Frequently Asked Questions
These FAQs relate primarily to the CRIS certification itself. For FAQs addressing
the operation of the CRIS Learning Center and
how your CRIS account will be serviced visit the
CRIS Learning Center FAQs.
There are three simple steps to obtaining and maintaining the CRIS certification:
- Complete the core curriculum, consisting of 5 online courses, within 60 months of
starting the program
- Complete only 7 hours of CE credit within 24 months of obtaining the certification
and every 12 months thereafter (through one online course or approved seminar)
- Comply with all other terms and conditions of the CRIS
certification
The CRIS continuing education (CE) program curriculum is intended to be on a basic-to-intermediate
level, but it does cover complex insurance topics and assumes you have basic knowledge
of insurance terminology and fundamentals. Therefore, the core curriculum will be
more challenging to someone who has no insurance background than it will be for
someone who does. For this reason, we created "Fundamentals of Construction Risk
Management and Insurance," a course designed to acquaint you with terminology and
basic concepts that are prevalent in the core curriculum.
A contractor, safety professional, lawyer, or accountant who has limited insurance
knowledge can successfully complete the courses by starting with the fundamentals
course and then carefully studying the core curriculum texts and paying attention
to any concepts with which he or she struggles when taking the final exams. If you
do not pass an exam the first time, these concepts can be the focus of additional
study before retaking the exam.
Chartered
Property Casualty Underwriter (CPCU), Certified Insurance Counselor (CIC), and
Associate
in Risk Management (ARM) are all excellent educational programs for risk
and insurance professionals. The CRIS program is not intended to compete with or
be a substitute for these or other insurance industry designations. The CRIS curriculum
is less rigorous and less time consuming than the CPCU, CIC, or ARM program. The
CPCU program requires passing exams for 8, and the ARM 3, courses that cover the
equivalent of a college semester's material in each. The CIC program requires attending
5 2½-day seminars, each of which is followed by a 2-hour final exam. While the CRIS
program is not as rigorous as these other programs, its specialized focus on the
complex insurance needs of the construction industry make it a worthwhile investment
for people who hold one or more of these designations as well as for people who
do not.
When you obtain the CRIS certification, you make a statement to contractors that
you are committed to serving them and have the knowledge to do it well. Your enhanced
credibility along with the confidence you'll gain as a result of your new knowledge
will improve your ability to sell insurance to contractors and negotiate intelligently
on their behalf with underwriters or adjusters. You may also elect to have your
name, firm, and phone number included in the directory of CRIS construction insurance
agents and brokers.
Many construction managers charged with purchasing their company's insurance feel
helpless and lost when dealing with their insurance representatives. Once you have
obtained the CRIS certification, you'll know the language and the key issues to
address in your insurance program. The ongoing continuing education program will
hone your knowledge and equip you to be a far better steward of your firm's insurance
and risk management program. You'll have the confidence and knowledge to make the
right risk management and insurance purchasing decisions, to avoid onerous risk
and insurance provisions in your construction contracts, and to negotiate the best
deals for your company.
Continuous learning is important for all business professionals, particularly those
who work in a field that changes rapidly, as does construction insurance. The CRIS
core curriculum will be a great review of insurance and contractual risk transfer
fundamentals for contractors. Completing the core courses will help you maintain
confidence that your knowledge is up-to-date. The ongoing continuing education program
will then help you stay on top of the trends and developments affecting your important
contractor accounts. And if you are an agent or broker in need of state
insurance CE credit, obtaining the CRIS certification allows you to leverage
your CE effort into a meaningful professional certification as well.
We do not waive any of the CRIS core courses for those who hold degrees or other
certifications for two reasons. First, the CRIS program is uniquely focused on the
needs of construction projects. Other more general programs do not include this
unique industry focus, and we feel that allowing them to offset the CRIS courses
could detract from the credibility of the CRIS program. Second, we designed the
CRIS program in a manner to allow easy and efficient administration of the program.
By keeping our overhead costs quite low, we can offer the courses at very competitive
prices. Implementing a system for cross crediting other educational programs and
verifying that applicants indeed hold those certifications would increase our expenses
and require us to charge more for the program.
While we do not waive the CRIS core courses, we do plan to allow credit for certain
other educational programs in meeting the ongoing continuing education requirement.
For more information, see Reaccreditation
Depending on your current level of knowledge in the subject matter, a CRIS course
will typically take 6 to 10 hours to complete. The average length of a CRIS course
is about 100 printed pages. The text includes a few practice questions following
each chapter, which you may answer at your option. After reading the course, you
take the final exam, which is comprised of multiple-choice questions. The number
of questions presented is dependent on your state's CE requirements if you choose
to receive insurance CE credit, and will be between 25 and 50 multiple choice questions.
If you don't request CE credit, the exam will be 50 questions. If you do not pass
the final exam the first time, you may study the material again and retake the exam.
The final exam for each course contains questions randomly selected from a test
bank. The number of questions varies according to state insurance CE requirements,
but there will be no more than 50. You must correctly answer 70 percent of the exam
questions to pass a course. If you fail to do so, you review the course again and
take another test that is randomly generated from the question bank.
You must correctly answer 70 percent of the multiple-choice questions on the final
exam to successfully complete a CRIS course. Keep in mind that you can retake the
exam if you fail to pass it. If you have not requested CE credit, there is no limit
to the number of times you may take the exam. If you request CE credit, the number
of retakes may be limited by your state.
The Fundamentals course, all five core courses, and most of the reaccreditation
courses have been approved for insurance CE credit in
all 50 states. Other courses will be filed as they are introduced. The amount of
credit provided ranges between four and twelve hours, depending on the course and
state. To learn how much credit is available in your state, please go to the
CRIS Learning Center, go to the Course Catalog, choose the course(s) you
wish to take, and indicate the state for which you need CE credit. You'll also need
to select a license type for most states. The number of approved credit hours for
that state will then be displayed on your screen.
Absolutely. You can receive credit under three other programs at this time and we
are working towards having CRIS recognized by some others.
Completing a CRIS course counts towards the CPCU Continuing Professional Development
(CPD) program, which allows the same number of points for CPD that have been awarded
for CE credits in your state. Simply record the completed CRIS courses on the CPD
qualifier application to receive credit in that program.
Completing a CRIS course also counts as a one-day workshop towards the Risk and
Insurance Management Society (RIMS) Fellow designation.
Obtaining the CRIS certification also satisfies the requirement of completing a
non-NAIW educational program/designation to earn the Certified Professional Insurance
Woman/Man (CPIW/M) certification from the National Association of Insurance Women
(NAIW).
The objectives of the CRIS program are to (1) assure that certification-holders
understand the fundamental insurance needs of contractors, (2) demonstrate certification-holders'
commitment to the construction industry, and (3) provide certification-holders with
the means to stay abreast of construction risk and insurance developments and trends.
The core curriculum satisfies only the first of these three objectives, and the
ongoing continuing education requirement is necessary for the program to achieve
the other two.
We do not intend for this requirement to be onerous. You may satisfy it through
just one additional online course or attending an approved seminar or conference.
Yes. Sponsors of seminars and conferences must request approval from IRMI for a
program to qualify for the CRIS continuing education requirement. To qualify, a
program's content must be substantially directed to risk, insurance, surety, financial,
or legal topics relevant to construction projects or contractors.
See a list of approved programs or obtain information on how a sponsor of a program
can become certified.
Go to the Voucher/Promotion/Completer Code Redemption page in the CRIS Learning
Center to report your attendance and pay the reaccreditation fee. You will need
the Completer Code number printed on the Certificate of Completion the program sponsor
provided you when you do so. The fee for this reaccreditation option pays the costs
of administering this part of the CRIS program.
As a holder of the certification, you are granted a license
to display it in connection with your name. The most common format is to place a
comma after your name, followed by the certification abbreviation (e.g., John Doe,
CRIS). Alternatively, you may spell out the certification name (Construction Risk
and Insurance Specialist) in connection with your name; the most common approach
for this is on letterhead or brochures. You may display it following your name on
your business cards, marketing literature, or letterhead.
We recommend that you send a press release to your local newspapers, business journals,
and other publications that run announcements about people. You also may wish to
give or mail your clients and prospects announcements of your achievement. The
CRIS
Toolbox page includes a model press release on which you may base yours as well
as PDF files of some fliers you can print to provide to clients and prospects.
Lastly, the directory of CRIS construction insurance agents and brokers provides
a list of holders of the CRIS certification for use by contractors in verifying
the credentials of insurance professionals with whom they are or are considering
doing business. As part of the registration process, you can indicate whether you
wish to be included on this list, and you may opt out at any time. To protect your
privacy, the list will display only your name, city/state, phone number, and company
affiliation.
If you fail to meet the continuing education requirement, you lose the certification
and the right to use it in connection with your name. Once you lose the certification
in this manner, you must complete the core curriculum again to regain it.
We will e-mail you at the e-mail address on record in the Learning Center in the
event you lose your certification because you failed to meet the experience requirement.
However, it is your responsibility to keep up with your CE status, and failure to
receive the e-mail does not make it permissible to use the certification after it
expires. In other words, your license to use the CRIS trademark expires 24 months
after you earn the right to use the certification unless you renew it by meeting
the CE requirement during that time. Thereafter, you must complete the continuing
education requirement every 12 months.
IRMI also reserves the right to revoke the certification for anyone who:
- Is convicted of a felony
- Is convicted of any state or federal crime related to insurance
- Has an insurance license revoked due to violation of a state insurance code
- Displays a pattern of unethical, illegal, or immoral behavior that reflects negatively
on the CRIS certification
In the event IRMI revokes your certification, IRMI will e-mail notification and
send a registered letter to the e-mail address and postal address on record in the
Learning Center. Your license to use the certification expires three business days
after the registered letter is mailed whether or not you receive the letter. (It
is your responsibility to maintain current contact information in the
CRIS Learning Center.)
The CRIS certification is a registered federal trademark of IRMI and is protected
under the law. Anyone who uses this trademark without permission is subject to severe
financial penalty. Please contact IRMI to report any suspected violations
in the use of this trademark.
Any CE Credit earned by taking CRIS courses or attending a seminar may be used to
meet the renewal requirement for the 12-month period in which the credit is earned.
We are sorry, but we cannot roll CE credit into a future period.
We will e-mail you several months before your certification expires to remind you
of the need to renew your certification by taking additional CRIS Courses or attending
approved conferences or seminars. It is your responsibility to keep your e-mail
address updated in the CRIS Learning Center
to assure you receive these e-mails.
Yes. The CRIS program focuses on the application of coverage in standard U.S. property
and casualty insurance forms. However, it could be quite helpful to a non-U.S. resident
if your firm or your clients have projects in the United States. Unfortunately,
our system cannot process non-U.S. addresses from the
CRIS Learning Center online, so please call WebCE at 800.488.9308 or 214.575.5000
between 8:00 AM and 6:00 PM Mon-Fri Central Time or WebCE at
info@webce.com to place your order. Courses and exams will be available
to you online.
IRMI is proud to bring CRIS to you using WebCE's state-of-the-art Internet delivery
system. WebCE is the premier provider of Internet-based continuing education courses
for insurance agents, brokers, and others. More than 150,000 insurance CE courses
are completed on WebCE's system each year. The courses are self-paced, allowing
you to take breaks and go back to the point where you left off in the course when
you are ready to continue.
IRMI has affiliated with WebCE.com, LLC, a nationwide supplier of state-of-the-art,
self-paced continuing education courses to host the
CRIS Learning Center and provide you with customer support. We chose WebCE
because the firm has a long history of success in the CE business, has developed
a premier on-line delivery system, and upholds the same standards of quality that
we do.
WebCE is the official CE provider for your courses, and this will be reflected on
your certificate of completion. WebCE ships all course materials, validates completed
tests, issues certificates, does the billing, and provides customer support.
Should you have specific questions about or problems with your service, contact
WebCE directly:
E-mail: support@webce.com
Phone: 800.488.9308
Fax: 214.570.0213
Address: P.O. Box 850058, Richardson, TX 75085-0058
For more details regarding WebCE and how your CRIS account will be serviced see
the CRIS Learning Center FAQs.
All course materials are copyrighted by IRMI, WebCE or other WebCE business affiliates
(the copyright holder is printed or displayed with each course). Purchase of a course
includes a license for one person to use the course materials. This person may view
the course online, save it on a single computer for his or her personal viewing,
or print a copy for his or her personal use.
Absent specific written permission from the applicable copyright holder, it is not
permissible to distribute files containing course materials or printed versions
of course materials to individuals who have not purchased the courses. For example,
you should never e-mail a PDF file of a course to someone else. It is also not permissible
to make the course materials available to others over a computer network, Intranet,
Internet, or any other storage, transmittal, or retrieval system.
Please follow these guidelines and contact IRMI if your business needs require some
other form of use. Violation of this license could subject you or your employer
to substantial statutory remedies under Federal law (e.g., $10,000 per violation)
and possible liability for actual damages and punitive damages.