I want to take the DiveCon course here in the next few months but I am trying to find out what I must do to teach open water. I know that an SSI instructor must be affiliated with an SSI Dive Shop but what is considered an SSI Dive Shop. My brother and I got our OW certs about ten years ago and the SSI Instructor who did our class had his own shop out of his garage. I know that probably sounds bad but it was a pretty nice shop. He had rental gear, he sold gear and he had a compressor. Is this considered a dive shop to SSI. I have done most of my certs through SSI so far and I would like to keep it that way but I am wondering if I should switch it up now that I am considering going pro. I believe with most other agencies you can teach freelance. Anyone have any opinions? Thanks for your time.
There are PADI, TDI, SDI, SSI, etc. dive shops in Ontario that are run out of garages. Some of them are bigger and better than shops located in retail strip malls. So I would worry about whether the shop is in a garage or a traditional retail environment.
If you want to confirm a shop is a SSI dive shop, go to
Dive SSI. In the upper right corner of the home page are two text fields. One is a general search box and the other is for locating SSI dive shops. If I enter just 'texas' I get 23 results. Most are around Houston but they have one as far north as Amarillo.
If you are going pro there are two things to consider. One where do you want to teach? If there are no SSI shops in the area you want to teach, switching to other agencies might not be easy. PADI is the most popular agency. To switch from anything to PADI, PADI requires you to complete the entire course again or they will take your current rating as prerequisite for upgrading. For example, if you are a SSI DiveCon and want to switch to PADI, you can either take the full PADI DiveMaster course or you can use your DiveCon as a prerequisite to enter the PADI OW Scuba Instructor program.
The other is who are the instructors in your area for each agency. I'd learn from a great instructor on a virtually unknown dive agency but I'd go to a PADI instructor who isn't very good. In other words, it is all about the instructor.
Ideally, you want a good instructor in an agency that is widely recognized in the area you want to teach.