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Marketing learning communities

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Marketing learning communities. Jacque Mott. Associate Professor. William Rainey Harper College ... Hold celebrations and opportunities to reflect. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marketing learning communities


1
Marketing learning communities
  • Jacque Mott
  • Associate Professor
  • William Rainey Harper College
  • National Learning Communities Project Fellow
  • jmott_at_harpercollege.edu
  • 847.925.6894

with Jean Henscheid About Campus University of
South Carolina National Learning Communities
Project Web Editor henschei_at_gwm.sc.edu 208.883.819
1
Barbara Leigh Smith National Learning
Communities Project Co-Director smithb_at_evergreen.e
du 360.867.6602

2
Table of contents
Table of contents
  • Part 1 - The marketing process
  • Part 2 - Developing a marketing plan
  • Part 3 - Marketing to critical audiences
  • students
  • faculty
  • counselors/advisors
  • administrators
  • Part 4 Promotional materials that work

3
The change process
  • Learning community developers and
  • promoters are institutional change agents
  • What we ask of students
  • embrace a form of learning that may be foreign to
    them
  • take responsibility for their own learning
  • What we ask of faculty
  • alter teaching paradigms
  • take risks teaching with their peers
  • What we ask of administrators
  • place student success first, even before
    financial and logistical problems
  • support new approaches

4
Learning communities as change
  • Change involves
  • Vision Is the program vision clear?
  • Skills Does your leadership team have the
    necessary skills to forward the project?
  • Incentives Are there benefits to those
    involved?
  • Resources Are the necessary resources
    available?
  • Action Plan Does a specific plan define actions
    for all involved?

5
What is integrated marketing?
  • Marketing is a carefully formulated strategy
    designed to bring specific audiences to your
    program that includes
  • on-going research and analysis
  • planning, implementation, and assessment
  • Robert Sevier, Integrated Marketing for
    Colleges, Universities and Schools, Council for
    the Advancement and Support of Education,
    Washington D.C. 1998.

6
What is integrated marketing?
  • Marketing is a data-driven planning process of
    extensive listening to the audience to ensure
    that the promotional message and the
    product/program fits with the intended
    audiences needs and interests.
  • Robert Sevier, Integrated Marketing for
    Colleges, Universities and Schools, Council for
    the Advancement and Support of Education,
    Washington D.C. 1998.

7
What is integrated marketing?
  • Promotional strategies are one part of an
    overall marketing effort. However, product,
    pricing, and place (distribution) strategies also
    matter.
  • For example, successful learning communities use
    marketing to recruit students, faculty, and key
    supporters and to design programs around real
    needs.
  • Robert Sevier, Integrated Marketing for
    Colleges, Universities and Schools, Council for
    the Advancement and Support of Education,
    Washington D.C. 1998.

8
What is integrated marketing?
  • Marketing Definitions
  • Product strategy A concept that considers
    satisfaction of all customer needs in relation to
    the service or good
  • Price strategy A concept that deals with the
    methods of setting a justifiable price for
    learning communities a cost for participation
  • Place strategy Methods for ensuring that the
    product is available in the right quantities at
    the right time and place
  • Promotion strategy The communication link
    between sellers and buyers
  • Adapted from Louis E. Boone and David L. Kurtz.
    Contemporary Marketing(7th ed.), Dryden Press,
    Fort Worth, TX 1992.

9
What is integrated marketing?
  • Marketing processes are designed to fit with key
    organizational objectives and link to the
    organizations strategic plan.
  • Robert Sevier, Integrated Marketing for
    Colleges, Universities and Schools, Council for
    the Advancement and Support of Education,
    Washington D.C. 1998.

10
Marketing is data driven
  • Research should also answer these questions
  • How can we communicate with prospective students?
  • What faculty are available and interested in
    teaching in LCs?
  • Are they the right faculty for what students
    need?
  • How effective was the LC in meetings its goals?
  • How can the program be improved?

11
Common research methods
  • Marketing research methods, each with their own
    strengths and weaknesses, include
  • Focus groups-good early in the research process,
    especially for testing and comparing concepts
    with local audiences.
  • Mail surveys-useful to gather more comprehensive
    data from geographically dispersed audience.
  • These methods are described in detail in
    Integrated Marketing by Robert Sevier

12
Your current marketing efforts
  • What are you currently doing in marketing?
  • Can you measure the effectiveness of the current
    effort?
  • Are you using all available resources and
    personnel?
  • outreach employees
  • counselors/advisors
  • research personnel
  • marketing department
  • webmasters
  • registration/enrollment
  • serving learning
  • grant writers
  • foundations
  • information desk
  • students activities

13
Assessing readiness for change
  • What is the state of your LC program?
  • Infrastructure
  • Pool of students
  • Mix and offering of LC courses
  • The faculty
  • What is the state of your current marketing
    efforts?

14
LCs require coordination

Goals for the LC Effort
Registrar/Registration
Assessment/Evaluation
Faculty Recruitment
Publicity-Student Recruitment
Locus of Learning Community Leadership
Faculty Development Support
Involvement of Academic Advisors
Program Delivery by Faculty
LC Offerings (Models/Mix)
Planning Calendar
Scheduling Time/Rooms
15
Extensive network needed
  • What would it take on your campus to get each
    one of the parts on the proceeding chart involved
    in the development of your learning community
    program?

16
Student need
17
Analyze your current LC program
  • Infrastructure of your program
  • What type of leadership team is there?
  • Does the program have a coordinator? Is that
    person(s) compensated?
  • Do you have adequate faculty incentives?
  • Do you have back-up plans for low enrollment LCs?
  • Is there an adequate budget?
  • Is there a plan to educate and recruit faculty
    and counselors/student advisors?
  • What is your application process?
  • What is your assessment process?
  • Do you have faculty development opportunities?

18
A marketing team
  • Marketing team structures vary
  • Some institutions have a cross-functional
    learning community steering or advisory committee
    that also serves as the marketing team
  • Others have a separate marketing team
  • In large, decentralized universities, different
    colleges or schools often design the LC program
    and each school has its own student recruitment,
    advising, and marketing process
  • All require collaboration

19
  • Developing a
  • Marketing Plan

20
Developing a marketing team
  • Identify key players for your team
  • Students
  • LC program coordinator or LC committee chair
  • Academic advisor/counselor
  • Admissions/student recruitment representative
  • Residence life representative
  • Registrar
  • Institutional research
  • New student activities coordinator
  • Member of institutional marketing department
  • Faculty

21
Marketing team functions
  • Establish a leadership structure for marketing
    the program
  • Gather data to inform decisions
  • Clarify issues and options
  • Spread ownership of the planning process
  • Ensure that relevant parties are well informed
  • Develop, implement and monitor the marketing plan
  • Develop a marketing plan and set deadlines to
    accomplish tasks
  • Make results and some proceedings public

22
Building a marketing plan
  • STEP 1 - Identify where the program is now
  • STEP 2 - Identify the marketing goals
  • STEP 3 - Identify the target audience
  • STEP 4 - Research the target audience
  • STEP 5 - Research methods for goal
    achievement
  • STEP 6 - Create an action plan
  • STEP 7 - Gather resources
  • STEP 8 - Establish a timeline
  • STEP 9 - DO IT
  • STEP 10 - Evaluate and adjust

23
Key marketing considerations
  • Develop appropriate strategies for all audiences
    your marketing plan must reach
  • Develop a widespread on- and off-campus network
  • Build permanent locations for promotional
    literature
  • Become a part of the registration system

24
Key on-campus allies
  • Dean/provosts office
  • Department chairs
  • Office of research
  • Admissions office
  • Registrar and scheduling office
  • Student advisors and counselors
  • Teaching and learning center
  • Public relations office
  • Graphics/design office

25
Common marketing mis-steps
  • Not meeting student needs
  • Creating ineffective promotional strategies
  • Forgetting that academic advisors change and need
    re-educating often
  • Assuming that marketing efforts to students will
    last more than a year
  • Forgetting that one person cant do everything

26
Common marketing mis-steps
  • Not maintaining student contact and getting
    feedback
  • Forgetting to create flexible/multiple use
    marketing materials
  • Not building a sustainable plan that integrates
    tasks into the duties of specific people
  • Creating a great plan without people to execute it

27
  • Marketing to Critical
  • Audiences

28
Different strategies for different audiences
  • In general terms
  • Students are concerned with graduating as well as
    making friends and having fun
  • Faculty are concerned with academic quality,
    collegiality, and life-long learning
  • Counselors are also concerned with student
    completion and are often involved with the
    development of all aspects of the students life
  • Administrators often have a broader view of
    campus life. They are concerned with logistics,
    academic quality, and maximizing every dollar.

29
Marketing to all audiences
  • Distribute literature and assessment results
    across the campus
  • Develop a catalog insert
  • Permanently locate LC signs to provide updates
  • Feature articles on an LC class in newspapers -
    invite reporters to come to class
  • Have previous LC faculty write columns for the
    papers and journals

30
Marketing to all audiences
  • Speak at student and parent orientation sessions
  • Promote LCs as an innovation that puts your
    college at the forefront of educational practices
  • Visit classes that could feed into LCs - make
    presentations and distribute registration
    information
  • Develop a campus learning communities newsletter
    or become a featured section of an existing
    publication
  • Develop an effective website (see section on
    effective promotional strategies)

31
Marketing to all audiences
  • Reserve a dedicated space in the course schedule
    for LC listings
  • Develop a method to easily identify LC courses in
    the course schedule such as a dot in front of
    them or a comments line
  • Mention LCs in routine institutional recruitment
    letters
  • Ask faculty members, rather than the coordinator,
    speak to their students about upcoming LCs

32
Marketing to all audiences
  • Ensure LC announcements run on
  • campus radio station
  • Kiosks electronic signage
  • Internal TV announcement channels
  • Find community, corporate or government sponsors
    for certain learning communities (i.e. the
    Department of Water Resources for an LC with a
    water theme)

33
Marketing to all audiences
  • Stage an LC event on campus (break the Guinness
    Book of World Records by making the longest
    paperclip chain) to build awareness
  • Distribute publicity materials at a give-away
    table in the center of campus (popcorn, coffee)
    established by your program
  • Build momentum to announce the arrival of an LC
    class through a billboard/signage campaign

34
Marketing to students
  • Be honest, be clear, use humor, show the
    product, show something important about the
    product, show realistic situations.
  • Students want good schedules, the opportunity to
    make friends, to belong, to feel comfortable
    around faculty, to find someone to study with, to
    study relevant, interesting subjects, to achieve
    academically.
  • Market manageable nature of coordinated
    assignments. Work in the advising center to help
    students select courses. The testing center can
    make referrals into developmental LCs.
  • Personal contact is best. Advertise LCs in
    orientation materials. Send letters to incoming
    students and their families.
  • Advertise in high schools and other feeder
    schools. Meet with counselors and hold
    information sessions. Include LCs in prospective
    student visits to campus.

35
Marketing to students
  • Include marketing/art students in materials
    development. Ask students their thoughts on
    program titles and materials. Hold a logo
    contest. Develop a video. Create a speakers
    bureau.
  • Strategically place materials around campus.
    Create buttons. Place bookmarks in libraries.
    Place displays in stores. Market in your student
    programs office. Involve student leadership and
    residence life staff in recruiting.
  • Include students on your LC committee. Speak to
    student leader groups. Develop an LC alumni group
    to speak to students. Designate a learning
    community room.
  • Assign just one registration number to each LC
    course group. Secure popular time slots for
    courses. Require LCs for graduation. Build LCs
    around high demand courses. Offer sequential LCs.
    Offer LCs that fulfill general education
    requirements.

36
Marketing to faculty
  • Work from their interests and issues.
  • Before you begin, determine how they react to
    innovation, can be influenced, express their
    feelings and exchange ideas, respond to outside
    ideas.
  • Publicize the program and its rationale
    (intellectual and communal). Demonstrate benefits
    to the students. Demonstrate links with
    innovations they care about. Make assessment
    results public. Sponsor professional development
    events. Hold celebrations and opportunities to
    reflect.
  • Make benefits to faculty visible including
    opportunities to teach with colleagues, learning
    new teaching techniques, more time with students,
    learning outside their disciplines, building
    closer relationships.
  • Communicate with both full and part-time faculty.
    Publicize the programs connection with regional
    and national movements. Invite faculty from other
    institutions to offer workshops. Arrange for
    faculty to visit other programs.
  • Create a developing an LC handbook. Connect
    faculty to LC listservs. Distribute syllabi from
    elsewhere. Connect them with their colleagues in
    similar LCs elsewhere.
  • Provide stipends, reassigned time, professional
    development credit, class size reductions,
    support in tenure and promotion dossiers.

37
Marketing to advisors and counselors
  • Work from their interests and issues.
  • Work hard and often to gain and maintain their
    support. Inform them early and frequently about
    LC developments. Re-educate since turnover is
    frequent. Keep your program as consistent as
    possible to make it easy to explain. Include
    advisors and counselors in retreats.
  • Invite them to visit an LC or talk with LC
    students. Differentiate between LCs. Keep them
    well stocked with LC materials. Develop an LC
    handbook for advisors. Create easy-to-use
    promotion materials. Include them on LC
    committees.
  • Introduce them to the national LC movement. Work
    with them one-on-one. Attend their meetings to
    review LCs. Demonstrate through LC program design
    and materials that their advising philosophy is
    understood and appreciated.
  • Invite LC allies to speak with them. Make
    assessment results public. Help them through
    registration periods with pizza or registration
    table assistance. Provide up-to-date LC
    enrollment status.

38
Marketing to administrators
  • Work from their interests and issues.
  • Frequently provide concise assessment results.
    Maintain a high quality program. Involve
    administrators on LC committees. Invite them to
    visit LC classes.
  • Invite their peers from other campuses to speak
    to them. Connect the national LC movement to your
    program. Bring in national LC speakers. Provide
    practical, successful models from other campuses.
    Solve problems immediately. Collaborate with
    others in request making.
  • Work with them to develop student and faculty
    recruitment strategies and faculty development
    approaches. Ask well in advance for lower
    enrollments. Seek minimum and maximum guidelines.
  • Define LC effectiveness in multiple ways
    including cost effectiveness, benefits to
    students, to faculty, to curriculum, and to the
    institution.
  • Work with them to develop an assessment plan that
    meets their needs.

39
  • Designing an
  • LC Website

40
Level 1 the homepage
  • The most important information (level 1) goes
    right on the homepage.
  • In addition to these nuggets, the homepage
    should have a stable nav that links to level 2
    pages.

41
Level 2 important content
  • Carefully consider the second-level information
    because these links form the "stable nav" of the
    site.
  • The stable nav appears on every webpage of the
    site for easy navigation between second-level
    subjects.
  • Try to limit the number of choices in the stable
    nav to 5 (optimal), and never more than 8. The
    reason for this is that most people cannot easily
    remember more than 5 things at a time.
  • 1. Bla bla
  • 2. Ya ya ya
  • 3. More good info
  • 4. Hop to it
  • 5. Need to know this
  • 6. ..?

42
Levels 3 4 specific content
  • Third and fourth-level nuggets can be handled in
    a couple different ways.
  • Sub-menus can appear on each second-level page
    with links to the third-level content.
  • current course offerings
  •   - American Identity
  • - Mind over Matter
  • - Words of Wisdom
  • - Education Core Program
  • service learning projects
  • meet the faculty
  • application materials
  • resources for teachers

43
Levels 3 4 specific content
  • Another option is to simply have hyperlinks
    scattered throughout the second-level pages that
    lead to third level content.

44
Visual elements
  • Examples of visual elements
  • Colors
  • Fonts
  • Logos
  • Photos
  • Borders
  • Blocks of text
  • White space

45
Interactivity
  • Examples of interactivity
  • Rollover as the user moves the mouse over a
    portion of the screen, more info appears.
  • Rotating images when a user clicks an image,
    it is replaced with a new image.
  • Popup windows instead of opening a new webpage
    in the current window, a little popup window
    appears. These work well with tidbits of info.
  • Dynamic menus drop-down menus and expanding
    folders make finding information easier.

46
Writing style
Too often, webpage content is a hodge-podge of
blurbs from authors with very different
vocabularies and voices in a variety of tones and
tenses.
students will develop both as learners and as
members of our unique college community."
theories of chemistry as they relate to
psychology are examined
Click on the links below for current and past
descriptions and
schedules
47
The value of consistency
Users tend to appreciate a level of consistency
throughout a website. This goes for writing
style as well as look feel. Consistency
allows a user to more quickly assimilate the
website, since they are able to focus on the
content instead of being distracted by shifting
styles and new navigation schemes.
48
The website is where?
When the website is ready to launch, an important
yet often overlooked aspect of web-marketing
should be considered website placement.   Website
placement refers to where the website resides on
the internet, usually in relation to the
institution's homepage. Even if you have a
wonderful website, if it has poor placement (with
few connecting links), it will be difficult to
find and ineffective as a marketing tool.
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