Adult educators enter their carriers along as many paths as they themselves are many. Few adult educators start their professional life aspiring to support the learning, training, and education of other adults, but more and more people find themselves entering this special and diverse group of educators. Some train colleagues in the art of searching for weapons in departure halls of airports. Others teach adults who never finished their secondary education and want to finally acquire their journeyman's certificate. Unlike teachers in other levels of education, the carrier path is in few instances clearly outlined in the official education systems. However, as the importance of adult learning increases in today's economy, the need for quality assurance in adult education has risen, and with it the demand for educators who have at least a minimum level of competency. This has led to a growing number of projects and initiatives aimed at identifying adult educator skills and to lay out clear roadmaps to acquire them. In this paper I will describe an Icelandic project which in some ways seems to differ from most other such projects at least in its method, and which, due to this method might have uncovered some interesting aspects of the skills adult educators do develop through their practice and which ones remain underdeveloped. The project, furthermore, developed a tool for prior learning assessment for adult educators, and a roadmap for competence development. These will be presented and discussed.