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MakerSquare vs. Wharton, UT Austin,
General Assembly & Online AI Courses

There are more AI training programs launching every month. This page gives you an honest, specific comparison — price, format, duration, and what you actually walk away with — so you can decide which one is right for you.

MakerSquare is the only multi-week in-person AI builder program currently available. Every other in-person AI program runs 3–4 consecutive days, conference-style. Every multi-week program is online, evenings or async. If you want immersive, in-person, and long enough to actually change how you work — there is currently one option.

Wharton AI Generative AI for Business UT Austin AI & ML / Exec Ed General Assembly AI/ML Part-Time Section / Maven Live Online Cohorts MakerSquare Austin, TX · In-Person
Price $13,500 $2,800–$5,000+ ~$4,000 $500–$2,000 $3,999
Format In-person, Philadelphia Online (async + live) Part-time, online evenings Live online evenings / weekends In-person, Austin TX
Duration 4 consecutive days 9–12 weeks ~12 weeks 4–6 weeks 2 weeks
Schedule 4 full weekdays Evenings & async, self-paced Mon + Thu evenings, 6–9pm Evenings or weekend seminars Mon–Fri, 9am–3pm
What you ship No deployed products Certificate, no live product Portfolio project, varies 1 project, may not be live 3 deployed AI products
Hands-on building Strategy & theory focused Some labs, mostly theory Mixed — lectures + exercises Mixed, depends on course Hands-on from Day 1
No coding required Business audience, minimal code Python basics often required Programming prerequisites vary Varies by course Never. Domain expertise is the edge.
Cohort size Executive group, ~20–40 Online, varies widely Online, ~20–50 Online, ~20–80 15 people, in the room
Curriculum freshness Updated periodically Updated by semester Updated infrequently Fixed per cohort Updated every cohort
Public Demo Day No No No No Yes — Austin tech community
Austin tech network No No No No In-person, builders & operators
Money-back guarantee No No No No Full refund if 3 products not shipped

Prices and formats reflect publicly available information as of mid-2026. Verify current pricing directly with each provider.

Detailed comparisons

What each program is actually good for — and where MakerSquare is and isn't the right fit.

MakerSquare vs. Wharton Generative AI for Business

Wharton's Generative AI for Business executive program is one of the most prestigious AI training options available. It runs for 4 consecutive in-person days at approximately $13,500. The audience is senior executives — the content is strategy, governance, and organizational use of AI, delivered at the Wharton level of intellectual rigor.

MakerSquare is $3,999 for 10 full days of in-person instruction. The audience is operators, founders, and domain experts who want to build AI tools themselves — not manage teams who build them. You leave with 3 deployed AI products; Wharton participants leave with frameworks and strategic clarity.

Wharton AI — best for
  • C-suite executives setting AI strategy for large organizations
  • People who need brand credibility alongside the content
  • Governance, ethics, and AI policy discussions
  • Those whose budget is not a constraint
MakerSquare — best for
  • Operators and founders who want to build, not just strategize
  • People who want deployed products by the end, not frameworks
  • Anyone who wants 10 days for the price of Wharton's 4
  • Non-technical professionals who need no prerequisites
Bottom line: Wharton is the right choice if you're a senior executive who needs strategic AI fluency and institutional credibility. MakerSquare is the right choice if you want to build. At $13,500 for 4 days vs. $3,999 for 10 days, the price-to-hands-on-time ratio heavily favors MakerSquare for anyone whose goal is to leave with working AI tools.

MakerSquare vs. UT Austin AI Programs

UT Austin offers AI training through multiple channels: McCombs School of Business executive education, continuing education through UT's Professional Education arm, and online programs run in partnership with Great Learning and edX. Prices range from approximately $2,800 for a 9-month online program to $5,000+ for executive-level offerings. Most are delivered online with async content and live virtual sessions.

MakerSquare is also in Austin — physically. Students are in the same city, building in person, and connecting with Austin's operator and tech community. For Austinites or anyone willing to travel to Austin for 2 weeks, the comparison is direct: 9–12 weeks of online coursework at a similar price vs. 2 weeks of in-person immersion that ends with a live Demo Day in front of Austin's tech community.

UT Austin AI — best for
  • Students who want UT's institutional brand on their resume
  • People who prefer a slower, semester-style pace with flexibility
  • Those who cannot take 2 weeks away from work or family
  • ML and Python-oriented learners comfortable with technical depth
MakerSquare — best for
  • Professionals who want 3 live AI products, not a certificate
  • People who've tried online courses and not finished them
  • Non-technical operators who need zero coding prerequisites
  • Austinites who want to build and connect locally
Bottom line: UT Austin is a strong choice for technical learners who want academic depth and a recognized credential at their own pace. MakerSquare is the choice for non-technical professionals who want to leave with something deployed. Both are in Austin — only one of them is in Austin with you, in person.

MakerSquare vs. General Assembly AI/ML Program

General Assembly is one of the most recognized names in tech education. Their AI/ML part-time program runs approximately 12 weeks, Monday and Thursday evenings from 6–9pm, fully online, at around $4,000. It's a structured curriculum with projects and instructor support — a serious program for working professionals who want to upskill without quitting their job.

MakerSquare is the same price and a very different experience. Two weeks, full days, in person. The tradeoff is real: General Assembly fits around your existing life; MakerSquare requires you to step away from it for 2 weeks. What you get for that commitment — 3 deployed products, a public Demo Day, a cohort of 14 other serious professionals in the same room — is not available in an evening program by design.

General Assembly — best for
  • Working professionals who genuinely cannot take 2 weeks off
  • People who prefer a structured evening curriculum over immersion
  • Those who want the General Assembly brand recognition
  • Learners who want a longer runway to absorb material
MakerSquare — best for
  • Professionals who can commit 2 weeks and want maximum output
  • People who've done evening programs and found them too easy to deprioritize
  • Operators who want 3 live products they use in their business immediately
  • Those who want a public Demo Day as a proof point
Bottom line: same price, completely different format. General Assembly is right if you need to fit learning around your life. MakerSquare is right if you're willing to step away from your life for 2 weeks to change it. The completion rate and shipped-product outcomes are very different between evening programs and immersive ones — that's the honest trade-off.

MakerSquare vs. Section, Maven & Live Online AI Courses

Section (formerly Section4) and Maven both offer cohort-based live online AI courses — typically 4–6 weeks, evening or weekend sessions, at $500–$2,000. These are among the better online options: live instruction, peer accountability, and structured cohorts rather than pure self-paced video. Section focuses on business leaders; Maven hosts courses from independent instructors across a range of AI topics.

The advantage over MakerSquare is access and price — you can take these from anywhere and pay significantly less. The trade-off is format: evenings and weekends around a full workweek are chronically deprioritized, the cohort is distributed across time zones, and neither program ends with you having deployed products you built from scratch. They're well-suited for awareness and concepts; MakerSquare is built for people who want to actually ship.

Section / Maven — best for
  • Getting AI literacy and a mental model for $500–$2,000
  • People who want to test the waters before committing to immersion
  • Remote learners who cannot travel to Austin
  • Teams that want lightweight async upskilling
MakerSquare — best for
  • People ready to move past concepts and actually build
  • Professionals who want deployed tools, not completed lessons
  • Those who know evening courses don't hold their attention
  • Anyone who wants a money-back guarantee tied to real output
Bottom line: Section and Maven are reasonable entry points if you want to understand AI before committing to something intensive. MakerSquare is the right next step when you're ready to stop learning about AI and start building with it. Many MakerSquare-type students have already done an online cohort and found it wasn't enough.

Why no other format produces
the same outcomes.

Online AI courses have a ~5% completion rate. That's not a motivation problem.

It's a structure problem. When there's no room to show up to, no cohort in the same city, and no consequence for skipping Tuesday's session — most people skip. The content is often fine. The format fails them. In-person with 14 other people who paid real money to be there is a different experience at a structural level.

AI skills compound daily. Space them out and you restart every week.

What you learn on Day 4 builds directly on Day 3. Stretch that over 12 weeks with a full job in between and you spend the first 20 minutes of every session catching up instead of pushing forward. Two uninterrupted weeks is the same reason language immersion works and Tuesday evening language class doesn't.

The guarantee no other program offers: ship 3 products or get your money back.

MakerSquare guarantees that every student leaves with 3 deployed AI products live on the internet — not exercises, not wireframes, not certificates. If you complete the 2 weeks and don't have all three deployed, you get a full refund. No other program in this comparison ties their money-back guarantee to a specific shipped outcome. That's how confident we are in the format.

Cohort 1 starts July 6, 2026.
$3,999. 15 seats. Enrollment closes June 26.

In-person, Austin TX. You leave with 3 deployed AI products — or a full refund. No coding background required.

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