Was a waste of time
Was a waste of time. I thought I'd be learning animation theories, animation softwares etc. They rather thought how to pitch for the giant clients and all that. I'm still in debt from the course I did. 5K!
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"We get you career-ready, helping you future-proof your creative career and broaden your mind, as well as build your portfolio."
8 Bloomsbury Street, WC1B 3SR, London, United Kingdom
Was a waste of time. I thought I'd be learning animation theories, animation softwares etc. They rather thought how to pitch for the giant clients and all that. I'm still in debt from the course I did. 5K!
I finished the Motion Design Foundation course in April 2021 and would like to share my experience to help others make informed decisions since Created wasn't particularly transparent about the course syllabus or the specifics on offer in this course. I don't regret taking the course as it helped demystify the craft of motion design, but I'm disappointed with the fact that I got significantly less value from it than I expected, particularly given the price range.
OVERVIEW:
The course is centred around an assignment that's given to all students in the cohort. Everyone's given the same brief. There are 3 modules over 12 weeks with a submission expected at the end of each module, which is then reviewed by a motion designer using a standardised format. You're offered access to an online learning platform and a Slack channel where you can interact with your cohort and the wider Created community.
PROS:
- Friendly staff and a nice sense of community in the online platforms (even though everyone works individually).
- Cinema 4D license included for the duration of the course.
- Access to motion designers to ask questions and get ad-hoc help when you get stuck.
CONS:
- Limited opportunity to explore your own interests; everyone in the cohort gets the same brief so don't expect to necessarily work on whatever tickles your fancy; my assignment was brand identity, which I wasn't particularly interested in but was stuck with for the duration of the course.
- You need to submit a full pitch deck with storyboards at the end of the first module, which means you're committing to a concept/design before you've actually learned anything about After Effects or Cinema 4D; I personally find this inexcusable as it's difficult to gauge the difficulty of what you're proposing and you only get advice after you've submitted your pitch deck.
- There's only about 1 to 2 hours of video content per module (i.e. per 5 weeks) so don't expect to gain any in-depth knowledge on any of the topics; you only scratch the surface then the rest is up to you, so don't be surprised if you end up learning from other courses as you work on your assignment; 95% of the time will be spent figuring things out with 5% watching video content, so make sure that works for you.
- You lose access to all course contents once the course has ended, so unlike other platforms, you can't go back and rewatch your videos if you ever need to.
My advice would be to ask yourself if you're interested in learning motion design or After Effects/Cinema 4D more generally. There's a subtle but important difference and this course is definitely focused on the former, not so much the latter. If you're curious about motion design for self-expression (i.e. you're a videographer looking to improve your videos, or a visual artist looking to create visuals for multimedia) you can almost definitely find more suitable courses out there, particularly at this price range.

Reply from Created
Very disappointing experience from the start.
Given a hard sell on being the last few places on the course and how this would change my life.
It's not a motion design course, you need to know motion before you start and definitely not for a beginner. As far as I could see they were making this up as they went along, by the time we got to month 3 most of us were looking to leave the course.

Reply from Created
I signed up for the Professional Motion Design Course at Created Academy believing it would provide professional technical Instruction in Cinema 4d and After Effects. The teachers, mentors and support staff are all amazing and hard working. I was very impressed and they can’t be faulted. However the structure of the course itself contains very little technical instruction. By month 3 there will have only been about 10 to 12 hours of technical videos, and month 4 has no technical instruction. You will have to learn these outside of the course, which is strange since the title is ‘professional motion design.’ That means it is only 3.5 hours per month In the first 3 months of a 60 hour a month course.
Making you learn extra outside of the course by searching around for the right videos makes it harder if you also have a full time job. The guidance for finding technical instruction outside was also rather haphazard and given as an afterthought in live zoom sessions. It felt as if the zoom teachers weren’t too familiar with what we knew and didn’t know from the course material. I feel as if we are an add on to their normal day job so that’s not their fault since they are great at what they do. Even though students are at different levels when they begin, we are measured not taking that into account.
I was told there would only be a little further technical instruction in month 6, so I stopped there. Most of the things you will want to create in practice to actualise your vision, haven’t really been dealt with in the technical videos.
Also you are trained very much to fit into the corporate world rather than for personal artistic expression and I feel the balance between the two was not right for me. They’ve gone too far into training for corporate, for me.
There is not a great deal of personal time with any of the teachers, although you can ask technical questions. Still it’s pretty hard to learn by a couple of questions a month as opposed to a structured introduction so you know what you are asking about. I don’t need more lessons in figuring things out for myself since I do that a lot anyway. The students are all great, and they do figure it out themselves, so I would credit all their technical results more to their own talent and drive rather than how they were technically taught at created academy. It’s my personal opinion that this is not how it should be in a school.
I personally felt I was misled into thinking this course was something else when it was sold to me. Additionally, you only know what is coming up in detail on the course after they slowly reveal it over time. You aren’t able to foresee it beforehand - if I had been able to see before, I would have withdrawn earlier and stopped paying. Due to this, I requested a partial refund believing the product was something else to what I was sold. I was told at first, that their contract didn’t allow me to withdraw or do this. This would be against consumer rights law in the UK, just as it is against the law to make a contract which contradicts UK consumer rights law. While I gave them value because they used my feedback to create a new zoom session, they did not bring me much personal value In return (since I’m already familiar with the marketing world). They agreed to let me withdraw but only after signing and filling out an odd form which I didn’t want to do, (and also don’t think I should have to do) without also discussing a refund. I asked for a partial refund and they have not responded to my request for this for weeks hence I think it’s fair to write this review at this point.

Reply from Created
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