By The Pollack Group
BOSTON and LOS ANGELES – November 12, 2014 – A recent study, conducted by Worldcom Public Relations Group partners Schneider Associates and The Pollack PR Marketing Group, revealed that colleges and universities need to be concerned about marketing to a decreasing crop of prospective students (enrollment rates down .8% from last year), who are significantly more critical of and less responsive to traditional marketing tactics. According to the “iGen Goes to School” study, college admissions and communications programs are not resonating with today’s new cohort of digital natives. Dubbed the “iGeneration” by Stefan Pollack, author of Disrupted, iGens are those born between 1994 and 2004 and require “information on demand” with a professed inclination to trust the advice of “friends,” or strangers, who share their opinions freely on social media platforms.
According to Joan Schneider, president of Schneider Associates, “Considering the decreasing number of applicants, college admissions and communications departments are under pressure to reexamine their customary communications platforms and recruitment marketing mix. To be competitive, enrollment management strategies for the next generation of applicants will need a more personalized, multi-channel approach.”
The two-part study consisted of four qualitative focus groups conducted in Boston, New York and Los Angeles, and a quantitative online survey of 130 current or recent college applicants. Findings indicated that iGens are dissatisfied with the impersonal nature of traditional college communications outreach, signifying a serious disruption in the higher education enrollment process, which includes a barrage of emails, view books, letters and other print communiques addressed “Dear Student or Applicant,” and are often deemed irrelevant to the audience.
According to Stefan Pollack, president of The Pollack PR Marketing Group, “Schools need to engage with students directly through popular social media channels, texting and video, all with personalized messages that resonate with these discerning digital natives and their parents, who are also using these new tools to research potential colleges, courses and careers.”
Key findings from the study include:
• Students want to engage with schools on their own terms. Today’s digital natives are likely to use social media and other online resources to learn about a higher education institution, with Facebook (67%) being the top social media channel. Of those surveyed, 92% of students said they used social media at least a little during the application process and 60% of applicants felt comfortable contacting schools through social media.
• iGens desire authentic, personalized outreach from people similar to them. Of those surveyed, 43% stated personal contact influenced their decision to attend a college or university, such as one-on-one communication with a current student or engaging content such as videos.
• Applicants place importance on program specialties and digital presentation. Participants indicated that course/program offerings (48%) and school reputation (44%) were critical influencers in enrollment. Also, of those surveyed, 38% said that a school’s website was the most trustworthy source when learning about a school.
“The admissions process must be continually fed to ensure a full cohort, creating a high-pressure situation that makes it daunting to step back and reimagine the enrollment process through the eyes of the prospective student,” said Schneider. “College communications and enrollment teams are being asked to produce detailed performance reports that show both the value of their campaigns and marketing channels, as well as the return on investment.”
“This is more than just a problem for colleges and universities. It’s a problem for all companies, brands and organizations using traditional or non-personalized approaches to market to iGens,” added Pollack. “If your brand has not gained ‘permission’ to market to iGens in their digital worlds, what will you do to convince them to let you in?”
“The results of this study hold major implications for the future of college enrollment and communications programs,” said Schneider. “Colleges and universities simply cannot keep spending marketing dollars on tactics that do not reach the target demographic—or worse—don’t hit the mark when it comes to meeting yield and enrollment targets. The goal is not to reinvent the enrollment funnel, but to find moments in time during each institution’s application, acceptance and enrollment process where marketing professionals can insert new ideas that resonate with iGens.”
Pollack suggests a ‘research and replace’ strategy that questions the efficacy of every outgoing communique and uses new, personalized messaging and visuals on platforms that will connect with iGens.
According to the study, iGens crave personalization and expect schools to understand their needs and demonstrate they want a student as much as the student wants the specific institution. Much as students have to convey demonstrated interest, schools must understand the personalities, skills, talents and desires of this emerging generation and relate those to what they have to offer. Schools need to mine their data and personalize messages to prospective students, highlighting the features, benefits and educational opportunities that will make sense to iGens.
“The college application and marketing process needs to be a two-way communication,” according to Schneider. “Schools must understand the need to demonstrate interest just as much as the students who are applying for a place in their institution. The sooner schools ‘get’ what students are seeking, the more students will not only apply, but actually enroll.”