Archive for the ‘Behavior’ category

Counselor Training Series: Adopt an Entrepreneurial Approach for Greater Success

December 4th, 2014

[Part 7 of the Counselor Training Blog Series provides you with valuable information to help you communicate more effectively with prospective students.]

Let’s play the “what if” game. What if everyone showed up on campus for a just another normal day? Everyone, that is, but the admissions team. All of the lights are on in the admissions office. The computers are running. The doors are open. Everything appears normal but there is not a single member of the admissions team in sight. It is as if a spacecraft has descended and snatched the entire department. Where is everybody? Where did they go? No one knows.

CounselorTrainingSeries270x150And, what if this goes on for days? Weeks, even. Poof! The entire admissions department has disappeared with no known date of return. Dust begins to accumulate. Cobwebs form. Tumbleweeds roll down a windy hallway. Scary little animals dart from behind empty desks. Phones ring. Non-stop. Unanswered.

If this tale were true, what would happen to the college? We all know the answer to that question. Incoming freshmen classes would dry up. The institution would lose the vast majority of its annual revenue. It would collapse. People wouldn’t get paid. The buildings and grounds would deteriorate. The consequences would be dire. One can only imagine the full impact.

The point is that as a member of the admissions team, your role is critically important to the financial well-being of the institution. Your contribution to your college’s bottom line is supremely important. As a member of the admissions team you have a significant responsibility whether you are a counselor, an admissions support person, or the person who greets prospective students and parents at the front door in order to make a great first impression.

In many ways, your role can be compared to that of any entrepreneur in a start-up or well established company. Your responsibilities and input, like theirs, significantly influences the success and revenue of your college. Each and every day, your accomplishments, and the choices you make, have a considerable impact.

We have found that the most successful admissions teams are comprised of people who take an entrepreneurial approach to their jobs. They think and act like Entrepreneurship-600x233entrepreneurs. Regardless of their position, or their territory, or the pool of students they are responsible for, they approach their jobs as though they are building a business. And, if you have a mother, father, brother, sister, or  friend who has built a business, you know what it takes to be successful.

Your job, like any entrepreneur, is to set goals and hold yourself and others accountable for meeting goals. Like any entrepreneur, you should keep your antenna up to spot trends in the marketplace and know your unique place in that market. You have to effectively manage your time – the most valuable resource you have – to make sure it’s being allocated to deliver the best possible return. You have to constantly look for “a better way” and not be afraid to apply them to your process or suggest them to the team. You have to constantly develop yourself professionally. Read. Share ideas. Embrace new ways of doing things.

These are what successful entrepreneurs do. And it applies to you. An entrepreneurial approach will make you more successful. You’ll be happier in your job and the department will function more effectively. Students will be better served. The institution will be better served.

Continue the conversation on Twitter @LongmireCo.  For more information about Longmire and Company’s Interactive Counselor Training Program, click here.

[In the next installment of the Counselor Training Series, we will take a look at the specific tactics that highly-effective admission counselors employ to take an entrepreneurial approach to building their business.] Subscribe to Versions of Conversion today so you don’t miss any of this highly-valuable information.]

Karen Full picKaren Full is a highly-respected higher education professional who has held positions in admissions and enrollment management at several institutions in the Midwest and Florida. With her vast experience working with large and small, public and private institutions, Karen brings a valuable perspective to her role as an Enrollment Strategist at Longmire and Company.

College selection can happen in the blink of an eye.

August 6th, 2014

Eye_For_CollegeFrom my days as a college admissions director I remember in particular one conversation with a parent attending an on-campus event. She told me, “This is it. Our son has made his decision. We have drunk your school’s Kool-Aid.”

I remember asking this parent to tell me exactly how her son knew that our college was now “his college.” In this particular student’s case, his realization or “aha moment” occurred very suddenly and forcefully while spending time on campus with a group of students who shared his love of automotive engineering and interest in motor sports.

Long before the May 1 decision date arrived, he had already identified himself as a member of this group and therefore as a future student at our institution.

Longmire and Company’s Your Value Proposition study, conducted in 2013 and co-sponsored with nearly 40 colleges and universities, uncovered just how much a student’s excitement about a college causes them to enroll there. It’s no revelation that college selection is an emotional decision, but the Longmire study showed that a student’s level of excitement about a school correlated to likelihood of enrollment by a margin of two-to-one over cost and a school’s perceived quality.

Students are applying to more colleges than ever before, and admitted-to-enrolled yield rates nationally have been on the decline. Students clearly have choices. Of course they are going to carefully consider costs and quality attributes. But they still are going to become very excited about one particular college.

Do you know precisely how and when your prospective students locked in on their college selection decision? Do you know how to create the environments where that will happen with predictability?

Your admissions officers work hard to spread the word about your institution during college fairs and at high schools. They lay out the facts and features. Your office most certainly conducts great Saturday campus open-houses at which enthused, friendly and eager staffers speak positively about the great things your school can do for students. You are constantly busy with direct marketing and electronic recruitment strategies.

All of this activity is good and necessary, but how do you know which, or if any of these activities are truly generating that moment of excitement, that emotional bond that makes students want to show up on campus day one?  Or, is the bond occurring due to something outside of your sphere of influence?

This summer at Longmire and Company we have set out to help enrollment officers find these answers. Our newest study The Excitement Factor! will help institutions better understand what is driving their own prospective students to that level of excitement that makes them want to enroll. We will gather data and information straight from the students — finding out how and when students become truly excited and committed to their college of choice, isolating the points at which students move beyond facts and attributes and feel the grip of an emotional bond.

The comprehensive data report that Longmire will produce for each participating institution will highlight patterns and habits of their student pools — thus allowing colleges to evaluate which of their recruitment methods cause excitement and enrollments, and which do not!

We are signing up institutions to participate this summer.  The cost is low, and all you have to do is provide us with the students from your 2014 (most recent) recruitment pool.  We do the rest and will present you with your data.

You can download detailed information about being a study co-sponsor and obtaining data on your pool of students by clicking here.

Karen_Full_100x100Karen Full is a successful higher education professional who has held positions in enrollment management at large and small, public and private institutions including Kettering University, University of Tampa, Marian University, and other institutions. She is now an Enrollment Strategist at Longmire and Company.

Bob Longmire discusses ground breaking enrollment management study

July 11th, 2014

What follows is a guest post by Mark Thompson based on his interview with Bob Longmire, President of Longmire and Company. The topic of the interview centers on Longmire and Company’s national higher education co-sponsored study now in preparation for launch.

Mark Thompson:
When – more importantly why – did Longmire and Company start doing these nationally co-sponsored studies?

Bob Longmire:
Our first one was back in 2008. The economy was tanking and our clients wanted to know how it would impact their enrollment. So we conducted a study and asked students and parents if and how their plans might change relative to college selection. The information we obtained from that study was an enormously helpful to the co-sponsors and they began asking us to do more studies on important topics of the day.

The study you’re getting ready to launch, “The Excitement Factor!” is the sixth co-sponsored study you’ve conducted in recent years. What prompted this topic?

We made a fascinating discovery in our most recent study called “Your Value Proposition: How Students and Parents Form Their Value Perceptions and Select Colleges.” That discovery cried out for further investigation and insight.

What was the discovery?

Of the three primary drivers of college selection, which are cost, perceived quality of the institution and the student’s excitement about attending, we found that excitement about attending is much more strongly correlated to likelihood of enrollment than the other two factors. And by “much more” I mean TWICE as much!

Excitement_FactorThe fact that excitement plays a role in college selection was not a revelation. What was surprising was how much stronger the correlation is to enrollment over other factors such as cost and perceived quality.

Does this mean that excitement is the only factor influencing enrollment?

Not at all! Students have to get information about cost and affordability. For some it’s a deal breaker right there. And they have to reach a degree of confidence that the institution’s programs, facilities and services have an acceptable level of quality. The thing is, though, the typical student will find many colleges that are affordable and of acceptable quality. This country is full of them. However, they are only going to get supremely excited about one of them in their mix of choices. And that college is going to win their enrollment. We actually explored all of this in a series of focus groups.

What did you learn in the focus groups?

This is where the discovery got even more interesting. Students were able to tell us the exact moment in time and place when they came to the realization that a specific college was going to be their new home. They could tell us exactly when and where it hit them. That’s when the deal was sealed for them. At that point all other colleges became an afterthought.

So when does it happen?

Every student is different, obviously. For some it happens because of something a professor says to them. For another it happens when they are walking down a campus building hallway and see other students who are just like them. For others it starts when they are a sophomore in high school and their big brother takes them to a football game on campus. It can be in the cafeteria when a food-service worker behind the counter smiles and says something that makes them feel welcomed.

It sounds like it sometimes has nothing to do with what college does and everything to do with the environment they are in and the people they are around.

I wouldn’t say that categorically. Ideally, the college puts them in a position where the “aha moment” can happen. The challenge for any college is to find the best way to do that. I will say, though, that we learned in the focus groups that many things colleges do to try to generate student excitement is having the opposite effect.

Like what?

Students tell us that highly choreographed campus visits turn them off. They see them as a show or performance designed more for the hard sell and less to show them what life is really like on campus. Other turn-offs are excessive phone calls and emails that have no personalization. And any communication, for that matter, that is homogenized and impersonal, including many face-to-face interactions that they had with admission counselors, professors, and even current students on campus.

What will be learned from the “Excitement Factor!” study?

We’re going to explore a wide range of issues on when and how students reach their “aha moment.” What environment are they in? What are they experiencing? Who is with them? How the college has facilitated it or not. When it happens? If they haven’t reached an emotional epiphany, why not? We want to find out which recruiting methods and messages are most successful in putting students on a path where they land at a point of realization that they have found their perfect fit.

How will this add to what’s known from all the research that’s already out there?

It’s going to be very additive. There is no doubt that as an industry we capture a lot of data about students and how they select colleges and what influences them. But we don’t get into what’s happening to them emotionally. And that’s what drives the college selection decision. Facts tell. Emotions sell.

Each co-sponsor in this study gets data back on the pool of students they surveyed for the project. How are the findings going to help them?

It’s going to help them better understand what’s happening on their campus with their pool of prospective students. It’s going to help them compare their methods and resources to those in use at other institutions. They’ll get a better feel for why some students matriculate down through the funnel and others stop. It’s going to help them better understand how to put prospective students in the environments and with the people who will most naturally lead the student to their own personal “aha moment.”

The data produced from the study is crucial but there’s an added benefit to co-sponsoring the project. We meet individually with each co-sponsor when we present their data to them. It gives us all an opportunity to share opinions and recommendations based upon what we see. The discussion is very helpful to them. And it’s a lot of fun!

Will non-sponsoring colleges benefit from the findings?

Absolutely. An executive summary will be released nationally after all of the co-sponsors have been fully debriefed on all of their individual and comparative data. Naturally, the national report doesn’t include the depth of information available to co-sponsors and it doesn’t include the college-specific data that we collect but it still provides useful insights.  We’ve done that with all of our studies and they are available on our website to download freely without any type of registration required.

What types of institutions are involved in the study?

Four-year not-for-profit public and private universities across the country. All shapes and sizes.

How does an institution participate as a co-sponsor?

Just call us. It’s really easy. The co-sponsoring college doesn’t have to do much other than provide us with data on the students they want to survey. We take it from there.

What’s the timeline?

We’ll be bringing colleges on board with this study through July and August and then begin analyzing and reporting data after that.

 

Mark_ThompsonMark Thompson is a seasoned and successful higher education professional who has held positions in enrollment management at large and small, public and private institutions including The Ohio State University, Thiel College, Defiance College and other institutions. He follows and writes about developments in the field of higher education enrollment management.

Discovery Leads To Launch of National Higher Education Enrollment Study

June 18th, 2014

WELL KNOWN FACT: A student’s excitement about attending a specific college is influential in their decision to enroll. NOT SO WELL KNOWN FACT: The student’s excitement about attending is more strongly correlated to likelihood of enrollment (by a factor of two!) than the institution’s cost or the student’s perception of the quality of the institution. This is consistent with human nature. People need facts but they buy on emotion.

Student Light BulbThe magnitude of the influence of excitement on the enrollment decision was revealed in Longmire and Company’s most recent national co-sponsored study entitled, “Your Value Proposition: How Students and Parents Form Their Value Perceptions and Select Colleges.” Nearly 40 colleges participated in the study. It yielded new insights on many fronts, to be sure, but one of the most startling was just how strongly excitement becomes the driving force in the selection process. It’s pivotal. And it’s so often born in a specific moment in time.

After Longmire and Company released the Value Proposition Study report, we decided to investigate this X-factor of excitement further. We conducted focus groups on college campuses. We were able to meet with college freshmen to explore, in depth, how their college selection decision developed over time and up to the point of making their rational and emotional commitment to their college of choice.

In each focus group we arrived at the central question, “Now, can you tell us when and how you knew this was the right college for you.” That’s when things got even more interesting.

That simple question sparked a higher energy to the discussion. You could see it in the students’ faces, body language and tone of voice. They got more animated. Their descriptions were more detailed. Highly detailed! They remembered the exact moment. They could remember where they were. Who was around them. The weather that day. Even what they were wearing. They related their moment of decision in vivid detail. They remembered exactly how they felt. And that was the precise moment that all other colleges lost their shot.

You can likely remember a moment at which you made a life-changing decision and how you felt at the time. I can. Maybe you share a similar experience to the one I’ll describe.

My wife and I were looking to buy a house. We had told the real estate agent about all of the attributes we wanted: the number of bedrooms, size of the yard, the neighborhood, nearby schools, and so on. Facts. Attributes. Characteristics. She proceeded to show us 15 houses that met those criteria. We visited each and every house (ugh!). And then, this one house, sitting on a cul-de-sac, grabbed our attention as soon as we pulled up in front of it. My wife and I sat in the back seat as the agent got out of the car. We were quietly staring at this house. I felt an immediate attraction to it. So did my wife. We didn’t say anything.

The agent led us to the front door, opened it, and let us walk in first. I stopped in the foyer, looked around, and immediately knew that this was going to be our new home. My wife had the same reaction. “This is it,” I said. “This is what we’ve been looking for.” (This probably killed our chances of getting a good deal.)

I remember that experience as though it were yesterday. That house had attributes similar to all of the others we had looked at. But there was something special that drew us in.

The same is true for students in making their college selection. There is something beyond facts and attributes that hits them like a train. It’s emotion. Excitement! It tells them that they have found their college. And it can occur at any time or place.

Our newest co-sponsored study, called “The Excitement Factor!” is going to isolate when, where and how that happens with prospective students in their college selection process. We will uncover patterns, information, and insight to help colleges better understand how to put students in the environments and with the people who will create the level of excitement that will cause the student to feel that they belong there.

ExclamationCo-sponsoring institutions of this study will receive information specific to their institution. A report aggregating all the data collected for the study will be released nationally later this year. If you have an interest in becoming a co-sponsor and uncovering information about how excitement is – or is not – being generated among your prospective students we invite you download a prospectus that provides detailed information on the “Excitement Factor!” study. You can download it by clicking here.

If you wish to download results from our previous studies, please do so by clicking here.