With so many different marketing options availabke, it's easy to overlook some of the most valuable solutions. To make a big impact in your enrollment efforts, PlattForm recommends these five must-haves for your budget.
Pay-Per-Click Marketing
Key takeaways include:
- The importance of setting realistic cost-per-enrollment goals
- How to modify your admissions team to meet the needs of adult and distance learners
- How to determine ROI by measuring admissions performance success on the micro level
- The four factors to examine in order to determine marketing mix
- How to encourage collaboration between the marketing and admissions teams
- And more!
Landing page optimization is a key component of a successful pay-per-click marketing campaign. Download our 5 Tips one sheet to learn how to ensure your landing pages perform to their fullest potential.
The paper offers insights and guidance on the best marketing strategies for promoting adult education programs in a digital age, an analysis to help you determine which media will be most effective for your plan and guidelines for how to determine ROI.
Specifically, you'll learn:
- The four factors that determine your optimum marketing mix
- The importance of diversifying your marketing mix
- How the roles of marketing and admissions departments differ
- Tips on measuring the performance of your marketing efforts
Presentation given by Brad Gibbs, PlattForm Higher Education and Marcelo Parravicini, Post University at the ACHE South 2011 Spring Conference.
Presentation given by Jeremy Schoen, PlattForm Higher Education and Marcelo Parravicini, Post University at the 24th Annual NAGAP Conference.
Just finished my travel plans for the NAGAP conference in Washington D.C. I’m excited to be presenting on Thursday, April 7th during the 1:15-2:15 breakout session. Presenting with me will be Marcelo Parravicini, Director of Marketing at Post University. The topic is Best Practices in Interactive Marketing and New Technologies. We will cover how to implement interactive marketing best practices, using ROI to drive interactive marketing strategies, and how to correlate traditional media activities and the impact it has on your interactive channels.
So, if you are attending NAGAP please check out my breakout session, if not, you can stop by and see me at booth #21 - PlattForm Higher Education. Or you can always reach me via email: jeremys@PlattFormad.com

Have you ever wondered how Google works? It’s pretty amazing, really. You can find nearly anything just by telling Google exactly what you want. When signing up for a Google profile, you have to name something you can’t find using Google. I ultimately decided on “my car keys,” but I’ll admit I had to think about it for a bit. While the intricacies of Google’s algorithm are unknown, the basis on which it claims to make adjustments to its secret search formula is clear: Google aims to give searchers their most favorable results in the shortest amount of time. Achieving this goal, at least more so than the competition, keeps customers returning and ad revenue booming.
These algorithmic adjustments are usually subtle enough to go unnoticed by the majority, rarely spreading past SEO circles, because they generally affect only a small portion of search queries. However, the latest Google algorithm update has the e-marketing world’s full attention, and for good reason.
On Thursday, February 24, Google confirmed its latest algorithm change that several have nicknamed the “Farmer Update” (more on that later), which went live the day before. In Google’s official blog post, Matt Cutts described their strategy:
“This update is designed to reduce rankings for low-quality sites—sites which are low-value add for users, copy content from other websites or sites that are just not very useful. At the same time, it will provide better rankings for high-quality sites—sites with original content and information such as research, in-depth reports, thoughtful analysis and so on.”
Just a month before, Google released another blog article that touched on similar subjects. The article said that since their algorithm has been pretty successful at removing “pure webspam,” they are now “evaluating multiple changes that should help drive spam levels even lower, including one change that primarily affects sites that copy others’ content and sites with low levels of original content … “content farms,” which are sites with shallow or low-quality content.”
One of the proposed algorithmic changes, specifically targeting sites with copied content, went live on January 28th, but was only supposed to affect slightly over 2% of queries in some way. Many believe the “content farms” Google was referring to in its earlier blog post were the main target for the “Farmer Update,” which is supposed to affect nearly 12% of Google searches.
To reinforce the effectiveness of the “Farmer Update,” Google confirmed a strong correlation between sites negatively affected by it and sites blocked by searchers with the Chrome browser add-on, released just a couple weeks before. This add-on allows searchers to block any sites from showing up in their search results. Google went on to say these blocked sites were going to be one of the “signals” used in “exploring different algorithms to detect content farms.” Google said they did not rely on the blocked sites for this update, but compared the sites after the update was launched. The algorithmic changes affected 84% of them, which they claim was a strong indication of user benefit. But not everyone agrees users have benefited from this change.
Some feel that several low-quality content farms have remained untouched since the update, like ehow.com. And others claim several websites outside of content farms and scraper sites were unfairly hurt, some of which are Google’s competitors. Whether you agree or disagree with the changes, it may have little effect on how you evolve your web strategy. Google is still the powerhouse of search engines, and for better or worse, your website is at the mercy of their decisions.
So, while we continue to study this new algorithmic update for more concrete do’s and don’ts, the following tips should help keep your site in the clear:
- Use unique content – Even if your content was written by you, that doesn’t mean someone else didn’t copy it. Copyscape is a good tool to check for duplicate content.
- Write useful content – Writing content for the purpose of gaining search traffic is fine, as long as you don’t leave the audience out to dry. Write rich content that is beneficial to your audience.
- Target relevant keywords – Keywords lie at the heart of user intent. Just because your content is useful to some, doesn’t mean it is useful to those who found your page in the search results. Make sure your keywords are highly relevant to your content.
- Use more content – If I’m searching for how to do my taxes online, chances are 75 words of description won’t help me much. Be thorough and resourceful with your content.
- Don’t practice outdated SEO tricks – Keyword stuffing and automated linkbuilding methods are getting more easily detectable by search engines, especially Google. Make sure you know who is optimizing your website, and more importantly, make sure they know what they’re doing.
So, name something you can’t find using Google…Until your answer is “I can’t find anything I’m not looking for,” you can be sure Matt Cutts and the rest of the Google team will keep trying to perfect their secret search recipe.
So many people are online today that it’s hard to imagine effectively cornering any local audience with a marketing message. At least that’s the way some institutions feel about their online marketing efforts, especially when it comes to reaching out to students in the limited geographical range from where they draw the most students. And we all know how important geography is in the higher education business.







