Admit or Die: Addressing Admission Decision Factors on Websites
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ADMIT OR DIE
mStoner
How colleges and universities can provide good information about decision factors on the web
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Live tweets: #mStonerNow
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#mStonerNow
What are some of the best admissions sites or best admissions sections you’ve seen?
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Get the deck by the end of the weekvia email and mStonerBlog.com
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Understand & explore
Narrow choices & apply
Decide & accept
Transition to being a student
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Understand & explore
Narrow choices & apply
Decide & accept
Transition to being a student
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• Decision factors: talking about what matters most to your audience
• 10 great examples of content that supports decision factors
• Questions?
DECISION FACTORS
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Decision factors, in order of most importance for Tier One Law Schools:RankingsProgramsLocationCostOutcomes / jobs
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RankingsProgramsLocationCostOutcomes / jobs
This order will look slightly different for every institution based on profile and competition.
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RankingsProgramsLocationCostOutcomes
But, these are the things I’m calling primary decision factors because they are going to be a huge part of the decision for almost everyone.
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#mStonerNow
What are other decision factors that can influence the choice to attend
a college or university?
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Takeaways
m1Addressing primary decision factors . . . (rankings, programs, location, cost, outcomes). . . needs to be part of your content strategy.
m2Your marketing needs to speak to the primary decision factors first.
m3For colleges and universities, the main site—or admissions microsite—needs provide easy-to-reach and compelling information for primary decision factors.
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DECISION FACTOR:RANKINGS
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https://www.baylor.edu/about/index.php?id=88794
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https://www.baylor.edu/about/index.php?id=88794
Highlights:
• Facts & Figures is in the main navigation
• Authoritative publication rankings are easily identified at the top
• Individual department and program rankings are grouped in a single place
https://www.baylor.edu/about/index.php?id=88794
http://www.gatech.edu/about/facts-and-figures
Highlights:
• General information only; program rankings mostly located within school and college sections
• Increasing diversity is a top goal and the entire third section of the page speaks to that
http://www.gatech.edu/about/facts-and-figures
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Rankings help students decide to attend.
What you can do with your site:
• Be transparent. Prospective students will find rankings no matter what. You can put the information in one place.
• Acknowledge the publications that matter.
• Rankings can be used to make a recruiting statement.
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DECISION FACTOR:PROGRAMS
(degrees, majors, minors, certificates)
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Remember: earning a degree is expensive, time consuming, and impacts the rest of a person’s life.
Program pages should never be an afterthought.
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Here’s a program page from astate university that charges:
$15,204 per year (in-state)
$26,000 per year
(out of state)
• They didn’t bother to give each degree it’s own page
• No information justifying the cost OR value of the degree is given
• No next steps are provided
Does this look like a $104,000 product to you?
http://www.northpark.edu/Academics/Undergraduate-Studies/Majors/Biology
Highlights:
• The goal was to create the ultimate product page model for .edus
• Gives reasons to study Biology in general for the casual browser
• Shows content for high-ability students
• Next steps and related programs are shown at the bottom
http://www.northpark.edu/Academics/Undergraduate-Studies/Majors/Biology
http://www.nait.ca/program_home_76755.htm
Each degree has its own set of pages
http://www.nait.ca/program_home_76755.htm
Highlights:
• Leads with data: will you graduate? What will you be making? How long does the degree take to complete?
• Superb information architecture that respects the needs and next steps of a prospective student
http://www.nait.ca/program_home_76755.htm
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What to think about with your program pages:• Program (degree, major, minor, certificate) pages
ARE the product for higher education! • Program pages should help justify the expense of an
education.• Program pages should help someone understand
what they can do with the degree.• These pages should be some of the richest and well-
maintained pages on a college or university site.
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DECISION FACTOR:LOCATION
http://www.scad.edu/locations/atlanta/explore
Highlights:
• Pretty much covers all the bases for a prospective student
• Facilities link includes residence halls and pictures
• Links to events – get them to visit
• The cities are already desirable for some – they went the extra mile
http://www.scad.edu/locations/atlanta/explore
Highlights:
• Transparency, even for facts that aren’t that appealing (like weather)
• Covers what your off-campus options are
• Covers travel distances
https://www2.naz.edu/
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Location helps students decide. What you can do:• Location is more than just a map. You must promote
the setting; it’s part of the decision process for almost every student.
• Transportation, living arrangements, shopping, and off-campus leisure are part of location that most prospectives will care about.
DECISION FACTOR: COST
https://college.harvard.edu/financial-aid
https://college.harvard.edu/financial-aid
Highlights:
• Leads with powerful data
• Follows with calls to action
• Amazing responsive net price calculator
• A page explaining types of aid page that is clear and concise
https://college.harvard.edu/financial-aid
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DECISION FACTOR:OUTCOMES / JOBS
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What are some outcomes that can demonstrate the value of a degree?
An entire section devoted to outcomes
http://www.kenyon.edu/
Highlights:
• Amazing demonstration of the value of a degree from Kenyon
• Leads with data, follows with stories
• Bonus round: first jobs in recent years!
http://www.kenyon.edu/
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Justifying the value of a degree is increasingly important. How can you help prospectives decide?• Jobs help demonstrate the value of a degree.• Use data AND storytelling, not one or the other.• Group outcomes by school or area of study – an
music student has different goals than a business student.
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Make sure you’re presenting these well: RankingsProgramsLocationCostOutcomes / jobs
m?Questions?
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Thanks!@DougGapinski mstonerblog.com