I was wondering how you guys feel about ASE certs and who has which or all and which are you signed up for.
I put it off for years. I really didn't see any need for bothering with it. I was stubbing good hours, my pay scale was the max that the shop paid, I wasn't on a team system, the dispatcher didn't hate me, and nobody messed with me. Life was good. About the only guys that I'd see wearing the ASE patch were the kids fresh out of trade school.
Then in the 1980's, the service director of the dealership I was working at decided that he wanted every wrench puller in the place certified. If I remember right, this had something to do with either the Mr.Goodwrench advertising or GM's big customer satisfaction push.
At any rate, there wasn't a whole hell of a lot of interest by the mechanics. <yawn>
Then he figured out a way to get our attention...
He offered to pay for and order the study guides, pay the test fees, chauffeur us to the test site, and then pay each of us fifty bucks cash for each certification we passed. If we got them all, he'd toss in an extra hundred bucks I think it was, for the "master" certification.
I took him up on the offer, as did pretty much the entire shop. I passed them all and did the same for the truck "master" certification when the next testing cycle came around.
Other than the bribes that I was paid to pass the tests, I honestly don't think that the certification ever made any impact on my earnings. I let them expire.
But, it's been a couple of few years since I darkened a stall in a dealership other than to visit. It's very possible that today, the worm has turned and the certifications will further your career. If nothing else, if you're looking for a job in this job market, the certification might make the difference between you getting hired or not getting hired.
WoD