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  1. #1

    Default Simple

    Register as an apprentice at tobacconistuniversity.org. Study your butt off, and they administer an exam, if you pass it you get a certification.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
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    Alberta Canada
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    Default

    Hi from Alberta, Canada
    It matters not how strait the gate,
    How charged with punishments the scroll.
    I am the master of my fate:
    I am the captain of my soul.

    ***William Ernest Henley***

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
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    Wichita, KS
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by MikePach View Post
    Register as an apprentice at tobacconistuniversity.org. Study your butt off, and they administer an exam, if you pass it you get a certification.
    A certification that does what, exactly? Give you the leg up in employment at a cigar shop? Just curious.

    I've read some of the stuff on that site before, and was kinda guessing that's what you were referring to. Do you do any practical type "labs"....as in growing tobacco or actually fermenting it, or rolling cigars, or producing pipe tobacco?

  4. #4

    Default Well

    I already work in the industry, me and my colleagues were mandated to enroll and graduate the program. There are a few levels of certification. Consumer; retail; Master. As you go up the ranks the information you learn gets more and more in depth. For instance a master tobacconist must log a certain amount of field and factory hours in order to earn certification. At my level "retail" it serves to give me a more formal schooling in the industry.

    As for whether it gives me a "leg up" or bolsters my credibility that's for potential future employers and customers to decide.

    I worked in the tobacco industry for a while before taking the classes and I was surprised with how much more information it gave me. The bulk of the work centers around the history of tobacco industry, and the functional process of going from seed to cigar, then it moves on to varietals and so on and so forth. You can read the text book online if you like, the page is a bit clunky but its loaded with information I haven't seen elsewhere.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
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    Cape Breton Island, Nova Scotia
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    Quote Originally Posted by MikePach View Post
    I already work in the industry, me and my colleagues were mandated to enroll and graduate the program. There are a few levels of certification. Consumer; retail; Master. As you go up the ranks the information you learn gets more and more in depth. For instance a master tobacconist must log a certain amount of field and factory hours in order to earn certification. At my level "retail" it serves to give me a more formal schooling in the industry.

    As for whether it gives me a "leg up" or bolsters my credibility that's for potential future employers and customers to decide.

    I worked in the tobacco industry for a while before taking the classes and I was surprised with how much more information it gave me. The bulk of the work centers around the history of tobacco industry, and the functional process of going from seed to cigar, then it moves on to varietals and so on and so forth. You can read the text book online if you like, the page is a bit clunky but its loaded with information I haven't seen elsewhere.
    "my colleagues and I"

    What shop do you work at?
    TBSCigars - "On Holiday"
    Grammar - It's the difference between knowing your crap and knowing you're crap.

  6. #6

    Default Sorry

    Info
    Last edited by MikePach; 03-07-2013 at 01:38 PM.

  7. #7
    Join Date
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    Um, what did I miss? It's interesting, and the site does contain some good information.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
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    Default

    What shop do you work at? I visit NYC on a regular basis.
    TBSCigars - "On Holiday"
    Grammar - It's the difference between knowing your crap and knowing you're crap.

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