It's a Zinch
- By Linda L. Briggs
- 12/01/08
A Q&A with Brad Ward, electronic communication coordinator for
Butler University, on new methods for recruiting prospective students.
The following article, "Social Networking: The New
Face of Recruiting", ran on our website on March 6, 2008.
ZINCH ALLOWS Butler U recruiters to search for students by state, graduation
year, gender, and more, and to better target who they’re trying to reach.
IN WHAT MAY BE the future for college recruiting efforts,
some 30,0 students now use a social networking site
called Zinch specifically to network with
colleges. On Zinch, prospective students can enter a personal
profile that gives colleges in-depth information well
beyond grades and test scores. From the other side, Zinch
says that more than 450 colleges and universities are
using the site as a high-powered recruiting tool.
And who better than someone fresh out of college himself
to understand the power of cutting-edge tools for recruiting?
In this interview, we talk with Brad Ward, electronic
communication coordinator for Butler University (IN),
which has about 3,90 undergraduates. Ward, who graduated
from the University of Illinois in 205, talks about his
successes with Zinch, which he started using in mid-207 ,
and other online tools he's used in recruiting efforts at Butler.
He also talks about the problems social networking sites
can spawn if you don't stay on top of them.
CT: How would you describe your job as electronic
communication coordinator at Butler University?
Ward: It's really a new position; we're still trying to define
it. I basically oversee all the e-mails for recruitment and
content. In a way, it's nice that I'm only 24, so I can still
relate to the kids. But at the same time, when I was in college
there was no YouTube or Facebook until my senior year.
Can you tell me a little bit about how Zinch works?
Kids on Zinch set up profiles that are more than just their
names and test scores. They can list extracurricular activities,
whether they're a first-generation student, or their ethnicity.
There's a lot of depth to it.
And how do colleges use that information for recruiting?
We can go in to Zinch and, if we're looking to reach out to
kids in a certain state, we can filter by the state. Then if we
wanted to filter by what year they're graduating high
school or what their gender is or something like that, we
can really drill down. That makes e-mail more than just
broadcasting a message to thousands of kids. With these
social networking sites, we can really narrow it down and
make it more refined. We can better target who we're trying
to reach. That's definitely a huge benefit for us.
Kids on Zinch are interested in finding out more about
schools. They're not joining it to hook up with other
friends-- the sort of thing you would do on Facebook.
With Zinch, it's truly just kids looking for schools. Students
can't add each other's friends or network in that
sense. So the kids on the site are definitely interested in
going to college, and interested in finding out more about
schools. They're not joining it to hook up with other
friends-- the sort of thing you would do on Facebook.
You mention some pretty impressive recruiting numbers
in blogging about your success with Zinch, like an
'open rate' of 35 percent. What does that mean?
Using Zinch, we filtered a certain group of kids that we
wanted to send a message to. And 35 percent of the kids
we sent the message to opened it on Zinch. We usually
average about 11 to 13 percent at that time of year for larger
e-mail blasts.
To what do you attribute that?
I think the kids on Zinch are obviously interested in colleges,
so they want to hear what we have to say. And it's
also just a whole "me" generation thing with these kids. For
us to be going out there and finding them-- I think they find
something special about that: "Wow, this school is coming
to talk to me; I don't have to go talk to them."
You've also used other electronic tools for recruiting in
interesting ways. What is the student blogger program you have there at Butler?
We have eight students who just blog about what they're
doing every week. It gives people an idea of what it would
be like to go here. We have two staff bloggers, and our
mascot has a blog-- we have an actual bulldog on campus,
and one of the workers is his caretaker, so he writes a blog
as if the mascot were speaking. It's pretty funny.
We put a Facebook advertisement out at the beginning
of the year and said we were looking for students who
want to blog. We had about 50 kids respond. So we put
an application together, and narrowed it down to get a
good mix of the student population here on campus.
The student blogger program has been going really well.
It's the most popular area of the admissions website.
The
student bloggers and the forums have more page views
than any other part of the Butler site.
What kinds of things are your student bloggers creating
for YouTube?
The most popular video is one where one of the female bloggers
took the camera into her sorority house and did a seven-minute
tour. Another popular video shows Coach Boone, who
is the coach featured in the movie Remember the Titans,
speaking on campus. That student-life aspect is popular:
"What am I going to see here?" "What am I going to do?" And
basketball games and things like that are always popular.
In terms of recruiting tools, what else have you tried
besides Zinch and YouTube?
We have a fan page on Facebook set up for the bloggers,
so that kids on Facebook can ask the bloggers questions
there. We haven't really started promoting that yet. It's just
there in case a kid runs across it. Right now, we're mostly
using that to direct traffic over to our main blogs, which
are on our admissions site.
In some ways, you seem the face of the future of college
recruiting in that you're starting to use these electronic
tools effectively.
We're getting there. When I came on board at Butler, we
didn't have the bloggers, the forums, or any of that, so I would
say we're doing well now. We have a ways to go. I don't
know what the definition of cutting edge is for admissions,
because I think in general most departments are behind.
Because they're not using social networking and other
online tools as effectively as they could be?
Right. Another problem is, in terms of YouTube and sites
like it, there's not yet a defined metric of what is successful.
If we put these videos up on YouTube, was that worth
it? There's nothing to measure this stuff with yet. That
makes it a little tougher when we try to pitch these new
sites and new ways to recruit. Hopefully, in the near
future, we'll all start to be able to define what success is
and whether it's worth it to be on Facebook and those
kinds of sites.
:: RelatedLinks ::
The Zinch that Stole Recruiting
What Channel Are You Recruiting On?