Datacamp has very good courses tbh. But the thing is, all of the information taught on datacamp or on other learning platforms is available online for free, on youtube and blogs. So it can be useful if the price is not an issue to you, but you can also learn it all for free in other places. An advantage of datacamp is that it will give you a learning roadmap so that's one thing not to worry about. You also get a certificate or something if you think that will improve your resume. Answer from Blancoo21 on reddit.com
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnmachinelearning › datacamp worth it?
r/learnmachinelearning on Reddit: Datacamp worth it?
September 17, 2025 -

Hey everyone! I'm about to graduate with a degree in statistics and want to specialize in machine learning/AI. I'm considering subscribing to Datacamp Premium so I can specialize for future job openings here in Brazil, improving my CV/resume.

Is this a good idea? As I mentioned, I already have a foundation in statistics thanks to my undergraduate degree; I'm even working on my final project related to the topic!

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/datacamp › i'm a certified data scientist from datacamp - my advice for all
r/DataCamp on Reddit: I'm a Certified Data Scientist from DataCamp - My advice for all
March 16, 2025 -

It took me 2 years to get this certification, yes I was slow as I had a lot of other stuff too.
A few months ago I put a post here, which also became one of the top posts of this group.

After around a week or two, I realised:
The current market was way beyond (above) my skills. I basically knew nothing. Well technically its not wrong....From their track I studied basically most of everything that falls within the definition and job description of Data Science.... Its basically the market that has converted most of Data Science into Machine & Deep Learning

Advice:
For Data Analysists:
A lot of people have been hitting me up since that post and asking me is Data Analyst worth... Well tbh I can't tell that. You mightv'e to ask someone who's already done that track. From what I know, yes today if I wanna step in that, I can very easily do it after my track of DS. But I dont have knowledge of market in DA.

For Data Scientists:
DONT DO THE DATA SCIENTIST CAREER TRACK.
Yes you could pick a few important things from it like Intro, EDA, SQL etc. But just try to wind it up ASAP. The only good thing in Datacamp is, it provides good practical experience, practice.
If u really want to do it from Datacamp, go for the "MACHINE LEARNING SCIENTIST" career track. It might train you well enough.

Summary:
I wasted 2 years for a certification that just gave me basic foundation of something I wanted to make my complete career in.

  • Look for some other platform.

  • If DataCamp, then "Machine Learning Scientist in Python" >>> "Data Scientist with Python"

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Reddit
reddit.com › r › DataCamp
r/DataCamp
July 8, 2016 - Hey everyone, I completed a the Data Scientist Career Track from DataCamp sometimes back alongside a few other courses. Do check out my review (not sponsored) and whether should you opt for it or not https://youtu.be/HDiX7UvSpoI?si=TXUZFC0BOTXGiP-o
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/learnmachinelearning › i am considering the datacamp premium subscription for upskilling myself in ai and ml. is it worth it?
r/learnmachinelearning on Reddit: I am considering the DataCamp premium subscription for upskilling myself in AI and ML. Is it worth it?
December 11, 2024 -

Hey, guys. I am a full stack developer looking to upskill myself in AI and ML. I have heard of and read about DataCamp before. Currently, its premium subscription is on sale, so I am considering buying it to learn and earn certificates.

Those of you who have used it before, can you share your thoughts on the quality of its courses or suggestions for any better alternatives?

Thanks in advance!

Find elsewhere
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/wgu_msda › is it me or is datacamp awful?
r/WGU_MSDA on Reddit: Is it me or is DataCamp awful?
June 26, 2024 -

Started the MSDA program June 1 and so far, so good except I find myself getting gradually more and more frustrated with DataCamp. I have decades of programming experience in multiple languages (including Python) as well as data analysis, reporting and database admin experience so I feel like this should be relatively straitforward for me, but I’m stumbling with some of the course work. A lot of the DataCamp instruction feels inconsistent and poorly designed. Am I alone in that? Trying to gauge whether it’s me or the material.

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/datascience › does the datacamp ds certificate have a lot of value when applying?
r/datascience on Reddit: Does the datacamp ds certificate have a lot of value when applying?
September 25, 2023 - Data Engineer track: What are some good practice projects I can do on DataCamp when I complete the Python for Data Engineer course?
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/powerbi › datacamp power bi courses worth it?
r/PowerBI on Reddit: Datacamp Power BI courses worth it?
June 7, 2024 - I took it and honestly it sped up my integration to PBI environment. Having things in an order and going through them lesson by lesson is very good to warm up. I wanted to have Microsoft PL-300 certification and DataCamp courses helped me a ...
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Reddit
reddit.com › r/devsarg › honest opinions on datacamp
r/devsarg on Reddit: Honest Opinions on DataCamp
April 12, 2025 -

Hey everyone, I wanted to snoop around a bit about all things Data Analytics and Data Science, but I wanted some reassurance before paying for something that might be crap. And I'm also a little scared because I heard they're not going to be hiring for data positions anymore because of all this AI stuff (I'm speaking from a place of misinformation and comments from two idiots).

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Reddit
reddit.com › r/datacamp › codecademy vs datacamp for python: what's your experience in 2023/2024?
r/DataCamp on Reddit: Codecademy VS DataCamp for Python: What's your experience in 2023/2024?
January 28, 2024 -

Hey everyone, I'm looking for the most efficient way to learn Python, I'm torn between Codecademy and DataCamp as the main options. Do you think this comparison is accurate https://self-starters.com/datacamp-vs-codecademy/? I want to start a side project for data analysis written in Python but I don't want to change my career.

Can anyone share their experiences with either or both? I'm particularly interested in which one offers a more comprehensive and beginner-friendly approach to learning Python. Any insights or recommendations would be greatly appreciated! Thanks in advance for your help.