CompTIA Security+ (SY0-701) Complete Course & Practice Exam vs Comprehensive GMAT Prep: Self-Study Guide to GMAT 700+
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Udemy · Test Prep
CompTIA Security+ (SY0-701) Complete Course & Practice Exam
GMAT 740 Instructor (Udemy) · Test Prep
Comprehensive GMAT Prep: Self-Study Guide to GMAT 700+
Per-criterion
The course covers all five SY0-701 exam domains across 264 modules and 31 hours of video, spanning General Security Concepts, Threats and Vulnerabilities, Security Architecture, Security Operations, and Security Program Management. Reviewers on OpenCourser and Reddemy consistently praise the structured domain breakdown, acronym walkthroughs, and the alignment with official CompTIA exam objectives. The main content gap flagged by multiple learners is limited hands-on lab simulation — the course is predominantly lecture-based, which can make performance-based question (PBQ) preparation less thorough than the actual exam requires.
Jason Dion brings over 20 years of IT and cybersecurity experience to the course and is consistently described by reviewers as easy to follow, thorough, and amiable. OpenCourser reviewers Victor Cabrales and Mark Guillen both called out his clear explanations and acronym-focused teaching style as the course's standout feature. He holds CompTIA Platinum Partner status, and Dion Training's 4.6+ star network-wide rating across 2 million+ students reinforces his reputation as one of the most reliable certification prep instructors in the field.
The course is almost always available on Udemy for $13–$20 during the platform's frequent sales, a price point that Reddemy commenters repeatedly highlight as exceptional for 31 hours of content plus practice materials. One Reddemy user noted purchasing both the course and the separate practice exam set for approximately $13 each during a sale. At that price, Dion's course delivers one of the lowest cost-per-hour ratios of any paid Security+ preparation resource, with lifetime access and periodic content updates included.
Multiple reviewers who passed SY0-701 on their first attempt credit Dion's course as their primary preparation resource, including John T. (Medium), who passed in under two months with no prior cybersecurity background. The course's exam-focused framing maps tightly to Security+'s five domains and the career skills they represent — threat analysis, security architecture, and incident response. However, the lecture-only format and absence of hands-on labs mean learners entering cybersecurity roles will need additional practical experience beyond what the course alone provides.
Like most Udemy courses, learner support is limited to the platform's Q&A section — there is no live instructor interaction or direct email support. One Reddemy user flagged a structural navigation issue, noting difficulty jumping directly to specific domains without watching the course sequentially. Response times in the Q&A section are generally adequate for a high-enrollment course, but learners who need real-time feedback or personalized guidance will need to seek supplementary communities such as the r/CompTIA subreddit.
The course is positioned as a consolidated self-study strategy guide rather than a full content syllabus: it teaches how to plan a GMAT preparation, how to attempt questions, and how to track progress, rather than re-teaching every quant and verbal concept from scratch. Reviewers describe it as covering "all important aspects of the GMAT exam in an easy to comprehend manner," and the standout asset is a specially designed MS-Excel GMAT Analysis Tool plus consolidated revision notes. The honest limit is breadth — it is a strategy and planning layer, not a comprehensive concept course, so a true beginner will need separate material to actually learn the maths and grammar.
The instructor's credibility rests on a concrete, verifiable claim: a GMAT 740 (Q50, V40) on the first attempt achieved through self-study. That is a strong, top-percentile result and it gives the strategy advice real weight, because the whole course is essentially "here is exactly what I did." The teaching philosophy — "if I was able to crack the GMAT through self-study, anyone can" — is encouraging and the test-day strategy insights are the part learners single out as genuinely useful. The deduction is transparency: the instructor's full name and broader teaching track record are not prominently published, so you are trusting one person's score story rather than an established prep brand.
This is the course's strongest dimension. It is explicitly priced "at the lowest possible price" and is regularly available very cheaply or via free coupons, with lifetime access and Udemy's 30-day refund. For the cost of a single coffee you get a structured self-study roadmap, an Excel tracking tool and revision notes from a 740 scorer — a tiny fraction of what Target Test Prep, Manhattan Prep or e-GMAT charge. The fair caveat is that the low price reflects scope: you are buying a plan and tools, not thousands of practice questions, so the real cost of your prep is this plus the official GMAT material you still need to buy.
The weakest area and the one most likely to disappoint buyers who expect a question bank. The course includes some solved questions to illustrate the attempting strategy, but it is not a high-volume practice resource — there are no full-length adaptive mocks and no large bank of original problems. Its own design assumes you will do your heavy practice in the Official Guide and GMAT Official Practice Exams; the course's job is to tell you how to use them efficiently and track your weak areas with the Excel tool, not to be your practice source.
The realistic value proposition is structure and efficiency rather than a guaranteed point jump. Learners credit the test-day strategy and the self-analysis tool with helping them prepare smarter, and the 740-scorer framing maps the plan onto a genuinely high outcome. But because the course supplies little practice and no full mocks, any score gain depends almost entirely on the learner pairing it with official material and doing the timed reps — the course is the map, not the miles.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.