Graphic Design Masterclass - Learn GREAT Design vs Adobe InDesign CC – Essentials Training Course
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 · Design
Graphic Design Masterclass - Learn GREAT Design
Udemy · Design
Adobe InDesign CC – Essentials Training Course
Per-criterion
A genuinely broad beginner-to-intermediate curriculum — typography, colour theory, layout and composition, photo editing, magazine layout, branding and logo design, plus the basics of Photoshop, Illustrator and InDesign across 16+ hours of video. Praised for blending design theory with software, not just one or the other. Capped because the same breadth means no single topic (type, branding, motion) gets specialist depth.
Lindsay Marsh is the most-cited strength across our corpus — calm, clear, well-paced, and good at breaking theory into digestible segments. Two decades of freelance brand work give her real credibility. The one recurring caveat reviewers raise is that her background is freelance and small-to-medium brands rather than large-enterprise design teams.
The strongest dimension. A 16+ hour project-based course that lists at ~$200 but realistically sells for ~$12 during Udemy's near-constant sales, with lifetime access, certificate of completion and downloadable templates. For the sale price the value case is hard to argue with — the main caveat is the well-known Udemy price-anchoring discount theatre.
Real-world projects (magazine layouts, logo work, branding exercises) build a beginner portfolio and are the part learners credit most for making the theory stick. Downloadable templates support each project. Capped because Udemy offers no graded submission or peer critique — you complete projects alone with no structured feedback loop.
Learners report the fundamentals and software workflows transfer directly to freelance and junior design work, and recent updates add current skills like Photoshop generative fill. Limit is that a single Udemy certificate is not a hiring credential on its own, and the course does not cover client process, pricing or the business of running design work.
Around 7 hours and ~78 lessons take a complete beginner from the InDesign interface through type, colour, master pages, frames, automatic tables of contents, data merge and professional print/PDF export. Reviewers call it well-paced and "straight-to-the-point" with no padding. Capped because it is essentials-only and the recordings predate the current CC interface in places.
Daniel Walter Scott is an Adobe Certified Instructor and Adobe Certified Expert, a multi-award winner and speaker at Adobe Max with 15+ years teaching. He is the single most-cited reason to take the course — students across Udemy, CourseDuck and CreativeLive consistently call him clear, patient, enthusiastic and never boring. The course's clearest strength.
Effective Udemy sale price of roughly $15-19 (full list ~$100+ is rarely paid) buys ~7 hours, five real publication projects, downloadable exercise files, lifetime access and free updates. One reviewer said it is "worth so much more than you pay on Udemy." The same content also lives on Skillshare and as InDesign Fundamentals on CreativeLive at different price models.
Project-driven throughout: learners build a flyer, a newsletter/brochure, a long annual-report-style document and conference name badges, leaving with five portfolio pieces. Outputs are competent beginner publications rather than client-grade deliverables, which is right for an essentials course. Real artwork-to-print workflow rather than isolated feature demos.
Teaches the genuine desktop-publishing workflow — master pages, styles, data merge, packaging and print/PDF export — that a junior designer or production artist actually uses. Skills transfer directly to print and layout work. Ceiling is that InDesign itself is a niche, print-leaning tool, so applicability depends heavily on the kind of design work you want.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.