Another new year has started and like many of us, I’ve jumped on the bandwagon of committing to personal and professional improvements in the coming year (and this year, I’m determined these resolutions will extend beyond mid-January!). On that note, I’ve created a list of interactive marketing resolutions that each of us working in higher education marketing and enrollment management should take to heart in 2009.
Continue reading "Four Interactive Marketing Resolutions for 2009" »
With the start of the new year, I thought we'd take one last look back at the best posts from 2008. Here are my personal favorites:
#1: How Students Actually Use Social Technologies
#2: ACHE 2008 Live Update: Stanford Shares How to Make Online Learning Work
#3: Death by a Thousand Cuts: The Email Marketing Practices of Undergraduate Admission Offices
In addition to the top three, I couldn't resist the urge to include (as my personal ultimate favorite post!) the post about the big change in my life in 2008 (Baby Copeland).
Happy new year and here's to a prosperous 2009!
Presented by Karlyn Morissette, Dartmouth College
A good overview of email marketing best practices, this presentation provided good fundamentals (which, unfortunately, are overlooked time and time again). Here are the 5 best practices covered:
Continue reading "AMA Live Update: Taking Email to the Next Level" »
Presented by Jennifer Wooley, Georgia Tech Distance Learning and Professional Education and yours truly
Our presentation this morning focused on 3 main topics:
Using institutions experiencing success as our model, primarily the Global Learning Center at Georgia Tech, we provided multiple examples of cultivation once the inquiry has engaged with the institution as a result of a paid search ad.
How can you make paid search work?
This week I'm in Chicago at the AMA Symposium for the Marketing of Higher Education. I'm presenting on Monday morning, but will also be blogging from the conference on Monday and Tuesday. Here are the topics I have planned:
Questions or comments in advance? Post a comment or email me directly at j.copeland@demandengine.com.
More people are online than ever before and time in front of the computer rivals traditional television viewing time. Despite negative publicity of spam, consumer attitudes are more positive toward subscribed-to email than other advertising channels.
MarketingSherpa categorizes email marketers into two camps- those who complain about declining response, but who do very little to change their approach, and those who enjoy high response rates and work hard for them. Too often, enrollment marketers pull out the email shotgun and think in terms of generating immediate results at the lowest possible cost...and with increasingly diminishing returns.
Email marketing is not a quick fix or magic potion to solve enrollment challenges. Email success requires strategic thinking, an investment in resources, a long-term view, and a commitment to testing and refining your approach. So, what does it take to be successful? Let's take a look at three best practices for email marketing that can help put you on the track to success.
Continue reading "Email Marketing Best Practices: Three Tips for Success" »
Now, I'm sure you're wondering where on earth I'm going with this one....but give me a minute to explain.
On Friday after work while waiting to meet up with friends, I found myself mindlessly reading the back of the bottle of ketchup sitting on my table. And, once I got past the nutritional information, I found the following quote:
"To do a common thing, uncommonly well, brings success."- John Heinz, founder of Heinz Ketchup, 1876
And it was one of those moments when a simple, unrelated statement made me think of how we must commit to excellence when it comes to our marketing efforts.
Continue reading "What I Learned about Email Marketing From the Back of a Bottle of Ketchup" »
Recent Comments