Imagine answering all of your questions you have about a student’s involvement on campus.
It would feel great to know all of the best times to plan a program, schedule meetings, or simply to interact with students to maximize their engagement and further understand how we can build meaningful relationships with them.
As someone who is always thinking about the best way to engage students and has a diverse array of student life experiences, I’m always looking for top strategies to provide student affairs professionals about this topic. The higher education industry is always eager to dig up new information about timing of events, loyalty of students, and which students are the most involved (or not involved at all).
So how do we organize and make sense of all of the data we collect?
Real-time data analytics is a major focus at today’s colleges and universities to determine student success. Analytics provide student affairs professionals the power to analyze and change what they need to do to retain students and engage them better. If you use analytical tools, you will know where you are, what exactly you’re doing, whether or not what you’re doing is working, whether or not you need to being doing new things to customize content or events, and you’ll have infinitely more information to help students persist while in college.
Maximizing this data, is a topic where I’d love to dig deeper with you!
Here I share a few ways you can maximize your own involvement data with real-time analytics to understand which areas you can improve.
Recognizing the need for consistent tracking of event metrics helps SA pro’s identify key trends, like finding the best time to plan a program or event.
Here are some key takeaways we’ve come up with in terms of maximizing event and program times.
Once you collect and compile all of this rich data about students, take time to reflect on how you can start to make changes. The purpose of collecting data is to make sure you’re making data-informed decisions around student engagement. First, think about how your campus defines engagement and discuss with your student affairs team how timing ultimately impacts engagement.
Second, share the data across campus! Asking various professionals for their lens on the data can help your team discover gaps you may not have seen otherwise.
Third, pull up real-time data in meetings on a tablet or laptop to show off the latest campus engagement trends to your fellow student affairs colleagues. Making the data public can help your team hold real conversations about the state of student engagement: this can help you further synthesize data and give you a specific direction to go. (Also, you don’t have to hold a follow up meeting to wait to share or receive the data – WIN)!
What worked five years or even one year ago may not be effective with today’s college student. It’s fun to stay up-to-date on the latest engagement trends, and what’s more fun is experimenting with them on your campus to see what really sticks.
Here are some takeaways on how to diversify your content and get it right every time.
Data visualization is a powerful way to gain credibility and further highlight all the great work you do! Use involvement data to explain to parents and potential students what student involvement really looks like on campus and how students can get involved.
Analyzing event content data helps you predict where time can be best spent in the future. In what ways do you obtain diversified student feedback on event type or content type, if any? Have you typically collected the same feedback from the same students attending similar events? Look at the data holistically, from multiple perspectives, and use your team to give feedback on the overall feeling or ‘pulse’ on the event while comparing it to hard numbers. Compile your own study on event offerings and draw comparisons from month-to-month or semester-to-semester based on feedback.
The way an event or program is marketed can determine the success of the event itself. That’s why it’s so important to take some time to really get your marketing strategy off-the-ground and iterate to find out what works best!
Here are some takeaways when planning the best marketing strategy.
Marketing data helps us translate online relationships to in-person engagement and learning!
Analyze what is the best time to Tweet on Twitter, best time to post on Facebook, and the best time to snap a photo to harness the most Instagram engagement. Engagement can take all sorts of shapes and sizes. After experimenting with social media platforms, create a consistent strategy with students to maintain engagement online. You may find that Snapchat is a great way to reach the entire campus population, including off and off-campus students. Instagram and Facebook may be a great way to build more alumni and prospective student engagement.
Let’s be clear: marketing is not only social media. We consider it only a piece of the pie. Did you utilize a student engagement platform (the first step of marketing)? Did your team create a checklist or brainstorming sheet to help get the word out?
There is a specific recipe you need to follow to get your marketing strategy right: experiment, iterate, and experiment more!
The future of student involvement includes utilizing a student engagement software platform to retrieve specific real-time analytics about student events and programming.
Too often we hear, “What software works best?” when looking for a software grounded in assessment. In order to understand what types of results a software delivers and how it impacts student learning outcomes, student affairs professionals must ask “In what context?” to find what works best for them.
It’s great to hear about all the great things that you can do, and at the end of the day it’s about getting your hands dirty and taking a data-driven approach to it all.
Tweet us to continue the conversation @HelloPresence! Thanks for reading.