caps portfolio quality, and the certificate alone rarely closes a junior UX role.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.