I've been a pretty harsh critic of the way
IICRC worked in the past, but I'm coming around.
Is it worth becoming a member?
Up until now you paid to be a
Certified Firm or registrant, and got little more than a listing and whatever you could do to market that yourself. Because the
IICRC can't have members like an association does, it can't do anything for a registrant like an association can do for a member.
That's changing, as the Certified Firms are going to become members of the IICRCA (A for Association) in a few months. The association will be able to provide more promotional and other benefits like other associations. (One rumored benefit is that the IICRCA convention will cost members nothing, and will have no sales pitches disguised as information.)
They currently just send leads that have come in through their website. If you have a lot of other CFs in your service area those are split on a rotating basis. Some report better success at turning those leads into jobs than others.
For carpet warranty requirement is it just as well to pay into CRI mafia? Just wondering.
A lot of us refuse to join the CRI program because the CRI gets it wrong so often when it comes to telling us how to do our job. It's way cheap, but you do have to pledge to use no chemical or equipment provider that hasn't already paid to be approved by the CRI - and those companies pay thousands.
I found a carpet store that is looking for a cleaner and trying to get my ducks in a row.
Since
IICRC certification is being recommended for warranty cleaning work in a lot of carpet maker's paperwork, saying "I run a firm certified by the International Cleaning Insitute and the Carpet and Rug Institute" might be worth the price.
IICRC certification is STRONGLY recommended in the CRI agreement, so if you're going the CRI way you may as well join both programs.
http://www.carpet-rug.org/documents/soa/CRI_SOA_Service_Provider_Packet.pdf