The Complete Digital Marketing Course – 12 Courses in 1 vs HubSpot Inbound Marketing Certification
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Daragh Walsh & Rob Percival (Codestars) · Business & Marketing
The Complete Digital Marketing Course – 12 Courses in 1
HubSpot Academy · Business & Marketing
HubSpot Inbound Marketing Certification
Per-criterion
Twelve disciplines in 23 hours gives beginners a coherent map of digital marketing, but each channel averages under two hours. The Google Analytics module was built on Universal Analytics, retired by Google in July 2023, leaving a material gap for learners in 2025–2026.
Daragh Walsh is consistently singled out for clear, analytical explanations and responsive Q&A. Rob Percival's Codestars brand carries broad recognition. Reviewer frustrations centre on scope and currency rather than delivery quality.
At $11.99 on sale, twelve channels for less than a lunch bill is the consensus judgment. Even at the $89.99 full price the breadth-to-cost ratio outperforms single-channel courses. Lifetime access and periodic updates reinforce the value case.
Each module includes projects, checklists and downloadable resources. Reviewers report applying the frameworks to freelance pitches and small-business planning. The limit is depth — projects are introductory exercises rather than full campaign builds.
Useful for interviews and freelance proposals. YourDigitalAid's reviewer explicitly flags the gap — the course equips you to hold your own in an interview but not to independently run paid campaigns and generate revenue from a website.
Reviewers describe the inbound methodology content as clear, current and well-structured for beginners. The trade-off is depth — experienced marketers call it "basic," and some exam questions are flagged as awkward or HubSpot-flavoured rather than universally correct.
HubSpot Academy instructors come across as polished and credible to beginners, and the methodology carries HubSpot's brand weight. A minority of reviewers including Jon Reed on Diginomica flag that production quality outpaces individual instructor depth.
The course and the credential are both free, with no audit/paywall split. Reviewers single this out as the strongest argument — even Miles Beckler, the most critical voice in our sample, concedes the content is free, quality content useful for career beginners.
The flywheel, attract-engage-delight model and lifecycle stages give beginners a coherent playbook they can apply at work the next day. Critics argue the frameworks are HubSpot-flavoured and reward learning HubSpot's phrasing more than universal marketing thinking.
Skills transfer well for solo founders, small-business marketers and junior agency hires, and reviewers report applying frameworks immediately. The gap is hiring weight — Miles Beckler argues the credential carries less weight than actual work experience.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.