10 Keys to Enrollment Management Success
- By Jim Scannell and Kathy Kurz
- 03/01/08
How well do student-related systems serve your institution's enrollment
management needs? The answer may have everything to do with the
relationship between your IT staff and the offices served by the systems.
AS ENROLLMENT MANAGEMENT consultants,
we have worked with over 200 institutions
over the last 11 years and seen just
about every possible student-related system
in action, from homegrown, single-office
databases, to enterprise resource planning
systems. One common factor in how well
these systems serve the institution's enrollment
management needs (from both an
operational and strategic perspective) has
nothing to do with the technology itself, but
everything to do with the relationship
between the IT staff and the offices served
by the system. Those institutions where a
true partnership exists between technical
and user staffs typically have found a way to
make their student-related systems hum. On
the other hand, poor communication, confused
priorities, and tension between user
offices and IT typically result in ineffective
systems-regardless of the products being
used. Clearly, solid partnerships are imperative
when it comes to the success of technology
tools like enrollment-managementrelated
systems. In fact, as we see it, there
are 10 keys to the partnerships that effectively
support the use of such student-related systems.
Those institutions where a true partnership exists
between technical and user staffs typically have found a
way to make their student-related systems work.
1) Develop Leadership
There's no underestimating the importance of solid
leadership. Leadership that sets expectations and
incentives to encourage effective IT/user office partnerships
is fundamental. Likewise, in successful enrollmentmanagement-
related technology initiatives, this kind of
leadership sets the tone. Specifically, expectations
regarding precisely how IT staff and users will work
together need to be clear, and performance appraisals
need to include feedback from the "partners" as well as
from supervisors.
2) Find or Create Super Users
It's essential that a "super user" be housed in each enrollment
management unit. Simply put, the days when user
offices could rely on IT staff for every technical support
issue are gone. Whether the office is Admissions, Financial
Aid, Student Accounts, or the Registrar, it is critical
that at least one person on each of those staffs understands
how to pull data from the system and has an appreciation for all of the system's functionality.
In the most effective Financial Aid offices, for example,
there typically is an associate or assistant director
assigned responsibility for setting up the system for each
new awarding cycle, running routine data transfer and
reporting functions, and creating ad-hoc reports and selections
for processing. This person frequently serves as the
office liaison with the IT staff, explaining office needs
and priorities to technical staff, and interpreting technical
matters for users and office decision-makers. It may even
be helpful to have the super user work directly in the IT
department for a time, in an internship role focused around
a critical project-especially early in this person's tenure
in the position.
According to Mary Healy, senior solutions analyst at Hobart and William Smith Colleges (NY), "Having power
users in the office has greatly increased productivity and
has allowed for the speedier implementation of newly
released system features and enhancements. The power
user, with a deep understanding of her system, can articulate
areas of need as well as review firsthand [any] projected
releases and enhancements. In the relationship with a
focused IT support person for enrollment systems, the
power user and the IT support person develop a common
language which removes a good many of the barriers sometimes
seen in office/IT communication."
3) Dedicate IT Staff to Work With
Specific User Offices
Depending on staff size, it is ideal to have dedicated IT staff
working with specific user offices, rather than floating
everywhere as needed. With IT staff designated to specific office coverage, an IT staffer could be assigned to work
regularly with the Financial Aid and Student Billing offices,
or with Admissions and the Registrar. (Importantly, this
arrangement provides an ideal opportunity for IT and user
offices to be involved in interviewing each others' candidates
for relevant positions. For example, if the user office
is hiring a position that will serve as an IT liaison, the dedicated
IT staff member who works with the office should be
included in the interview process, and vice versa.) This
dedicated model enables IT people to better understand
particular office functions and even anticipate the needs of
the user offices they serve.
Of course, many IT staffs are simply too small to accommodate
dedicating staff, and even those that are larger are
sometimes concerned about this approach leaving service
vulnerable in the event of staff turnover. However, the benefits
to the partnership cannot be overstated.
4) Set Institutional Technology
Priorities With Teams
We highly recommend the creation of a joint IT/user office
team, to help set institutional priorities for technological
enhancements. Frankly, an effective way to damage the
user/IT partnership is to keep user offices guessing about
when their technology needs will be addressed. Yet, having
a clear and open process for setting priorities not only clarifies
timelines, but also helps users understand why other
offices may be receiving priority attention. User offices will
be less tempted to call every technical issue a crisis or
create their own standalone solutions, when they have a
forum in which they balance their needs against those of
other users.
This priority-setting team should be made up of the
directors of key user offices and appropriate leadership
from IT. The involvement of senior management can help
ensure that projects receive sufficient resources and support.
In addition, there may be a need for a users group
comprised of the super users from each office and the
associated dedicated IT staff. This group would be responsible
for coordinating key system events and processing,
for planning the implementation of new functionality, and
for bringing suggested items/projects to the prioritysetting
group.
5) Help Users Know Their Data and Ops
We are frequently surprised to find significant errors in data
files provided by clients, or discrepancies between the data
files and "off the shelf" reports provided by the institution.
We suspect this happens either because the user offices
fail to check data files that are pulled by IT staff, or because
users do not know their data well enough to recognize
errors. Clearly, if users are not trained (or do not take the
time) to understand their own office's procedures for entering
data, do not understand system-created fields, or misuse
fields, they cannot effectively partner with IT to ensure
accurate reporting.
Lack of system knowledge also makes it difficult for user
offices to clearly communicate system problems to IT. The
best communication between IT staff and operational
offices occurs when knowledgeable users clearly identify a problem, IT staffers respond with probing questions, and a
solution is arrived at jointly.
6) Benchmark Toward Enhancement
User office personnel should constantly be asking themselves
how they can improve service to students and
streamline their operations. When user offices fall prey to
technological stagnation, it generally is because the office
has been content with the status quo and has not pushed
for change. But benchmarking with other institutions can
generate ideas for enhancements and shake up even the
most moribund offices. The most effective benchmarking,
however, involves both IT and user office staff members.
That way, both operational and technical aspects of the
desired functionality can be explored.
7) Form Joint Project Implementation Teams
This mandate should be ingrained in all campus technology
administrators by now: Any significant systems projects
need to be owned by both user offices and IT staff. Shared
responsibility for project definition and project management
simply produces the best results.
8) Market Your Successes
Success with small- to medium-sized projects can build
momentum for larger projects that require more time,
cooperation, and consideration. What's more, picking the
"low-hanging fruit" inspires confidence and mutual trust
between user offices and IT staff. And never underestimate
the power of promotion: Marketing your success stories
can more broadly impact the level of confidence in IT
across the campus. In fact, at the Rochester Institute of
Technology (NY), IT staffers put out an electronic newsletter
that clearly communicates to the campus the status of
major projects-and then celebrates their completion.
Create a joint IT/user office team to help set institutional
priorities for technological enhancements. Frankly, an
effective way to damage the user/IT partnership
is to keep user offices guessing about when their
technology needs will be addressed.
9) No 'Technodonnas'
or 'Technophobes' Allowed
At some institutions, we've noted technical staff members
who display little respect or tolerance for users with limited
technical skills. Worse, they sometimes take advantage of
the dependency or technological illiteracy of those users by
failing to provide the best service they can. Yet, without
mutual respect, there can be no partnership.
At the same time, staff in user offices need to take
responsibility for their data and systems. It is not acceptable
to term everything that is "technical" as IT's responsibility.
Encourage system users to become techno-literate
and technologically empowered, wherever possible. Institute
quick lunchtime training and troubleshooting sessions,
or offer guides and push out handy web links so that users
can comfortably help themselves where possible and free
IT staffers for the larger challenges.
10) Celebrate Excellence at All Levels
Often, junior-level programmers and junior staff in user
offices carry the brunt of the work during an enhancement
project. These staffers need to be recognized and rewarded
for their cooperation and innovation. If the IT office has
a newsletter (see number 8), the individuals involved can
be recognized there. Some institutions even hold celebration
lunches at the completion of a major project, at which
the staff members most involved can be publicly acknowledged.
Finally, performance appraisals should make note of
such accomplishments so that they become part of the
individual's permanent record.
Endnote: Partner for Institutional Mission
According to RIT Registrar Joe Loffredo, "In today's student
service offices, nearly any strategic goal is dependent on
data and systems support, and therefore the development of
the IT/user relationship is not just useful; it's mission-critical."
Given the technology investment your institution has
made and continues to make, it is imperative that you make
the best possible use of your enrollment-managementrelated
tools. That cannot be ensured by IT or user staffs
alone. Make the time now to build effective partnerships;
you'll be amazed at how those efforts will help your institution
get closer to its enrollment goals and priorities.
-Jim Scannell and Kathy Kurz are president and VP, respectively,
of Scannell & Kurz, a consultancy
specializing in financial aid, recruitment, retention,
and enrollment management strategies for higher ed.