CertCities.com -- The Ultimate Site for Certified IT Professionals
Free CertCities.com Newsletter via E-mail
  Microsoft®
  Cisco®
  Security
  Oracle®
  A+/Network+"
  Linux/Unix
  More Certs
  Newsletters
  Salary Surveys
  Forums
  News
  Exam Reviews
  Tips
  Columns
  Features
  PopQuiz
  RSS Feeds
  Industry Releases
  Contributors
  About Us
  Search
 

Advanced Search
  Free Newsletter
  Sign-up for the #1 Weekly IT
Certification News
and Advice.
Subscribe to CertCities.com Free Weekly E-mail Newsletter
CertCities.com

See What's New on
Redmondmag.com!

Cover Story: Content Cops

Managing in Isolation

Keep an Eye on Those Servers

6 Steps to a Simpler Network

Your Turn: The Good and the Bad of MBSA


CertCities.com
Let us know what you
think! E-mail us at:



-- advertisement --
Traveling to a
Tradeshow or Event?
Bowling Green Hotels
Breastfeeding Medications
Hotels in Pingtung
North Acton Hotels
Windows Network Software
Las Vegas The Paris
Panama City Beach Hotels
Tombstone Az Hotels
Hotels in Pontorson France
Hotel Booking France

 
 
...Home ... Editorial ... News ..News Story Monday: May 9, 2005

-- advertisement --
Free white papers, case studies, research and more for the IT Manager:

Blade Systems Move into the Mainstream

Sarbanes-Oxley Compliance

StorageWorks for E-mail Retention

Policy-based Data Management

IT Service Management


CompTIA Bans Discount Voucher Resales


3/5/2003 -- On March 1, the Computing Technology Industry Association implemented a new policy aimed at shutting down Web sites that offer discounted CompTIA exam vouchers directly to the public.

Currently, a handful of companies use their membership discount to buy exam vouchers in bulk directly from CompTIA and then resell these online for less than the non-membership price of the organization's certification exams.

Effective this week, CompTIA is banning the sale of vouchers sold "independently to non-members." Instead, providers must bundle the vouchers with other services, such as training.

CompTIA offers several vendor-neutral certification exams, including A+, Network+ and Security+. The non-member price of these exams ranges from $139 to $225 (U.S.) per exam.

In an e-mail sent to several discount voucher providers on Monday, CompTIA explained that the policy was implemented to protect its member benefits program. "The discounts for certification vouchers are one of most important reasons many of our members choose to join and renew their memberships with CompTIA," wrote Edward Grace, CompTIA's sales operations manager. "The intent of the discount is to allow our members to purchase discounted vouchers for their own employees....It was never CompTIA’s intention to have our members reselling stand-alone vouchers."

The decision also appears to be financially motivated. In a memo sent to several of the same providers on Tuesday, CompTIA said it estimates that 17,686 of these discounted vouchers were sold to the public last year. These members paid a total $1,454,257 for their vouchers, or $82.23 per voucher. "Had CompTIA received the nonmember rate of $145.76 as opposed to the discounted rate of $82.23 for those 17,686 vouchers, CompTIA would have recognized an additional $1,123,591 in revenue," the memo states.

"These vouchers are sold individually [one at a time], or in bulk as 'stand alone' sales which has the effect of reducing the value of membership and depriving CompTIA of additional revenue," the memo continues.

CompTIA stated in the memo that providers who don't comply with the new policy will have their membership revoked.

"This policy is...a big surprise to all of us," commented Andy Barkl, trainer and owner of the Web site http://vouchers.wetrainit.com. (Barkl is also contributing online editor to CertCities.com.) " I've been involved with the CompTIA program since 1996 and I think they have really gone overboard this time."

"CompTIA wants and begs for promotion of their programs but then tries to limit who can belong to their group of promoters," he continued. "I will stop offering discount vouchers to the public certification community, but most likely I will also stop promoting CompTIA certifications and not renew my corporate membership next year."

"It's a crock..." commented another voucher reseller, who asked not to be named. "I don't agree with their math...that we cost them a million dollars."

"I don't believe that all the people who bought vouchers through us would have bought them through CompTIA if these sites weren't around," the source explained. "Individuals don't buy vouchers through CompTIA. Most test takers go through the test centers directly, and I have to believe that Prometric and Vue take a cut..."

"I honestly feel that CompTIA can't see the forest through the trees," the source continued. "With all the money these [resale] companies are spending promoting the CompTIA name through banner advertisements and links...it's hard to believe that CompTIA doesn't see this as a win-win situation."

When asked for a response, a spokesperson for CompTIA e-mailed the following statement. "CompTIA is formalizing and enforcing an existing policy to protect the value of membership. We have a responsibility to all our members to ensure an equitable and level playing field and protect the value that membership offers.

"Knowingly or unknowingly, individuals reselling vouchers are diluting that value. At the same time, this practice is depriving some of our member training companies of sales revenue that would be generated in the bundling of training and testing packages. CompTIA must, as an industry association, protect that value."

As for candidates who previously purchased vouchers through these sites, the spokesperson recommended that individuals "approach their employer to see if the employer is a member of CompTIA, since reduced pricing for tests is a benefit of membership and available to all employees of a member organization."

The voucher providers interviewed for this story said they were told by CompTIA that they would be given two to three weeks to comply with the policy. One provider, who also did not want to be named, stated that it seemed that the ban was still up for negotiation, but other providers we talked with said that they felt the new policy was "pretty final."  -B.N.



There are 79 CertCities.com user Comments for “CompTIA Bans Discount Voucher Resales”
Page 3 of 8
3/6/03: Anonymous says: CompTIA is tightening belts in other areas too, including personnel. From experience, many of us have probably been part of a company that needs to cust costs...NOW. The decisions made during these times aren't always the smartest, and rarely look beyond the current or next quarter. Sales are sales, so cutting off a sales channel sure seems short-sighted to me. This wouldn't be the first time they missed the forest because of too many trees.....
3/6/03: Anonymous from USA says: Just wait - next we will have to upgrade our certs as new versions are released!! Certification is just one big money making business.
3/6/03: EPC from Georgia, USA says: This reminds me of when congress raised luxury taxes on yachts. All they could think of was all the money they were going to generate. Well people quit buying yachts and it drove most of the industry out of business. CompTIA will do the same. They will drive people away and they will go out of business. Unless of course they are already going that way and are trying to find ways to stay afloat. Instead they should do the opposite. Lower prices, increase the quality of the test and get a large volume of certified techs with a certification that has meaning. Oh yes, and good customer service too. That alwyas helps.
3/6/03: Romain from Paris, France says: Maybe Certification is "just one big money making business" Mr Anonymous...But tell me? What in this base world is not money? Does RedHat act out of base commercial motives with an 800$ exam?
3/6/03: Anonymous says: they want mo' money
3/6/03: anonymous says: This is the reason why more people (once they get their foot in the door) should be looking at a 2 or 4 year degree in IS-IT-CS (since it will never expire, and can be used to move upwards in your career).
3/6/03: Anonymous says: Do you believe that you take two A plus test (OS and hardware) will cost you us$400 ?? It's money eating business. And a plus training cost you $2000 for a week! --- Do you believe that and want to spend your money ! I passed the A plus OS and give up to further to test the hardware any more! It's too expensive for any comptia test!!! It's suck!
3/6/03: Anonymous says: Comptia try to get every money in certifications business. They try to eat out all their comptetitor. They got the orginal A plus, so they have network plus and I-Network to eat CIW, and they have server plus to eat CIW, Server exam, they have wireless plus, linux plus, and security plus to eat CISSP/SAN GIAC and CIW Security, and they have Project plus to eat out PMP, and sooner or later they have Switches plus and Router Plus and FireWall Plus and Anti-Virus Plus.... SQL Plus and Oracle Plus businesss... SO Certification or not ! Our guy try to prove to the employer we have skills, experience, and plus certification SO are you buying or not ? Comptia is a BIG SHARK !! It's eating and destroy you. Can I have a COMPTIA COMBO PLUS ??? That I do not need to spend to much time and money any more!!!!
3/6/03: Stop your whining says: I love watching people who have never had to balance a set of company books or meet a payroll piss and moan about other people's business practices. And it's hysterical to see these voucher resellers and you test takers whine about greed because you're no longer able to take a full exam at a discount price. Talk about greed. That's like some welfare queen complaining about other people's greed because they won't give her more money to stay home and watch television all day long. It's the people who expect and demand something for nothing, those are the greedy ones.
3/6/03: BetMen from USA says: Combo-plus would be a good choice, if any, rather than taking all those nonsense-pluses which are knock-offs of those original certs posted above... I studies some of them, A-plus, Net-plus, Server-plus but will probably take only A+ which is still worth it...
First Page   Previous Page     Next Page   Last Page
Your comment about: “CompTIA Bans Discount Voucher Resales”
Name: (optional)
Location: (optional)
E-mail Address: (optional)
Comment:
   

top

Sponsored Links:
Free Authorized Cisco eLearning: from Global Knowledge
LAN/WAN Consultant Placement Camp: Guaranteed to get you eng/consulting gigs!
$10,000 MCSE/CISCO Scholarship: offered to top techs throughout the US!
FREE PRACTICE EXAMS: Test Gurus
Storage Guide: Control growth and maximize storage resources
Exchange migration survival guide and poster: It's new and it's FREE!
Subscribe to Redmond magazine: It’s free and available in print or PDF!
Fresh Cisco White Papers: Get them now on TCPmag.com
IT certification news delivered weekly: Subscribe Today!




Home | Microsoft® | Cisco® | Oracle® | A+/Network+" | Linux/Unix | MOS | Security | List of Certs
Advertise | Contact Us | Contributors | Features | Forums | News | Pop Quiz | Tips | Industry Releases | RSS Feeds RSS Feeds from CertCities.com
Search | Site Map | ENTmag.com | MCPmag.com | TCPmag.com | TechMentor Conferences | 101communications | Privacy Policy
This Web site is not sponsored by, endorsed by or affiliated with Cisco Systems, Inc., Microsoft Corp., Oracle Corp., The Computing Technology Industry Association, Linus Torvolds, or any other certification or technology vendor. Cisco® and Cisco Systems® are registered trademarks of Cisco Systems, Inc. Microsoft, Windows and Windows NT are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corp. Oracle® is a registered trademark of Oracle Corp. A+®, i-Net+T, Network+T, and Server+T are trademarks and registered trademarks of The Computing Technology Industry Association. (CompTIA). LinuxT is a registered trademark of Linus Torvalds. All other trademarks belong to their respective owners.
Reprints allowed with written permission from the publisher. For more information, e-mail
Application Development Trends | Campus Technology | CertCities.com | The Data Warehousing Institute | E-Gov | ENT News
Enterprise Systems | Federal Computer Week | IT Compliance Institute | JavaSPEKTRUM | MCP TechMentor Conferences
MCPmag.com | OBJEKTspektrum | Recharger | Redmond magazine | SIGS-DATACOM | TCPmag.com
Coming July 2005 Redmond Channel Partner magazine.
Copyright 1996-2005 101communications. See our Privacy Policy.
101communications