I just got some info back from them..
you can get a clia card after an online class and use their
travel agent id for disney discounts as you are considered an independent agent under them.
you get your very own login to disneytravelagents.com too can take disney training free and get up to 50% off resorts
I'm another bricks and mortar TA who'll tell you this isn't really a deal if you have to pay for. We have outside agents working out of our office. I have myself.
If the agency has paid their CLIA dues for the year and you sign up, pay for & complete a CLIA online course AND pay another fee for the id card, then you too can own a CLIA card which may or not be accepted as proof that you are a TA when you request agent benefits.
Assuming that you jump thru the appropiate hoops and have paid for everything - including the additional expenses you'll have to pay CLIA, the CLIA card will not be issued until the agency owner approves it when CLIA emails them to confirm before issuing your card, it will also be mailed to the agency address even though you paid for it and not directly to you.
That's a lot of trust and money to put into someone who doesn't even list their address just so that you might potentially save a few dollars on your vacation.
If you'd really like to do that, contact a few local agencies about working as an outside agent in your town. From what I've seen, I'm fairly sure you could come to some arrangement locally without paying $200.
Anybody with an address and an IATAN or CLIA number can register for their "very own login to disneytravelagents.com" too & can take disney's online training free. It isn't a big course and it covers mostly what the folks on this board already know anyway.
There's nothing special about the site, in fact, it is very similar to the normal Disney Travel site's booking engine but a bit more frustrating and convoluted to use. Rates and availability are the same as shown on the site the public can access with the exception of the TA benefits and collaterial/sales brochures.
No matter how much you love disney, nobody needs 300 WDW travel brochures cluttering up the house so that's not a plus if you're not selling travel each day.
CLIA is much less widely accepted these days specifically because of companies like this. It will not get you discounts everywhere and in my 25+ years in travel has been honored more off than on.
You'll also need to show wdw a copy of the CLIA certificate, in addition to your card. The certs are sent to the agency after yearly CLIA fees are paid. They belong to the agency, not the agent so, there again, you're counting on that company to pay their dues each year - and in time for you to take the required courses and pay the fees for your id card before you book your discounted vacation.
WDW passes are also mailed to the agency, after they are approved by both disney and your agency owner, but they are paid for by you first. You are only able to order one slightly discounted pass per year that you must use yourself. I haven't done all the math this year but it's roughly only $100 off the one premium non-upgradable pass, if that, making an annual or standard MYW with upgradable options a better deal in many cases.
With an IATAN Card, you also need to have a copy of the IATA list that shows you as a full time agent to qualify for benefits. When you apply for any benefits - assuming they are available for your travel dates - you certify that you are indeed a working full time agent for many of them. That means you'd have to also decide how much you wanted to "embelish" your work/sales history each time to qualify for more limited availability to rates very close to what is available to annual passholders anyway. In March 2007, there were no TA rates available at all. We stayed like we do many times using AP rates instead as did other TA friends who traveled at the same time.
Whew, all that said, I can't believe that people could charge so much for so little just by holding out the promise of possible discounts which can, and do often, change substantially at any time.
If I had an extra $300 or so to give away, I'd be booking an extra couple of nights with an AP or
free dining code instead - at least that's a sure thing...