Inferior to what? And in what way?
If you're talking about aesthetics, a professionally done inlet/bed job with pillars is going to look 5000x better than a few globs of Acraglass or JB Weld.
In terms of actual performance... Put it this way, I had an action professionally inletted and bedded. I ended up changing to a chassis, then to another composite stock, and on the new composite stock I put a dab of JB Weld on the recoil lug area, and another around the tang screw hole. Rifle still shoots 1/2 MOA. It's not perma-glued to the stock, I taped off surfaces that needed it, and cleaned up after the epoxy set just a little bit.
You don't NEED a full-length skim bed, nor do you NEED a full-length bed with the bedding compound all at the same thickness and a professional looking inlet. It does look very nice, though. You want the action not to be bound up in the stock, the action screws to touch nothing but the action and bottom metal, the trigger free-hanging, and the recoil lug squarely seated in ONE possible position. 2 gobs of epoxy accomplishes that.
Don't get me wrong, it is very possible to fuck up a bedding job, but you can get the same performance from an easy home-spun application as you can spending $750 to have it done professionally. No doubt there will be someone here to tell me that JB weld shrinks X% more than DEVCON or Marine Tex, and some other precise pointers, but if they mattered beyond the scope of "noise" I'd see it in my groups.
The other thing you're going to want to look at, because this is a walnut stock, is pillars. I typically say that in modern composite stocks pillars aren't really necessary, but in wood stocks I do suggest them. Wood fibers do compress, and they do swell with humidity and temperature changes, and it can mess with POI, action screw torque, accuracy, etc.
Oh, and Acraglas is runny. Get good with tape dams and clay. The Gel version filled with milled fiber or microballoons is a lot easier to work with.