Archive for the ‘Counselor Training’ category

College Personnel: Take a Page from Car Salesmen

September 25th, 2012

Every employee on campus – from admissions to grounds keeping – might be able to learn a thing or two from their last car-shopping experience.  “But car salesmen are shady” you could be thinking. Well what do you think about service professionals at banks, hospitals or even the United States Postal Service? The truth is, all of these industries ranked higher in customer service satisfaction than colleges, based on recent data from a national co-sponsored study by Longmire and Company. On top of that, 55% of students and parents questioned colleges’ commitment to provide quality service, based on their experience during the pre-enrollment process. Our study revealed that many colleges are currently flunking out when it comes to pre-enrollment service. Perhaps it’s time we look to other service industries and revisit Customer Service 101.

Let’s go back to the car salesman example: Much like choosing a college, buying a car is an important decision, and a big investment. There are many dealerships to choose from, and aside from price, the purchase decision will be heavily influenced by the human interaction and overall experience that a customer receives when they walk through the door. Car salesmen and dealership owners know this, and the most successful shops invest in making the customer experience as positive as possible. They hire sales personnel who treat customers with respect and put them at ease. They ensure the grounds and waiting room are clean and comfortable. They offer beverages and send follow-up thank you notes. They adopt an overall attitude of helpfulness toward the customer. All of these seemingly small details contribute to establishing a sense of trust between the customer and the seller. And if something is off during the ‘browsing’ stage, there is little chance the customer will follow through to the ‘buying’ stage.

Now many of the students and parents we surveyed were largely put off by the level of pre-enrollment service at the buying stage, reducing the chances that they would enroll. Forty percent of them said that their most recent experience with the college they were considering was less than positive. Here’s how the details of their experiences broke down on a graded scale:

Admissions Office & FacultyC+

Student Affairs: C-

Housing: C-

Campus Security: C-

Financial Aid & Food service: D+Grounds/ Maintenance: C+

A C-average is passable, but not impressive. These things matter significantly to prospective students and parents and enormously influence their final decision regarding which institution to attend. Bottom line: If a college wants to gain a competitive advantage and attract students, it must invest in delivering a higher level of personal service during the recruiting phase.

The good news here is that it is not terribly difficult to improve the experience for prospective students. It starts with adopting a service mindset and getting the whole campus on board with attentiveness to student needs. If car salesmen can do it, surely our centers for higher learning can as well. Over the next few months, I will continue this conversation with more specific guidelines and tips for helping to improve the level of pre-enrollment service. We want to help colleges seize this opportunity to differentiate and attract more students through better service.

In the next installment we’ll describe how to take a baseline measurement of your institution and determining a roadmap to better service.

If you would like a copy of the results of our national study on pre-enrollment customer service, simply visit our Contact Us page and request it. We’ll send it to you right away.

The Single Most Powerful Change Counselors Can Make To Be More Effective

April 26th, 2012

Time and time again when we visit campuses to conduct our Interactive Training Workshops we see counselors struggle with what is the most important element in their conversations with students: Probing.

If you ask the average counselor, they will tell you that they have an established list of questions that they ask the typical student. What major are you most interested in? What do you like to do outside of school? What do you hope to be doing after graduation? Have you been to our campus before? What schools are you looking at? What attracted you to our institution? There are hundreds more.

After they’ve been doing it for a while, most counselors get very polished at asking these questions. They become skilled at making students and parents feel at ease.

In truth, most questions asked by a counselor – even a seasoned one – are the same questions asked by counselors everywhere. For a student, that makes for a rather predictable and uninspiring conversation.

The alternative to asking questions is to probe. Deeply. Widely. Comprehensively.

In our workshop, we conduct a role-playing exercise called “Fill The Buckets” in which a counselor must spend no less than 10 minutes asking questions of a “student” (who is played by another participant in the workshop). The counselor can open any conversational bucket they wish in an effort to understand the student’s needs, preferences and motivations. Open a bucket about parents? That’s okay. Major interest? Okay, too. Other schools under consideration? No problem.

The role-playing counselor is encouraged to ask all of these questions and many more. But they can ask questions only! For 10 minutes! They are encouraged to open buckets and drill down thoroughly enough to understand the importance of specific issues. They should also uncover the importance relative to other issues, and the degree to which each issue will influence college selection.

What the counselor must NOT do during this probing exercise is to talk about the college. And that’s what is so hard. The natural inclination is to ask a question, get an answer, and offer up some attribute of the institution that relates to the answer they just got. That’s the definition of a linear conversation controlled by the equivalent of triggers and switches.

A more free-form conversation, with unexpected tangents and discoveries, is more productive for both the student and the counselor. Only after the counselor has opened, filled, and closed all the needed buckets is he or she in a position to connect the dots of the conversation and to frame a compelling value proposition for the student.

The only way to influence anyone is to first understand, through rich conversation, what truly motivates them. Probing enables rich conversation.

Most counselors can’t probe for 10 minutes straight. They run out of questions. With training they can learn to probe indefinitely.

A True Story of Horror

April 26th, 2010

This is a true story. A story that causes anyone in an admissions office to wince and utter, “Ouch.” I witnessed it a couple of months ago.

Recently, a college had engaged Longmire and Company to conduct a full-day Interactive Training Workshop for their counselors. I was accompanied on the trip by Rick Montgomery, an associate with our firm. The college graciously offered to put us up in a beautifully renovated house they owned near campus for our overnight stay prior to the workshop. We were instructed to call the campus security office upon arriving to obtain the keys to our rooms on the second floor.

We arrived at the house after dark and phoned campus security. “I’ll be over in about 10 minutes,” the security officer said. “I’d be over sooner but the kids are getting back on campus after break and I’m having to open alot of dorm room doors because they’ve lost their keys.” The tinge of exasperation I noted in his voice prompted me to assure him that we were in no hurry.

The security officer arrived not long thereafter. He was helpful yet seemed rushed. After letting us in the house and manufacturing a little small talk, he handed over the keys to our upstairs bedrooms and promptly left to, presumably, go open more dorm room doors.

Rick and I threw our bags in our respective rooms and agreed to meet downstairs in the large living room to talk about an upcoming consulting engagement. After an hour or so, we decided that our work was done for the day. It was getting late. Except for Rick and me, the large house was empty and quiet on a Northeastern night that had transformed into a misty chill.

As I was closing my laptop we heard the tall, heavy front door squeak as it opened slowly. Rick and I looked at each other as if to silently question who might be entering at such a late hour. We heard voices and footsteps coming toward us from the long hallway on the other side of the living room wall. We remained in our chairs, our eyes fixed on the doorway leading into the hall. These visitors, whoever they may be, would appear any second.

What appeared was a delightful, smiling mom with two high school seniors in tow. They had driven hours through the night for a campus visit scheduled the next morning. The woman, her daughter, and her daughter’s boyfriend all looked a little damp and frizzy from the mist outside. The dampness and the hour had not suppressed their excitement, though. Their eyes were bright and engaging as we introduced each other. They, like us, had been invited to stay in the house by the admissions office.

Within minutes, another family arrived. They, too, had traveled a long distance to visit campus.

Excitement and noise had replaced quiet and calm. The atmosphere was infectious. Everyone was laughing and asking questions of each other. It was a first visit for all. A sense of anticipation permeated the conversations. No one had seen the campus. The morning would reveal it.

In a tone slightly louder than that of this developing mini-crowd, I asked if everyone had called the campus security office to get their room keys. They all said yes, and that the guard would arrive at the house soon to drop them off.

While waiting for campus security to arrive, and after everyone discovered that Rick and I knew a great deal about the college, questions started flying at us from every direction. Faster than we could attempt to answer.

What did we know about the faculty? What did we know about the quality of the programs? What level of personal attention do students receive? Is the campus pretty? Do we know students who attend there? What is the town like? What fun things are there to do? Are the students nice? What are the dorms like?

We assured everyone that the admissions office was looking forward to answering all of their questions, and that they would do a much better job than we ever could. Unfortunately, that reassurance did little to quell their excitement and anticipation.

Just then, the campus security officer arrived with sets of keys. He looked even more damp and disheveled than I had remembered. He seemed just as hurried. He was now the center of attention, and he spoke.

“Sorry it took me so long to get here,” he said. “All of the students are getting back on campus and some of them are being stupid, as usual. They’re locking themselves out of their rooms and they gotta call me.” He punctuated that sentence with a laugh.

He continued. “I had to confiscate a bong, I had to take away a bunch of pot from another kid, and I had to bust up a party and lock up all the beer that people brought back on campus.”

The room went suddenly quiet. Expressions on faces neutralized faster than a flash.

I’m sure my expression bordered on horror.

Oblivious to the damage he had just inflicted on the poor admissions office that had not even had their first visit with these people, the security guard happily handed everyone their keys, smiled, and offered a sincere offer of help to anyone who desired it. To all he bid a cheerful farewell.

From that moment forward, all perceptions that these visitors formulated about the college were most likely influenced by or filtered through the prism of this innocent yet unfortunate encounter.

Will it make a difference in the institution’s ability to recruit these students and parents? Maybe not. But it may.

Customer service and brand is demonstrated at each and every touch point between the institution and the student and parent. This was reinforced in our recent co-sponsored Study of Parents: How They Evaluate Colleges and Influence Enrollment. Any touch point can reinforce the perceptions that the college promotes and any touch point can derail or destroy it. The only way to ensure that the institution’s brand is protected at all touch points is through institution-wide and ongoing training of every single person on campus.

All representatives of the college, regardless of function, should proudly carry the same job title: Director of First Impressions. The impressions they should convey must be clearly understood and they should be equipped with the tools and training to advance them.

5 Key Traits of Successful Admissions Offices

February 16th, 2010

Over the last several years, Longmire and Company has visited many campuses to conduct interactive training workshops for counselors and other staff members who have direct or indirect recruiting responsibility.

Some of our clients bring us in to address specific areas that need attention. Other clients that can boast high functioning, high-performing admissions and recruiting operations bring us in to help them get even better.

Regardless of where the client falls on scales of proficiency or performance, they share a common interest: To get better. Simply having a goal to get better sounds, well, rather simple. But it’s huge.

In our experience, high-performing admissions offices and the people who work in them exhibit five key traits.

EMBRACE CHANGE:

Organizations, departments, and people who embrace change pave their own way toward improvement. Without the fundamental willingness to change, there is no road ahead.

The old adage holds true. You can’t do the same thing over and over again and expect different results. Improvement is, by definition, measured in differences. Greater success depends upon change. Willingness to change is not enough. Enthusiasm for change is the ideal.

A BETTER WAY:

There is always a better way. Always! The most successful people and organizations are constantly searching for a better way. It’s ever present in their thinking. Unless a department or a team member needs radical change, incremental change is fine. It adds up. The impact is sizable over time.

PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT:

If you don’t measure it you can’t manage it. Once objectives are set, high achievers measure their performance toward reaching the desired objective. It’s a simple concept but hard to do. We recommend breaking down objectives into small increments so that they can be tracked on a daily or weekly basis.

VALIDATE DECISIONS:

Once strategies and tactics are implemented, successful organizations validate whether they work as intended. If the desired result is being achieved, exploit it. If not, go back and determine a better way. Validation is easy when strategies and tactics are clearly defined and performance indicators are installed along the timeline of implementation.

INTERNALIZE IT:

Once all of the above is practiced continually it becomes ingrained in your personal and organization’s processes. It becomes natural and habitual. It becomes central to your culture. New players coming into the team learn it through osmosis and adapt to it.