I'm having problems with this; don't Certifying Agencies compete for Dive Shop alliance? I remember SSI turned my old dive shop from PADI about 12 years ago (before they went out of business). Doesn't that mean that both SSI and PADI have to implicitly help the LDS? From the course material in both isn't there a mantra throughout training to 'consult with your local dive shop on any equipment questions you have?'. Your correct in that the agencies don't INSIST that you purchase gear, BUT they compete for LDS business and therefore are stuck in an LDS centered business model.
Well, yes and no. SSI, for example, requires all instructors to affiliate with a dive shop, and those dive shops will have equipment for sale, more often than not. Other agencies, like PADI for example, permit independent instructors (including those in club formats) to conduct training and issue certifications, which is why you've been given some advice about seeking out independents. We independents (myself included) are not affiliated with an agency-registered shop, and some of us, again like me, do not stock equipment for sale at all, but we do need to make money somehow. In my case, it's through sales of dive trips. You'll notice that not only do the materials discuss equipment ownership, but they also discuss (and show in the imagery) travel destinations.
Agency affiliation isn't required of a scuba training facility, but the agencies furnish a good deal of marketing assistance and offer other perks (like discounts on the purchase of instructional materials), so most do affiliate. Shops don't affiliate with the agencies in order to sell equipment, but instead to bring in new customers, usually as student divers, whom the shops hope will ultimately buy equipment or dive outings. That big blue globe with the red scuba diver is instantly recognizable throughout the world and is a strong brand that potential customers (even non-divers) recognize. In fact, prospective students are very often heard to say "I want to get my PADI" or "I just got my PADI" when what they really mean is that they plan to take an Open Water course or have just become Open Water certified. Brand presence matters when you are putting those banners up outside the shop.
Now, because selling equipment is an important source of revenue for dive shops, instructors are expected to help sell. If they don't help sell, then the business may not prosper, and then they are out of jobs. The agencies support this role for the instructor in that the agencies must prepare prospective instructors for multiple roles in a dive operation, one of which is selling. So "implicitly" the agencies do help the LDS by telling instructor candidates to be prepared to sell, even if their main function in the business is bringing new customers to the store by way of the courses they're teaching. As far as the agency is concerned, yes, it is in their best interest for dive shops to be profitable since a busy shop that is drawing in lots of new dive students will help them sell their (the agency's) products (certifications and learning materials). So the agencies are going to be in competition for the most successful shops, and if in order to be successful, instructors (and materials) need to encourage student divers to buy locally rather than from the kinds of online businesses you cite that do not bring the industry new customers that's what you will see in the classes and in the materials. Additionally, instructors are also expected to mention upcoming dive trips that students might be interested in joining. That's a sales pitch in the same way that saying "you can find great gear down at the shop."
I'm here in the San Francisco bay area and I'm not seeing a lot of thriving dive shops. Given the disposable income of this area, Dive Shops should be thriving, and yet one of the largest closed, and the others I've visited don't exactly look like they are going gang busters. I read an interesting
blog post on experienced Divers versus new divers and really got me thinking about the future of certification agencies and the future of the dive shop. From my perspective the LDS looks like the local bookstore, and yes we love the local bookstore, but amazon is so much easier/cheaper; I think much of the Local Dive Shop business is being 'cored out' by the online retailers. It kind of struck me that Dive Magazines promote gear by responding to manufacturers and Certifying Agencies promote Local Dive Shops, what if the future has many fewer Local Dive Shops?
We don't know. What if, indeed.