There
have been an increasing number of calls and emails from schools seeking
training for their admissions’ departments the past six months. As a consulting
group, we are pleased to help out. But I am amazed when we tell the schools
they can save money and increase profits by focusing on retention.
“Retention!
No, we can solve all our problems if we enroll more students”.
But
they can’t enroll more students. That’s why they call us. But then they don’t
listen. They still focus on a churn and burn approach. Enroll them. Bring them
in. Greet them at the front door and wave bye to them and your revenue as they
flee out the back. As a result, schools continue to have problems meeting
revenue and mission goals.
Let’s
look at the realities. If an admissions department enrolls 50 students on
Monday but only 25 show for the first day of classes, how many students were
enrolled? 25. Yet you paid to have all 50 recruited and processed at an average
cost of $5,640 each. That means an immediate loss of $141,000. This loss is
partially from inappropriate sales technique but mainly from not focusing on
retention from day one.
The
fuller loss can be easily calculated by multiplying the 25 students times your
annualized tuition as discussed in my book Customer Service Factors and the Cost of Attrition.
If the school’s annualized tuition is $12,000, that means an additional
$300,000 lost. Just for one start. If there are six starts, total attrition
losses could be $2.646,000. For most schools recapturing some on that $2M-plus
would be good. That is why we are so busy helping schools on retention.
When
I was the Chancellor of a college the truth was that we seldom hit our
admission goals. Competition was increasing. The available market was starting
to shrink due to competition and costs. Tuition went up every year and we were
about to hit a price point at which the ROI would be questioned more and more
by potential students and their families/buying committees. We would soon hit
that point at which we were pricing ourselves beyond our target market. Yet
admission goals were raised by corporate for every single start. The goals were
raised even though the school did not hit its earlier goals. A guaranteed way
to assure failure financial if we focused on new enrollment alone. But we
didn’t.
I
realized the most important number was not new students but total population.
Money was made if we kept population. So we began to focus on retention.
Sure
we kept working at improving our admission approaches and tried to change the
sales methods to adapt to the actual mindset of potential students rather than
that of the admissions rep. For example, they seemed to think they should keep
talking and dumping more and more information on the potential student’s head
as if they were an educational landfill. Sooner or later, the student would
agree to fill out an application just to shut them up I think. Applications
could be up but real enrollments, those who showed for classes and paid
tuition, not so much.
We
brought in the top sales coach in the world, Stephan Schiffman and used his
excellent books that lead to sales success. We also tried re-aligning staff to
focus on strengths such as setting appointments and closing sales. But a
hallmark of churn and burn is the comfort in failing; to keep doing the same
thing that isn’t working. So the admission’s team went back to its losing ways
each and every time with the blessings of regional admission’s directors who
only cared about admissions of course.
But
I hate failing so we hired a student retention group. But to illustrate the
inability of churn and burn-oriented groups to change to succeed, I was told by
I could not use the title “Vice President for Retention Services”. That would
take away from admissions and make a negative statement. So I hired a VP of
Student Services who focused on retention. We also hired intervention
counselors whose job was to contact every student at least every other week and
any student at risk at least twice a week to see what we could do that was
legal, ethical and in the students’ best interests to help out. We did all we
could to meet their needs and especially their return on investment concerns
and goals.
We
also put in place a Rapid Response Retention approach that sought out problems
that caused students problems each day and then solved them by the end of the
day so the solution could be implemented the next day. The only rule was to
determine if the solution was legal, within rules and regulations; ethical and
to the benefit of students.
Bottom
line – The college did not hit admission numbers but did return a quite solid
enrollment every year based on a retaining students so they could graduate Students
hit their goals and we hit ours. Would anyone refuse that?
By
the way, since we offered two and four year degrees, we increased our ability
to upsell associate degree students into the BA programs since they were
also happier with the school. Again, a win-win for everyone.
So
the message here? Admissions is good and necessary but retention really makes
the revenue grow.
Move
away from failing churn and burn approaches that assure fiscal failure. Focus
much more on retention and embrace what we call Learn and Earn that we teach
schools and is discussed in the new book From Admissions to Graduation with
many ways to keep students learning so they graduate and get to their goals
while you keep earning.
We
are quickly filling up our dates for school opening convocations and workshops
in August and September as well as customer service week (Oct.5-9). We would
like to be able to help you too so please contact us ASAP for a date. info@GreatServiceMatters.co
Nraisman & Associates has been providing
customer service, retention and research training and solutions to colleges,
universities and career colleges in the US, Canada, and Europe as well as to
businesses that seek to work with them since 1999. Clients range from small
rural schools to major urban universities and corporations. Its services range
from campus customer service audits, workshops, training, presentations,
institutional studies and surveys to research on customer service and retention.
Nraisman & Associates prides itself on its record of success for its
clients and students who are aided through the firm’s services.www.GreatServiceMatters.com
413.219.6939 info@GreatServiceMatters.com
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