eLearning solutions

latest news

EdTek News

More

Program Approval and Accreditation Consulting

More

Enrollment Marketing and Admissions

More

ePortfolios for Student Assessment

More

Faculty Recruitment and Training

More

Instructional Design and Course Development

More

Best Practices for Online Education

More

The Education Industry

More

Government Education Policy

More

Education Affordability

More

Education Technology

More

what others say

"They have small college prices with accessible services."
Dr. Rebecca Jones, Chancellor, West Suburban College of Nursing

"EdTek has met all of our expectations."
Dr. Sue O'Donnell, Program Director, U.S. Office of Personnel Management

"EdTek gave us the top technology and support we needed."
Ken Westray, President, NP Learning

More

eLearning library

Blog Category:

Enrollment Marketing and Admissions

2/9/2010
Dominick Miciotta
Comments (0)

The Brand Identity Test

When we begin the marketing part of our Operations Assessment one of our first questions is “What is your value proposition” this question sometimes illicits more blank faces than answers.  If you think your institution has a value proposition, try the following test.  If you ask this same question in your next staff meeting, you will find as many unique and different answers as there are people in the room.  To make sure you get the best answers ask your team to write their answers down and collect them when completed.

When beginning a branding development process you should prepare for resistance.  Resistance will likely occur where the cross roads meet between “What Your Audience Values” and “Your Strengths” as these two items are sometimes different.  Your staff will also have different opinions about the strenghts offered by your institution and your students may value a similar but different range of items.  The mere suggestion of a branding development process will make some employees uncomfortable as even the most mild potential for change can be threatening to some.

What Your Audience Values

This gets to the heart of education itself.  Why do students enroll at your institution, and what do they hope to get out of the experience?  An institution that begins with these questions and makes a concerted effort to get to the real answers will be on their way to identifying their brand and value proposition.  The shared governance structure in non-profit education should be very successful at managing the process to get these answers but they are not always successful in doing so.  Likewise, the situational leadership and “top-down” management style in corporately owned for-profit institutions typically have a keen awareness of their brand identity; one weakness is they may not factor in the opinions of students well enough.

Your Strengths

Getting faculty, administration and staff members together to identify departmental then institutional strengths can be an insightful and fun time for all involved.  Finding where the key stakeholders’ identified strengths meet what the audience thinks is important is where an institution will find its brand promise and resulting value proposition.

Problems

• If students do not value the institutions' strengths, then perhaps the institutions needs to focus on developing additional strengths

• Students may not identify an institutional strength; this may be an indicator of success, but this does not mean we stop this process as brand management is a continual effort

Shared Governance – sometimes the appearance of shared governance is just that, an appearance.  While too much ‘shared governance’ leads to a failure to make decisions, a balance is required.  In terms of Situational Leadership and the “top-down” approach to management in for-profit institutions, a leader may spend too much time telling and directing and not enough time listening.  Again, balance is required for successfully managing your Brand Identity – perhaps the most critical element of your public image.

Finally, we believe if conducted more frequently than a strategic planning process, a continuous analysis of what students want, what an institution is delivering on and how each aligns with the institutional mission can be a very healthy undertaking for an education provider.


1/13/2010
Dominick Miciotta
Comments (0)

Literacy, Teaching, Technology and the Impact on Women and Children

What is the role of Women's Literacy on their children's health and education attainment? How can technology specifically eLearning software impact the racial achievement gap? How can technology influence pedagogy and ultimately customize education for individuals on a global scale?

Bookmark and Share