A
few months ago while reading an article in The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
online (www.ajc.com), I ran across an ad for
the EMBA program at Mercer University. Mercer happens to be my alma matter, so
I was intrigued. I couldn’t resist the temptation to click to see how Mercer
was using this ad to acquire inquiries.
The
ad was linked directly to the
University’s main page for the Stetson School of Business. Since things like
inquiry acquisition for higher education is among the things we do on a daily
basis at DemandEngine, I couldn’t help but notice several things about Mercer’s
approach:
Continue reading "University online advertising can miss the mark....the enrollment mark, that is" »
Another new year has started and like many of us, I’ve jumped on the bandwagon of committing to personal and professional improvements in the coming year (and this year, I’m determined these resolutions will extend beyond mid-January!). On that note, I’ve created a list of interactive marketing resolutions that each of us working in higher education marketing and enrollment management should take to heart in 2009.
Continue reading "Four Interactive Marketing Resolutions for 2009" »
Presented by Karlyn Morissette, Dartmouth College
A good overview of email marketing best practices, this presentation provided good fundamentals (which, unfortunately, are overlooked time and time again). Here are the 5 best practices covered:
Continue reading "AMA Live Update: Taking Email to the Next Level" »
Presented by Jennifer Wooley, Georgia Tech Distance Learning and Professional Education and yours truly
Our presentation this morning focused on 3 main topics:
- The marketing playing field has changed - institutions must now engage prospective students, customers, donors, and other constituents on their terms...not ours.
- Paid search marketing represents an opportunity for higher education to engage prospects when they are looking for what you have to offer.
- To get the most out of your paid search efforts, marketers must develop strategies to move students beyond the click and to conversion (i.e. application, enrollment, registration, etc).
Using institutions experiencing success as our model, primarily the Global Learning Center at Georgia Tech, we provided multiple examples of cultivation once the inquiry has engaged with the institution as a result of a paid search ad.
How can you make paid search work?
Continue reading "AMA Live Update: Beyond the Click: Strategies to Generate and Cultivate Online Inquiries" »
With the popularity of social networking, colleges and universities understandably are interested in participating. Increasingly, colleges and universities are asking how to start social communities, measure a return, and sometimes why to start them. In our experience, the "how" to do it unfortunately often comes well before the "why" or the "should."
As part of a larger outreach strategy, communities can an effective channel to deploy, but managed improperly, they can backfire, or fizzle out from the large amounts of institutional time invested, producing very little measurable benefit.
Continue reading " How to Use Email to Start Your Social Networking Engine in Higher Education" »
Starting to think about your new year’s resolutions?
Makes sense, right? A new year represents an opportunity for a clean slate.
As you think about your 2008 recruitment and outreach
marketing plans, consider the growing need to engage students in dialogue rather than
marketing pushes, blasts, or broadcasts. With the increasing number of media
technologies to share and access information, students are gaining more control
– and are less tolerant of irrelevant information, and unidirectional marketing
pitches.
Our experience working with colleges and universities across
the country shows that a properly planned and executed email marketing program
can start conversations, qualify student interest, and nurture relationships to
achieve enrollment objectives.
As you think about your 2008 “slate”, erase your current
email board and adopt the following resolutions to power your results:
Continue reading "Five Higher Education Email Marketing Resolutions for 2008" »
E-blasts. Email blasts. Email broadcasts. These are a few terms I commonly hear to describe email marketing. I’ve even noticed one vendor recently who is touting endless email, going so far as trademarking the name.
Here’s a question. How often do you like to be blasted? And raise your hand if you want to receive never-ending email?
Guess what? Neither do students. Nor do they want to receive endless letters, brochures, and postcards!
Continue reading "Endless Email and Other Bad Ideas for College Interactive Marketing Strategies" »