Title: Comprehensive Enrollment Management Program
1Comprehensive Enrollment Management Program
2INTRODUCTIONS
- Dave Radcliff Associate Director,
Site OperationsMilitary Distance Learning - Kirk Dewyea, Regional Director ODL USA, PVCC,
BRCC, MJH - Iva E. Armstrong Fort Myers
- Mary-Ann Heubusch Fort
Myers/Pentagon - Donald McCary-Fort Belvoir
- Emily G. Robertson-Dahlgren/Quantico
- Deanna Kroner-Dahlgren
- Terri Wysor-Fort Lee
- David Morgan-
Fort Eustis/Monroe/Langley - Victor Reyes-Dam Neck/Portsmouth Navy Regional
Medical Center/ USCG ISC Portsmouth - Florence Hayes-Addison Little Creek/Oceana
- Pamela Beatty NSN Norfolk
- Tiana F. Karst Quantico
3Office of Distance LearningOld Dominion
UniversityEnrollment Management
What, if anything, do the sites do to attract
transfer students?
Transfer Committee Presentation September 29,
2008 Chesapeake Room, Webb Center, from 1000am -
1130am
4Questions cause us to Re-think what we do?
- Dr. Kochs personal challenge 1994
- Who are those students that contacted you? (name,
address, phone, email) - How did they hear about us?
- How do we encourage them to apply?
- What makes them register?
- What makes them re-enroll?
- How do we make them successful graduates?
5MarketingThis focus is too narrow.
- Eight steps in an advertising campaign
- Market research
- Setting out aims
- Budgeting
- Choice of media (television, newspaper/magazines,
radio, web, outdoor) - Design and wording
- 4Ps- Product, Price, Placement Promotion
- Branding
- Marketing Communications
- Public Relations
- Co-ordination
- Test results
- Youve brought them to the door, now what? Is
that all you do?
6Enrollment Management
- is an organizational concept and a systematic
set of activities designed to enable educational
institutions to exert more influence over their
student enrollments. Strategies and tactics are
informed by collection, analysis, and use of data
to project successful outcomes.
7Enrollment Managementshould be Our FOCUS
- At the site level, Enrollment Management is a
systematic set of activities designed to enable
the site to exert more influence over their
student enrollments. - Recruitment
- Retention
- Data Driven Decision Making
-
8REVISION OF SD Position DescriptionTerri
Wheaton, Regenia Hill, Kirk Dewyea
- Enrollment Management PART 1 RECRUITMENT
- Recruitment begins with data collection
and the creation of an annual enrollment
generation plan (marketing plan). Part of this
plan is the yearly activities calendar
(internal/external) that drives day to day
activities with the purpose of increasing
contacts, applications, enrollments, and
ultimately graduates. The activities plan guides
and directs activities such as, but not limited
to, - Creating an annual communications plan with
administrators, faculty, staff, and key community
partners (who, what do the need to know about
ODU, when, why, how-format). - Conducting public relations and marketing through
the use of displays, promotional materials,
presentations, mailings, and other activities. - Networking and partnership management through
communication, participation in local events and
program articulation. - Assessing and planning for opportunities and
threats in the service region. -
9REVISION OF SD Position Description Terri
Wheaton, Regenia Hill, Kirk Dewyea
- Enrollment Management PART 2 - RETENTION
- Retention is impacted at the site level by
the efficiency and effectiveness of the student
advising/communication processes. Site directors
must effectively assess and guide students with
timely and accurate communication. They must
take a student centered approach to follow up,
communication, and tracking. They ensure that
the different parts of the university work
together to produce graduates in the most
effective and efficient manner. - Communicating with students regarding their
degree audit and coordinating with campus offices
to support graduation. - Advising students for Academic and Student
Success - Assisting students with Career Management
Services that support their professional goals. - Assisting students in graduation planning process
and post graduation goals. -
10REVISION OF SD Position Description Terri
Wheaton, Regenia Hill, Kirk Dewyea
- Enrollment Management PART 3 -Data Driven
Decision Making - Data driven decision making insures that
plans and activities are informed by collection,
analysis, and use of data. Activities that
produce measurable improvements are continued
and/or expanded, while those that do not are
discontinued or continuously improved. Site
directors serve as the primary data collector for
their service region and use this knowledge to
guide activities and recommendations for
investment by the university in current/future
activities. Activities in this function
include, but are not limited to - Analyzing data collected from past enrollment
generation plans prospect contact data
application reports enrollment reports and
SCHEV/university data. - Developing and implementing enrollment generation
plans and activities based upon data collected
and partnership/feeder analysis by program
service area needs assessments and focus groups. - Evaluating results and continually improving
plans using sound problem solving processes and
work groups.
11(No Transcript)
12Maximizing STUDENT SUCCESS at each stage?
Contacts
Applicants
Registered Students
Graduates
13Maximizing STUDENT SUCCESS at each stage?
- Who are our students?
- How do they hear about us?
- Where do we recruit?
- Who are the Gatekeepers?
- What do prospective students want?
- What do they need to know to make a decision to
contact us? - How do we respond to their contact so that it
encourages applications?
Contacts
14Maximizing STUDENT SUCCESS at each stage?
Contacts
Applicants
- What encourages applications?
- What is the process to apply?
- How easy can you make it?
- Accurate Timely Information
- Once they are admitted, what processes ease
registration?
15Maximizing STUDENT SUCCESS at each stage?
Contacts
Applicants
Registered Students
- Orientation Registration Meetings
- Timely and Accurate Advising
- Accessible and Easy to use Schedule Long Range
Planning, - Cost, Support, Communication
16Maximizing STUDENT SUCCESS at each stage?
Contacts (75 of 360)
Applicants (40-50)
Registered Students
- Long Range Schedules
- Degree Audits
- Academic Support
- Advising
- Career Management Services
- Graduation Post Graduation planning support
Graduates
17Distance Learning Mission
- Enrollment Management
- Overview
- Recruitment
- Annual Enrollment Generation Plan
- Monthly Activities Calendar (300-400
inquiries) - Weekly Prospect Contact Tracking and Follow Up
(240-360 face to face meetings) - Admission and Enrollment Report Analysis (40-50
applications for Fall) - Activity Report (Benchmarking and
Organizational Learning) - Retention
- Degree Audit
- Advising for Academic and Student Success
- Student Services
- Career Management Services
- Graduation and Post Graduation Planning
- Data Driven Decision Making
- Continuous Improvement
18EXAMPLE
19Inquiries for Academic Year 07-08 Undergraduate
Inquiries
20Inquiries for 07-08 How they heard about ODU
21REPORT CARD- How did we do? Enrollment Analysis
22Questions or Comments
- Kirk Dewyea
- 434-977-3262
- kdewyea_at_odu.edu
http//www.brcc.edu/odu