Locksmith Training
By R. Drysdale
Locksmith training is for the creative and ambitious person with a mechanical aptitude, good hand-eye coordination and the patience to work with delicate mechanisms and parts. Members of a profession that is never likely to go away, locksmiths are entrusted with the safety of people, property, information and other resources. If you are an honest, bondable and personable individual, a career as a locksmith can be highly lucrative and rewarding.
Locksmith courses train new specialists in the profession and upgrade those who have already obtained some skills. As well as the traditional skills of lock picking, lock fitting, key cutting, rekeying, and safe opening, locksmith training now includes more recent technologies - electromagnetic lock systems, digital locks and combinations, and computerized security systems. Much of the background knowledge required for these new technologies can only be taught in a formal course setting (rather than on the job), and there is a definite trend toward credentialing and licensing for locksmiths, so locksmith schools are more and more in demand.
In the United States, midrange annual earnings for locksmiths are about $31,000. Earnings tend to be higher in the northeastern states and in the District of Columbia. Predictably, credentialed professionals who have succeeded in formal locksmith training have an easier time starting their own businesses and are favored over other candidates by employers. Those who invest in continuing education to stay up to date by taking locksmith courses will naturally maintain a good reputation with people who use their services.
Employment opportunities for locksmiths and safe repairers are expected to increase modestly between now and 2014: about 16 percent. Regionally, the increase in opportunities will be greater: America's Career InfoNet predicts that Idaho, Utah, Virginia, Nevada, and New Mexico will all require more than 30 percent more locksmiths and safe repairers by 2014. Again, graduates of locksmith training programs will be in the best position to take advantage of these opportunities.
Most colleges and schools that offer locksmith courses have websites now and are happy to provide information to potential students. To investigate and compare locksmith schools, visit websites and request information packages. Various educational formats are available, including on site, on line, and distance locksmith training.
R. Drysdale is a contributing editor to Locksmith Training at Accredited Online University, your one stop resource for the very best online college degree programs.
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