Michael Guerrero
Contributor
So the instructors keep the money they make for certifying students then?
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Full-time or as a hobby job?Please respond with your views on the pros and cons of working for a shop vs. being an independent instructor.
My initial thought is that working for a shop gives you better access to fills, gear, and students, but I'm assuming they may want you to also commit to hours and that you have to split your student fees with them.
Thoughts?
You're making a lot of assumptions here TBone. Besides, I think it's a totally different thing for a diver who thinks they have the necessary skill and knowledge to be a scuba instructor to want a quick certification program than a shop to push thousands of dollars of equipment on a newly minted open water diver that many in fact never dive again.
Let's keep the threads separate if possible please so we can maintain focus. If you want to question the motivations of someone who wants to become and instructor quickly, please do it in the other thread.
Thanks,
Mike
You may collect additional pay in the form of a check or you may have in-store credit. Best to have that conversation before hand.So, there are instructors who actually work for shops doing various things (I assume they get paid hourly).
In most cases if you're an on-staff instructor you are required to dive during classes in the gear the store carries. Some will say this is your 'uniform' and you will purchase and use it. Others will say, you can use anything in <insert store carried brand here> catalog.These shops may impose restrictions on the equipment the instructor uses to the lines they carry (could teach in rental gear?), but the instructor may have more of an influence on how the place is run since they're a part of it.
The stores I have worked for have paid for me to attend service tech courses on the gear they carry as long as I'm doing the service for them. If I wanted to attend so I could service my own, it;s on my dime.Do shops pay to get their service techs certified to maintain their line(s) of equipment, inspect tanks, blend gas, perform O2 cleaning, etc? And you get under their group insurance policy.
Course fees as in tuition? You may still have to pay the store for pool time, gear use and materials.There are people who are "associated" with shops, where they routinely bring their students and have a relationship with the shop that is symbiotic. This is more likely in areas with lots of diving? In this scenario the instructor keeps the course fees? And you might get on their insurance.