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I've brought this up at previous APS town halls and still nothing - but we really ought to be thinking about training the next generation of experts now, before it's too late.
Thinking about this, I came to the following conclusions. For one to be an expert in philately, one really needs the following:
1) Be independently wealthy or be subsidized by a wealthy benefactor.
There are no philatelic apprenticeships or unions that guarantee a living wage, and most retirees don't have the desire or energy to work full time because, let's be realistic, being an expertizer is a full time job, so the vast majority of collectors simply cannot become expertizers even if they wanted to.
2) Be a prolific collector in the intended area of expertise. Reading books is helpful but owning, handling, and studying one's own stamps is the best way to learn, imo. Why would anyone trust their classic US stamps to an expertizer who only collects stamps from the British Empire, etc.?
3) Be detail oriented.If you haven't the patience or ability to be a "flyspecker", you have no chance at being a successful expertizer.
4) Reputation, reputation, reputation!If I quit my day job and apply to work for PSE, PF, etc., or open up "Rileysan's Philatelic Expertizing Service", tomorrow, who in their right mind is going to hire me, let alone trust me to handle their expensive stamps without me having been actively involved in philately at a national or international level? It would take many years (and references) to establish one's reputation before they could reasonably expect to become an expert in any area of philately.
I'm sure there are many other criteria you all can think of, but these few stand out to me.
What else do you, the community, think is needed?
Brian