Waste of money and you only know 50% of the equation. I’ve finished 3 courses and spent double the time finishing them trying to implement the information I learned and spent tons of time with chatgpt and perplexity asking them for more details on a specific information the course discussed And after all of that my 8 years of experience friend told me to learn from articles and free sources like learningseo.io or semrush academy or hubspot academy (learningseo.io is better but you will suffer for 1 or 2 days trying to adapt to the hierarchy and flow of the website which is weird at first)
Personallly speaking, yes. But only from well-structured courses. I know LLMs and Google Search can help, but it’s also better to learn things in order and systematically. One course is enough, then apply what you learned right away.
Use the free online resources first, and then consider purchasing courses if you feel the need.
You learn way more by picking a niche building a site and then you have an asset to market after.
Lots of blogs, books and free courses out there.
Waste of money and you only know 50% of the equation. I’ve finished 3 courses and spent double the time finishing them trying to implement the information I learned and spent tons of time with chatgpt and perplexity asking them for more details on a specific information the course discussed And after all of that my 8 years of experience friend told me to learn from articles and free sources like learningseo.io or semrush academy or hubspot academy (learningseo.io is better but you will suffer for 1 or 2 days trying to adapt to the hierarchy and flow of the website which is weird at first)
Man just get a claude / chatgpt sub and start asking questions.
I’ve been working in SEO, then as a dev for 15+ years. Not once did I buy a course in my life.
I’d start first with trying to do SEO yourself.
Personallly speaking, yes. But only from well-structured courses. I know LLMs and Google Search can help, but it’s also better to learn things in order and systematically. One course is enough, then apply what you learned right away.
No.