I am in love with online, on-demand courses! I learned English, I refined my InDesign skills, and I am currently taking on Mandarin-and all of these with online resources.
Be aware that this solution will probably be more expensive.Īfter taking your live training, Iʼd suggest you come back here to this post and have a look to the resources you can find online-because I am sure most of the content that youʼll find there wonʼt be explained in class! If you prefer traditional courses, Iʼd suggest you find your local Adobe User Group (former InDesign User Group) from this list and see what options or suggestions they have for you.
You have two choices here: offline or online. Itʼs what you should watch if your manager drops you an InDesign file that needs some edits and youʼve never seen InDesign before.īut if your job requires you to work with InDesign for more than a couple of hours a week-then you should immediately consider a more in-depth training. That course is the first step you can take. That course is from David Blatner-one of the best teachers you can have-but that course is not for the person that will spend every day on InDesign, creating documents from scratch and then going to print.
Youʼll see below that I linked a course that promises to teach you how to use InDesign in 22 mins! But does that mean that you will need to learn how to use a super-complex solution that takes years for people to master it, in ONLY 20 minutes? Once you understand it, you will be able to create amazing layouts. InDesign is a well-designed, extremely user-friendly piece of software. The short answer is YES.Ī course is absolutely necessary to learn how to use InDesign and avoid painful (EMBARRASSING) mistakes! Is an InDesign course necessary to learn how to use it?