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Face the (Country) Music: Utilizing Connect to Measure ROI and Stop Wasting your Resources Marcus Hanscom Associate Director of Graduate Recruitment and Outreach University of New Haven July 17, 2012
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Face the (Country) Music

May 21, 2015

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Page 1: Face the (Country) Music

Face the (Country) Music: Utilizing Connect to Measure ROI and Stop Wasting your Resources

Marcus HanscomAssociate Director of Graduate Recruitment and Outreach

University of New HavenJuly 17, 2012

Page 2: Face the (Country) Music

Agenda

• Introduction• Assessing where we are• Building the funnel• Engaging prospective students• Measuring ROI• Q&A / Online Evaluation

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University of New Haven

• Private, nonprofit university in West Haven, CT

• 4,600 undergraduate/1,800 graduate students

• Centralized graduate admissions

• Grad using Connect, AY, VIP• Client since December 2007

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Learning Outcome for Today

• We will recruit more efficiently and deliver higher ROI if we:– Evaluate our current student base– Use student information to make educated

decisions on marketing channels and relevant messaging

– AND track student data throughout the funnel including activity on our website, social media

Page 5: Face the (Country) Music

The “Informed” ROI ProcessAssess

Incoming/Current

Students

Lead Generation

Funnel Management/Marketing/Recruitment

Tracking

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THE FOUNDATIONS“All my exes live in Texas…”

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Consider leadership…

“Know thyself… and others.”

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Your existing funnel• Assess the demographics of prospective

students– Geographic Origin?– Male/Female ratio?– Previous major?– Referral Source?

• In an ideal world, assess by program– Easier for decentralized admissions

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Assignment #1• Create a “demographic dashboard”– Utilize a broad filter for all reports• Ie. All graduate students for fall 2012

– Potential reports• International /Domestic Breakdown• Gender Breakdown• Applicants by State (Geo-targeting)• Applicants by Source (ROI)• Applicants by program

– Use dashboard attribute filtering

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Dashboard Filtering

• Customize data reporting in real-time• Helpful attributes:– Gender– State (Geographic Origin)– International/Domestic– Referral Source– Status– Funnel Status

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Inaccurate Funnel Tracking

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Accurate Funnel Tracking

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How we fix the funnel• Bulk edit based on current status– Populate all related options in a separate

attribute: Funnel Status

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Helpful Bulk Edits

• Funnel Status• Program name– Collect concentrations under one title if necessary

• College name– Filter with related college programs

• Use for dashboard filtering

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Food for Thought

• Is there a correlation between those that apply? Enroll?

• Are particular sources more productive?• Are certain groups benefitting from custom

communication plans? Support?

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Assignment #2• Conduct a program demographic assessment– Age/Gender, state, domestic origin– Referral Source– Previous Major

• Filter dashboard by program for data ease• Present to program faculty– Engage faculty in process if not already– Are faculty using Connect on your campus?– Faculty buy-in is crucial

Page 17: Face the (Country) Music

Sample: M.S.E.D. Applicants

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Sample Engineering Applicants

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BUILDING THE FUNNEL“I’m proud of the house we built…”

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Generating Awareness

• That’s so 2001…– Printed Directories– Bulk Snail Mailings– Cold Calling– Newspaper tombstone

ads

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Generating Awareness• …but this is so 2012– Directory Sites (Gradschools.com, Petersons.com,

GraduateGuide.com…)– University Website– Social Media (Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest, LinkedIn,

FourSquare…)– Google/search engines– Blogs– Virtual Information Sessions/Chats– Open Houses

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The key question is…

Is it trackable?

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Lead Sources

• Purchased Lists• Directory Sites• Social Media• University Website• Search Engines

(Paid and Organic)• Graduate Fairs/Visits

• Open Houses• Webinars/Chats• Word of Mouth• Click-thru campaigns• Mailings/BRC• …and more

Page 24: Face the (Country) Music

Purchased Lists

• Importing into Connect?• Critical to prevent purchased leads from

getting into communication plans for true inquiries– Unsolicited vs. solicited interest

• What triggers the inquiry?– VIP pages are a great option

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Key Questions

• What is the total budget allocated to generating leads?

• Are lead generation techniques/processes customized by program?

• What role do faculty members play? Administrators?

• How do you manage your prospect leads versus your inquiries?

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Assignment #3

• Do a lead generation audit– List all current lead sources and costs– Identify financial goals: spend more or less?– Are you doing some things because “that is what we

always do?”– Just the basics: How many students are applying or

enrolling from each source? (Dashboard)

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Where are you sending prospective students?

• Generic page on your site?• An inquiry form?• A specific landing page for just the leads from

a particular source?• A specific inquiry form?

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https://newhavengrad.askadmissions.net/emtinterestpage.aspx?ip=interest&src=152&program=EMGMT

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Assignment #4

• Set up Unique Source Pages – Set up landing pages or inquiry forms unique to each

lead source– Create vanity urls (ie. www.newhaven.edu/nytimes)

for print advertising– Create pages for your generic lead generation and for

event advertising management– Pursue potential custom options with Hobsons

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A Referral Source Policy

• Define your data captures– Created source, how did you hear?, Referral

Source, Lead source (custom pages)• Create attributes to centrally collect data• Identify means of collecting:– Specific sources– Broad source categories

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Bulk Edits

• Move each data set from source attributes into one attribute (ie. Referral Source)

• Use new attribute to help further “funnel” sources into broad attribute (Referral Source Category)

• Use broad attribute to get a pulse on what channels work or need improvement

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Referral Source Collection

Referral Source

Created Source

How did you hear of us?

Lead Source (Hobsons Custom)

Referral Source

Category

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Referral Source Category Collection

Purchased Lists

GMAT Search Names

GRE Search Names

International Search Names

International Hobsons

Leads

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Assignment #5• Create a referral source policy– How do you accurately report where students

came from?– Identify how the created source versus a “How did

you hear about us?” question will vary in your data

• Create one data set/attribute to collect this data– Greatly reduces reporting headaches

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Would your VP like this…

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…or this?

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ENGAGING PROSPECTS“I’m here for the party…”

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Keys to Success

• Automated Communication Plan• Relevant Messaging• Cross-channel messaging with common brand

message• Regular social media participation• Personalization whenever and wherever

possible

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Communication Plan• Automation = efficiency– Particularly for small offices– Does not necessarily mean impersonal

• Integrated marketing opportunities– Letters, emails, VIP pages– Phone call management

• Ensure communication consistency to all audiences

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Relevant Messaging• Students want personalization• Avoid the fluff communications• Provide program information as soon as

possible– Preferably through multiple channels – mail,

email, phone• Clear, succinct, “What’s in it for me?”

communicationsInitial Email Communication Interaction Rates

General 4% Program-Specific 20%

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Tips for Email

• Toss out the “HTML graphic email” is king mentality– Keep in mind personalization, smart phones– Perception of your message

• Send one-time emails to targeted audiences with program-related news

Counselor Email Interaction Rates

HTML 0.25% Plain text 6%

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Social Media• Engaging students on SM means exactly that– Regular interactions– Go beyond the “press release” posts

• Remember the audiences for each platform• Create opportunities to request information,

learn more, “see” your experience• Hobsons can create interest form for iframes

(Facebook)

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MEASURING AND UTILIZING RESULTS

“You got to know when to hold ‘em, know when to fold ‘em…”

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Measuring Results• Results in Connect– Email Results (Open rate, interactions)

– VIP page results• Source Coding (Referrals)• Unique Landing Pages w/tracking• Google Analytics (or other software)

Email Interaction Rates

General 4% Program-Specific 20%

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VIP results

• 8% of all visitors clicked an “Apply Now” link• 59% of those completed and submitted an application

• Average visits per user: 5.7• Average login time: 27 minutes• 6,245 active visitors in last 12 months• 1,267 engaged visitors (20%)

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Google Analytics

• Hobsons can put university code on interest pages

• Request to have redirect to your site• Use goal gauges to determine percentage of

traffic completing form

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Assignment #6

• Become a user on Google Analytics– Learn how to find your specific site content– Evaluate metrics as a whole– No single metric on its own is helpful

• Use metrics to make educated decisions about page content– Do you need to adjust content on your admissions

pages? Program pages?– Would new landing pages help?

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Tips on Tracking

• Minimize options on how students get to your website– Tracking does little good if you have too much to track

• Use vanity URL’s for ease of use or hidden tracking URL’s

• Use short inquiry forms if directing students there first

• K.I.S.S.• All tracking involves a grain of salt

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Utilizing Results

• Allocation of financial and human resources• Development of new channels/expansion of

current ones• Strategic advertising timing• Strategic planning for links/awareness• Restructure/rewrite existing content

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A Starting ROI Argument

• Avg. Rev/Student x # enrolled from source = Estimated Total Revenue/Source– Can simplify numbers by funnel status– Determine the “value” of a given inquiry

or applicant• Compare revenue to annual spend per source– Is your return worth the investment?

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ROI Example

Directory Listing• Avg. Total Revenue/student = $25,000• Students enrolled = 10• Total revenue from source= $250,000• Annual Directory spend: $32,000• ROI: 681%

**Remember this is using a gross revenue figure.

College Fairs• Avg. Total Revenue/student =

$25,000• Students enrolled = 2• Total revenue from source=

$50,000• Annual Travel Spend: $30,000• ROI: 67%

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Assignment #7

• Assign revenue to lead sources and determine estimated ROI– Gross revenue is a start– Determine average revenue/student• Can be most helpful at program level

– Can compare to other sources by percentage return on the dollar

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Assignment Review

1. Create a “Demographic Dashboard”2. Conduct a program demographic assessment3. Do a lead generation audit4. Set up unique source pages5. Create a referral source policy6. Become a user on Google Analytics (and use

it)7. Assign revenue to lead sources for ROI

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Final Thoughts

• None of this happens overnight• Need commitment of human (and in some

cases, financial) resources• Involve faculty if not already doing so• Be adaptable

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THANK YOU.Questions?

Marcus [email protected]: @MarcusHanscom