More than 40 years ago, PADI was a nonprofit corporation,
until the founders, in what surely seemed to
be self-dealing, set up a for-profit corporation and sold
it to themselves.
Since then, PADI has expanded and expanded, been
sold time and again, and is now owned by a consortium
of wealthy families and endowments in North
American and Europe. During the process, it has gained
wider and wider control, and now dominates the diving
market, making it difficult for non-PADI organizations
to compete. And now, things will get harder.
Just last month, PADI purchased Scuba Diving and Sport Diver magazines from Bonnier Corporation.
Years ago, PADI created a marketing vehicle called the
PADI Diving Society, to which it gave Sport Diver as
a "benefit" to those who joined. Apparently PADI is
closing the Diving Society down but "members" will
receive Sport Diver magazine until their individual
membership expiration dates.
To replace it, PADI stated on its website that it is
"is preparing to launch the all-new My PADI Club, designed specifically to meet today's divers' wants
and needs!" From our perspective, it's another vehicle
for marketing PADI courses, trips, equipment and
paraphernalia to divers.
New Diver appears to be Bonnier Corporation/
PADI's recently introduced free online supplement
aimed squarely at those about to take up or have
recently taken up diving, the audience traditionally
served by independent Dive Training magazine. (The
official magazine for PADI divemasters and instructors
continues to be The Undersea Journal, which is
unavailable to the public.
As for PADI's publications, we can't imagine other
training agencies like SSI, NAUI, SDI/TDI, etc. getting
any signification mention in their editorial pages or
articles in the future (although we'll wait and see).
After PADI's acquisition of the premier online dive
travel site, Diviac, which became PADI Dive Travel (travel.padi.com), it has an increased share of the dive
travel business, and continues to expand its reach into
the world of scuba diving.