If there is such a thing as a diver parlor game, it’s chatting
about just how many active divers there are in the U.S.
It’s a good game, but the truth is, nobody knows. The only
group that could actually determine the number, the Diving
Equipment and Marketing Association (DEMA), says it has
never been tasked with keeping a census of all certified divers
so consequently it has no concrete figures on the number
of certified divers in the U.S.
The number is important for at least two reasons. First,
people in the diving business or wishing to enter it create
business plans that need to be based on the number
of potential customers, that is, active divers. It’s odd that
DEMA, an organization with the mission to promote diving
and sell more products to a growing number of divers,
claims not to have this number. Second, knowing exactly
how many divers there are will make accident and fatality
statistics accurate.
Three and a Half Million Divers in 1988?
Nearly twenty years ago, conventional wisdom was that
3.5 million Americans were active sport divers, defined
then as divers making at least three dives year, which isn’t much activity. That figure came from an estimate by one
individual, John McAniff, the sole employee of the National
Underwater Diving Accident Data Center (NUDADC) at
the University of Rhode Island, which soon afterwards got
scooped up by the Divers Alert Network (DAN). However,
Robert Monaghan, a NAUI and PADI instructor with doctoral
training in statistical modeling, argued in a series of
Undercurrent articles that the active diver population was
actually closer to 700,000. Subsequently, McAniff told
Undercurrent that the 3.5 million number was “purely my
guesstimates and have been arrived at without any insider
information, and may well be inaccurate.”
Undercurrent looked at other perspectives. The National
Sporting Goods Dealers Association claimed that in 1986,
1.6 million Americans made one or more dives (including
resort course dives, clearly a larger population than
the “active divers” guesstimated by the NUDADC). Paul
Tzimoulis, publisher of the then-dominant dive publication
Skin Diver, told us that he assumed an active diver market
of roughly 1.1 million when promoting the magazine.
Undercurrent, combining data from several sources, calculated
an active diver base approaching 600,000 in the late 1980s.
Of course, you can’t calculate the number of divers if
you don’t know the number initially certified or the dropout
rate. It was at a time when PADI alone was claiming
to certify 400,000 divers annually (a grossly inflated number,
as we’ll show later). Monaghan used that number, but
claimed that the dropout rate was close to 80 percent. PADI
objected to such a high figure, though that statistic had
come from a PADI publication. Based on PADI student surveys,
the agency posited that the actual rate was somewhere
“around 40 percent after three years.” A research firm hired
by DEMA conducted a diver erosion study that proclaimed
a dropout rate of only 15 percent after 12 months, with 47
percent of divers still active after four years.
Not Much Change 20 Years Later
Today, in the 21st century, you’d expect the industry to
have a better handle on things, right? Well, not so fast, Buck
Rogers. Numbers are still hard to find and certify because
dive organizations are tight-lipped about their data, refusing
to share it with the public and even with each other. “The
industry is under-reported,” says Mark Young, publisher of
Dive Center Business. “We don’t know much about ourselves.” Renee Duncan of DAN told us, “There’s really no true
number for certified divers because this is not a regulated
industry, so it will always be a squishy figure. We’ve quoted
the 1 to 3 million number on our diving fatality reports.”
Dive organizations are tight-lipped,
refusing to share their data with the
public and even with each other |
Until this spring, PADI’s website addressed the question
“How Many Active Divers Are There in the US?” by noting
that it is one of the most frequently asked questions PADI
America receives. The most recent estimates posted (for
the calendar year 2000) ranged from 1.6 to 2.9 million, but
they were recently taken off the site (PADI did not respond
to multiple phone calls we made to discuss these numbers).
Nor does NAUI, SDI/TDI or SSI list figures on their web
sites.
William Cline, founder of the diving consultancy firm
Cline Group, says he extrapolated several sources to come
up with the industry’s accepted number of three million divers
in the U.S., but he believes there are actually more. “If
you look at the total number of divers within the U.S. that
have been certified over the past 25 years, take into account
attrition (by natural causes), and use an average certification
figure escalating from 1980, considered the beginning
of the real U.S. growth for scuba, you end up with six million
certified, living divers in the U.S.
“However, and there is a big however to this number,”
he adds, “No one speaks about the masses that are certified but only occasionally participate—in most cases, never since
their certification.”
Dane Farnum, once the publisher of Scuba Diver and
now in charge of it and several other magazines with F+W
Publications, told Undercurrent that he figures there are
about a million people who make five or more dives a year.
How Many Divers Get Certified?
In 1988, PADI reported certifying 400,000, but it was
clearly an inflated number that included all certifications
– e.g., rescue diver – and dual certifications (it was common
for people to complete one course, but get cards from
two agencies). Bret Gilliam, who founded the training agency
TDI/SDI, started the magazine Fathoms and was once
the CEO of dive gear manufacturer UWATEC, says that
dive agencies routinely blow smoke up people’s skirts, and
PADI’s figures were “far from the truth.” No other agencies
reported the numbers they certified, but PADI was not the
dominant training agency that it is today, so 800,000 new
divers a year might have easily been assumed by McAniff.
In 2002, four agencies – PADI, SSI, NAUI and SDI –
agreed to share data. They reported certifying 177,000 new
divers, but it is unlikely that certifications have dropped 50
percent since PADI’s claim. But McAniff’s 3.5 million diver
guess in 1988 was clearly based on an inflated number, easily
three times too high.
Unfortunately, certification data in the future won’t be
much good.While DEMA’s certification audit gets data from
four big agencies, there are 10 total and six refuse to play
fair. Mark Young says one agency is planning to bail out
because of political reasons. “Plus, the numbers they send
in are not a complete picture because the agencies themselves
question the numbers and how they’re gotten.”
“We’re not attracting as many new divers,
we’re a graying population, and younger
people are going for more extreme sports.” |
What’s An “Active Diver”?
The dive industry has no consensus about the definition
of an active diver. “No one has defined it. Is it once a year?
Every two years?” says Young. “And if you do define it, how
do you know who fits that category? If asked at a party,
someone will say he’s a diver when in reality the last time
he dived was three years ago. Your certification card is good
forever. A pilot license requires a medical exam every two
years, but there is no equivalent for dive recertification.”
Then there’s the issue of how different parts of the dive
industry track the divers who matter most to them. “To
Undercurrent, it’s someone who plunks down $59 a year,”
Cline says. “To a dive resort, it’s someone who plunks down $2,000 every couple of years. To Scubapro, it’s someone
buying a snorkel or fins, while to a certifying agency it is
someone taking training or buying books.”
The participation rate is also nebulous, Cline says. “We
evolved from a ‘dive once a month’ to a ‘one dive vacation a
year’ to be considered active.” The National Sporting Goods
Association, which does an annual sports participation study,
shows the number of divers at 2.1 million; however, it just
asks people, “Did you participate in scuba diving on one or
more occasions?” In polls like these, braggarts and wishful
thinkers inflate the numbers substantially.
The other methods used to get diver counts typically get
lower figures. By using market share data from resort destinations
and extrapolating for countries divers came from, the
U.S. has 1.5 million traveling divers, not taking resort courses
into account. Insiders estimate that paid dive magazine subscriptions
fall well below half a million.
Dropout Rates
How many people stop scuba diving and when is either
unknown or the industry’s best kept secret. When asked
about dropout rates, DEMA spokesperson Lisa Blau said,
“With regards to the number of new divers certified offsetting
the number of people leaving the sport, it is well known
and confirmed by two separate studies conducted by two different companies, several years apart, that more than
half the divers certified in a given year are still active five to
seven years following their initial certification. By calculation,
the number entering the sport would be far greater
than the number becoming inactive.” But when Undercurrent asked for the sources of those two studies, Blau said she
was unable to provide them. We could find no one else who
knew of these studies.
Though DAN is seeing its membership grow, spokesperson
Renee Duncan says the industry is flat right now.
“Everyone acknowledges that. We’re not attracting as many
new divers, we’re a graying population, and younger people
seem to be going for more extreme sports.” Diving is no longer
considered an extreme sport.
Across the pond, the English seem to agree. The British
Sub Aqua Club posted this gloomy outlook on its website.
“Over the past few years, the UK Diving industry has been
challenged by deteriorating business conditions. Consumer
habits are different and markets have changed. The traditional
description of a UK Diver, and likely member of the British
Sub-Aqua Club, has shifted. Increasingly individuals take up
diving as one of a range of activities experienced for a short
time before moving on to something else. New divers often
take to the water for the first time abroad and are less inclined
to continue when faced with conditions in UK water.”
All sorts of numbers are bandied about for the actual
dropout rate after the first year, ranging from as low as 40
percent to as high as 80 percent, but nothing is official.
When describing scuba classes on his website, Mark Scott,
owner of Mark’s Water Fantasy Diving in Maui, states that
PADI has the highest dropout rate of any certification agency.
When asked where he got that statistic, Scott replied that
he saw it on several websites, although Undercurrent didn’t
find it posted anywhere else.
So, for comparison, let us cite Undercurrent renewal statistics.
After the first year of subscribing, 40 percent of our
subscribers continue. After the second year, 65 percent stay
with us and after the third year, 85 percent remain. In the
magazine business, that is exceptionally good, and those
numbers are ones to be proud of. However, it also means
that after three years, only 22 percent of initial subscribers remain. Now, over the years many of these subscribers
return - - they start diving again, start traveling, whatever.
But we can’t count them as active subscribers if they’re not
paying money and so our dropout rate, after three years, is
78 percent. We suspect the dive industry would be delighted
to have rates like these.
So How Many Divers Are There?
If you define active as taking five or more dives a year,
which seems reasonable, we think 1.2 million, plus or minus
15 percent, might hit it pretty close. And we will be pleased
to publish any data to the contrary.
-- Ben Davison
In the next issue, we’ll discuss what numbers the insurance industry
uses for divers, and the growth rate of the dive industry’s future.