The Complete Digital Marketing Course - 12 Courses in 1 vs Google Analytics 4 (GA4) Essential Training
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 · Business & Marketing
The Complete Digital Marketing Course - 12 Courses in 1
LinkedIn Learning · Corey Koberg · Business & Marketing
Google Analytics 4 (GA4) Essential Training
Per-criterion
Twelve marketing disciplines — market research, WordPress, email, copywriting, SEO, YouTube, social media, Facebook Ads, Google Ads, Google Analytics, LinkedIn and app marketing — are packed into 23 hours across 246 lectures. For a beginner, that map is genuinely useful and coherently organised. The clear deduction is the Google Analytics module, which was built on Universal Analytics before Google retired it in July 2023; learners in 2026 must supplement it independently for GA4. The SEO section is also criticised for spending fewer than 20 minutes on backlinks and omitting standard tools like Ahrefs and Screaming Frog.
Daragh Walsh is the reviewer favourite — analytical, clear, operator-first — while Rob Percival's Codestars brand (2 million+ students on Udemy) supplies the reputational weight. Criticisms are almost entirely about course scope and currency rather than delivery quality. Walsh's responsive Q&A is cited positively by multiple independent sources, and the teaching pace is described as accessible without being condescending.
At the near-permanent Udemy sale price of $11.99–$14.99, twelve marketing channels with lifetime access and 246 lectures is hard to beat. Multiple reviewers reach for hyperbole — "I feel like I robbed a bank" — and even critics concede the breadth-to-cost ratio is exceptional. At the $89.99 list price the calculus is tighter, but that price is effectively fictitious; the sale is almost always on.
Reviewers consistently describe the course as useful for understanding how the channels fit together and for holding your own in a junior interview or freelance pitch. The recurring gap is between course completion and independently running campaigns that generate revenue. YourDigitalAid's reviewer frames it directly: the course equips you with enough to pass an interview but not enough to run paid campaigns unsupported. Small-business owners report the most actionable carry-over; specialists report the least.
Daragh Walsh's Q&A responsiveness is cited positively in multiple reviews and aggregator profiles. Being on Udemy means there is no cohort, no coaching, and no live community — the support experience is async Q&A plus the broader Udemy discussion threads. For a self-paced course at this price point, the instructor engagement is above average for the platform.
Covers the full essential GA4 surface — account setup, GA4 vs. Universal Analytics, enhanced measurement, lifecycle and user reports, segments, and funnel analysis — in under two hours. Production is clean, but the pace is brisk and demonstrations occasionally move faster than beginners can follow.
Corey Koberg is a founder-level digital analytics practitioner (Cardinal Path / Merkle) with 15+ years of enterprise engagements. Reviewers call his explanations clear and well-exampled, though several flag that his on-screen pace is fast and the cursor is hard to track during demos.
Included in the LinkedIn Learning subscription (~$40/month); standalone the course is listed around $39.99. Many US learners reach it free through public libraries. For under two hours of video it is excellent value inside the subscription, thinner as a one-off purchase.
Gives a usable mental model — measure → report → segment → analyse — and walks the live GA4 interface end to end. But it is conceptual more than hands-on; it shows the tool rather than drilling exercises, and stops short of GTM, custom events, and BigQuery export depth.
GA4 is the de facto web analytics standard, so the skill transfers directly to marketing, founder, and analyst work. The honest risk is shelf life: GA4's interface changes often, and a 2023-era course ages faster than evergreen marketing fundamentals.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.