Post on 16-Apr-2017
transcript
• 45 minute webinar + 15 minutes for questions and answers • Ask questions through the GoToWebinar Control Panel • Tweet during the webinar with #higheredmyths • Please fill out the post-webinar evaluation • Check your inbox early next week for the webinar recording and slide deck
The Plan
#higheredmyths
#higheredmyths
Michael Stoner President, mStoner
Michael.Stoner@mStoner.com @mStonerVT
Gil Rogers Director of Enrollment Marketing, Chegg
gil@Chegg.com @GilRogers
5
Myths or realities?
#higheredmyths
1. Your website is effective if it isn’t responsive.
2. Teens will think poorly of your college if you have a bad website.
3. Your website is the most important influence in a teen’s decision to apply.
4. Teens overwhelmingly prefer video and images to text on college websites.
6
Myths or realities?
#higheredmyths
5. Teens move freely back and forth between social media and college websites.
6. Teens are eager to engage with your college through a smartphone app.
7. Virtual tours are way more important to teens than campus maps.
7
Demographics: Professionals
#higheredmyths
• Work across multiple functions: marketing, communications, web, social media, admissions
• Institutions: 40 % public, 20% private universities; 33% liberal arts, colleges community colleges, prof schools
• More than 50% have worked in higher ed for 5-15 years • 596 responses included in final report
8
Demographics: Teens
#higheredmyths
• 62% high school seniors; 35% juniors • Most considering applying to public (86%) or private universities (61%) &
51% considering both. 28% considering applying to liberal arts colleges • 87% had started researching colleges already • Prospect pool is diverse: 47% Caucasian/White; 24% Hispanic/Latino; 23%
African American/Black; 11% Asian • 2,346 responses included in final report
#higheredmyths
81%of teens told us they visited a college website using a
mobile browser in our Mythbusting Admissions research, conducted in 2015 (mstnr.me/AdmissionMyths)
#higheredmyths
70%of teens told TeensTALK® 2016 that they
use a college website throughout their admission process (bit.ly/2frJo5e)
#higheredmyths
82%of professionals said that a bad website
will have a negative impact on teens opinion of the college
#higheredmyths
74%of juniors agreed that “College websites make a
difference in my perception of the school.” (E-Expectations 2016: mstnr.me/E-Expect16)
#higheredmyths
Kind of jobs I can get
Tuition, costs, aid info
Academic info
Student life info
Admission & app processes
What other students are like
Info re tours, info sessions
Scheduling a visit
0 10 20 30 40 50
Hard-to-use areas of .edu websites
#higheredmyths
Your website is the mostimportant influence ina teen’s decision to apply.
Myth or reality?
19
The question we asked
#higheredmyths
“When you evaluate a particular college prior to deciding whether to apply, how important is the college’s website in your decision whether to apply or not?”
#higheredmyths
80%of professionals rated the importance
teens placed on a college’s website as 6 or 7
#higheredmyths
84.4%of respondents to NACAC’s “2015 State of
College Admission” attached “considerable importance” to websites as an undergraduate
recruitment strategy (mstnr.me/2dAAeSn)
#higheredmyths
Question:
“Which resources did you or would you use during each phase of the college application process?”
data & figure from TeensTALK® 2016; © Stamats 2016 | © Chegg 2016
#higheredmyths
Teens overwhelmingly prefer
video and images to texton college websites.
Myth or reality?
#higheredmyths
2.4 hrsaverage time teens spend each day watching
TV/DVDs/videos (The Common Sense Census: mstnr.me/2eko4vY)
#higheredmyths
Content preferences on a college website
what teens say (n=1902)
what professionals believe (n=520)
text & articles 64% 17%
photography 60% 74%
charts and infographics 47% 55%
headlines and subject lines 47% 57%
videos 40% 76%
other images besides photography 8% 6%
#higheredmyths
Teens click throughto your sitefrom social media sites
and vice versa.
Myth or reality?
#higheredmyths
Click-throughs from a .edu site to a social site*
to Facebook
to Twitter
to Instagram
to LinkedIn
to YouTube
to college search/help80
44
10
35
25
34
57
69
11
63
39
53
professionals (n=434) teens (n=1349)
*when researching colleges
#higheredmyths
Click-throughs to a .edu site from a social site*from Facebook
from Twitter
from Instagram
from LinkedIn
from YouTube
from Snapchat
from YikYak
to college search/help78
5
15
35
7
32
23
33
73
20
40
61
58
58
45
59
professionals (n=430) teens (n=1431)
*when researching colleges
#higheredmyths
Teens are eagerto engage with your collegethrough a smartphone app.
Myth or reality?
#AMAHigherEd #higheredmyths
#higheredmyths
54%of professionals said that teens will download
and use a college’s app after they’d decided which institution they were attending
updates on admissions info
learn about college-specific info
submit an applicataion
communicate with a college rep
take a virtual campus tour
0 16 32 48 64 80
Half of teens would download an app to communicate …
But: do you offer what they want?
#higheredmyths
#higheredmyths
Teens and your website …
• Your website is important throughout the process, but different parts are important at different times.
• Your site must be responsive: 66 percent of the teens responding to this survey used a smartphone or mobile phone to fill it out. In contrast, 92 percent of professionals used a desktop or laptop computer.
• Photos are important forms of content. But pay as much attention to the text on your site as to the videos.
#higheredmyths
Teens and your website
• The content about academics/majors is very important. Make it robust and easy to find. And remember: teens look for both these terms on your site.
• The campus map is a neglected information resource for teens: they use it in a variety of ways in addition to way finding.
• Your social media sites are important in creating an impression of your institution, but teens won’t necessarily go to your site from Facebook or vice versa.
Michael Stoner President
@mstonervt
312.622.6930 michael.stoner@mstoner.com
Mallory Wood Director of Marketing
@mallorywood
802.457.9234 mallory.wood@mstoner.com
Resources
• Download: Mythbusting Websites:
mstnr.me/MythB2016 • Mythbusting Admissions (2015):
mstnr.me/AdmissionsMyths
Gil Rogers Director of Marketing
@gilrogers
860.990.2745 gil@chegg.com