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AICP - do you advertise?

Where and when do you put AICP after your name?

  • I worked hard for those four initials, and use them whenever and wherever I can!

    Votes: 9 37.5%
  • I use them on my resume, publications, bio etc., but not on letters or memos

    Votes: 5 20.8%
  • I passed the test, but don't use the initials - ever

    Votes: 1 4.2%
  • I haven't taken/passed yet, but when I earn the initials I will use them!

    Votes: 6 25.0%
  • Don't have AICP, don't want it

    Votes: 3 12.5%

  • Total voters
    24
  • Poll closed .

ssc

Cyburbian
Messages
209
Points
9
For those of you with AICP, do you use the initials after your name? If so, when?

Just curious.... :-D
 
Having just received my results I am still pondering this question but here is the direction in which I am leaning: I plan to use the initials wherever and whenever I can for the following reason. Most professions have their own certification or designation, engineers have P.E., architects have AIA, accountants have CPA, Doctors have MD, etc. My desire, and hopefully yours, is to have Planning viewed as a professional occupation, not just a job. For better or worse, people tend to notice those things that give a profession credibility and (again) for better or worse, ours is AICP.

Irrespective of our own discussions and often times bashing of AICP and APA they are for right now the organizations that provide us with professional credibility.
 
Of course, AICP is on my business cards. If my name is included as an author of a report, along with other planners, AICP will be included there, too.

I use AICP in the contact information of this site, to lend it some legitimacy among planners. In that context, it says "this isn't another skyscraper site." (Not that there's anything wrong with skyscraper sites. :) )

However, in most professional correspondence or "civilan" matters, like printed on a check, I don't use it. It's kind of pretentious, IMHO. Maybe if you're writing to the APA, but that's about it.
 
Dan said:
Of course, AICP is on my business cards. If my name is included as an author of a report, along with other planners, AICP will be included there, too.

However, in most professional correspondence or "civilan" matters, like printed on a check, I don't use it. It's kind of pretentious, IMHO. Maybe if you're writing to the APA, but that's about it.

I agree w/ Dan on this matter of style.
 
I don't know that I have a set pattern to my use of AICP. Obviously on resumes, articles, business cards, bios and official correspondences. I occassionally use it on memos, but not all the time.

Aren't AICP members encouraged to publish in their local paper a statement of what AICP members strive for in assisting the community? It seems like I did this about 5 years ago. Does this ring a bell with anyone. My code of ethics is on the wall behind my desk.
 
I'm el Guapo, AICP ******!
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My uses:

Official EXTERNAL Correspondence
Resumes
Business Cards

Never ever wear the AICP pin to a State APA conference. They will beat you senseless.
 
I'm MCIP and here is my take on it.

I would like to see it on my card, and I am arguing this point with my supervisor, who does not have his. I use it on all professional correspondence.

I also use my stamp on reports and letters to tribunals and when I think I'll end up in court.

My CIP professional practice manual sits in my top drawer and I look at it frequently for guidance and to provide rebuttals to people.
 
Use of AICP

I include AICP for most work related items....
I've heard tales of AICP wet/dry stamps.....
Does anyone know if Michigan or New Jersey require a "stamp" of some kind by the certified planners?
I now keep both degrees, AICP cert. and anything else that costs me money on my wall at work. This is partly to show support for well trained planners in the work place....
 
The One said:
I now keep both degrees, AICP cert. and anything else that costs me money on my wall at work. This is partly to show support for well trained planners in the work place....

Same here....my 2 degrees, my AICP membership cert, my CPDP cert, my code of ethics, NHPA membership cert, and a couple of awards are on the wall of my office.
 
NHPlanner said:
Business cards, resume, and all work correspondence.

Same as NHPlanner. As I recall, that's what they advised us to do. As for a previous post regarding running an article in the local newspaper, I think that was part of the stuff they sent you when you passed.
 
For me, it depends on the environment. Always have had the AICP on business cards. And I have always had the certificate and my diplomas on the wall. Other certificates are in a drawer somewhere (but with a copy in my personnel record).

In my last positions, the AICP on letters was only for the most formal, as when I expected an attorney to be a reader. Never on memos in past jobs.

Out here, I am putting it on more items, including memos. It is mostly a reaction to the City Engineer pasting P.E. on everything, but also to remind the internal people(especially the governing body) that I have credentials.

The only time I wear the pin is at APA functions, including state ones...well when Kansas ever has one. OT: I am scared that I may lose my CPDC status because there is no Kansas APA outside of the KC metro area.
 
I use the AICP after my name on business cards and official correspondence to either City Officials/Boards, on all external correspondence, etc. I rarely use it for internal. The certificate is somewhere in a box, same with my diplomas. I don't have anything educated related on my walls...I put all that info in my employee file.
 
How many titles do you put on your card? Would you list AICP and CEcD and EDFP? Is that overkill, or is it appropriate to list all of your credentials?
 
Comfort Zone

Whatever makes you most comfortable.....but this is how I do it :-D :

The One, AICP, PhD, PE, PLS, ASCP, MURP, BA, BS, JD, MD, MAI, GRI, EdD, APA, AIA, ASLA :p

Ha ha ha ha.....but seriously, I have seen journal articles written by people with JD, MD, PhD after their name..... :-C
 
One of my BSU professors had a microbiology degree as an undergrad.....he has a slew of initials he could use after his name.....
 
NHPlanner said:
One of my BSU professors had a microbiology degree as an undergrad.....he has a slew of initials he could use after his name.....
...but he usually doesn't, and his credentials are scattered all over his office... :D

My degrees are stashed somewhere, too. Assuming I could find them, and took time to frame them, there's no way I could display them in my office, not the way our walls are constructed, and every flat surface is covered in files/plats/maps/coffee cups (clean). :-$
 
The One said:
I include AICP for most work related items....
I've heard tales of AICP wet/dry stamps.....
Does anyone know if Michigan or New Jersey require a "stamp" of some kind by the certified planners?

NJ does require a stamp by certified planner. I used to do a lot of work in NJ and took the test to get certified. I still maintain the certification (although I'm not sure why, since never work there anymore) and have the stamp buried on my desk someplace - when I first got it I felt very cool, but that feeling has since worn off!!!
 
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