Olympic figure skating coaches charge $90 an hour on average. Of course, people are willing to pay that to chase the Olympic dream. A gold medal, a career doing what you love, celebrity endorsements may one day pay for an investment in pursuit of glory. The closest thing we've ever had to a gold medal in diving is the GUE C-cards. The standards for trim, buoyancy, and propulsion were high and measurable. Getting a card was sometimes like getting a medal. Divers less deserving from a skill standpoint were awarded passes for a pro-DIR attitude, while some divers with demo quality skills were passed over. So, earning a card was subjective like earning a medal in skating. But, unlike skating, there is no real benefit in diving to being world-class.
Product Endorsements? No.
Glory? No.
Fame? No.
Positive recognition among peers? For every 1 diver that gives you a pat on the back, 5 will give you a kick in the teeth.
As for instructors:
More students? Probably less. For every student willing to travel 200+ miles and pay a fair price for a true quality class, 200 others will grab the Groupon special from a volume-based LDS. Competitors will tell people you are too hard, not nice, too arrogant, bad for the industry, not a good instructor because you can't teach well if lots of students don't pass, not fun, etc.
You have to be crazy to spend a lot of time and money perfecting your craft to help others achieve a high level of skill and understanding that will enhance safety and the experience of diving to only to be berated by an industry that believes high standards are a barrier to the average diver.
Product Endorsements? No.
Glory? No.
Fame? No.
Positive recognition among peers? For every 1 diver that gives you a pat on the back, 5 will give you a kick in the teeth.
As for instructors:
More students? Probably less. For every student willing to travel 200+ miles and pay a fair price for a true quality class, 200 others will grab the Groupon special from a volume-based LDS. Competitors will tell people you are too hard, not nice, too arrogant, bad for the industry, not a good instructor because you can't teach well if lots of students don't pass, not fun, etc.
You have to be crazy to spend a lot of time and money perfecting your craft to help others achieve a high level of skill and understanding that will enhance safety and the experience of diving to only to be berated by an industry that believes high standards are a barrier to the average diver.