Who are CIPs and FCIPs?
The CIP designation stands for Chartered Insurance Professional. The FCIP designation stands for Fellow Chartered Insurance Professional. For you, as a consumer of home, auto or business insurance,
they both stand for much more.
CIPs and FCIPs are educated, experienced and ethical insurance professionals. They have completed a rigorous qualification(s) requiring years of study, strict adherence
to a code of ethics and years of hands-on insurance experience before they write and pass their examinations. CIPs and FCIPs are brokers, agents, underwriters, claims adjusters, actuaries, presidents, marketers,
IT consultants, human resource specialists, and risk managers and others. They are insurance professionals committed to customers and clients, to service excellence and to continually updating their skills and knowledge
to ensure that consumers receive the most informed, current advice possible.
In Canada, there are more than 15,000 graduates of the Insurance Institute’s CIP and FCIP programs.
For all of the
property and casualty insurance you need in your life, look for the professional standard… an insurance professional with the CIP or advanced FCIP designation.
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Did you know? | CIPs:
Complete 10 courses, each involving 36 hours of instruction and a three-hour national examination.
Takes on average three to five years to complete the program while working in the insurance industry or related industries.
FCIPs:
First complete the CIP Program and then take additional courses at a university level.
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