Showing posts with label recruiting international students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label recruiting international students. Show all posts

Thursday, September 1, 2011

EducationUSA Weekly Update: New & Improved!

EducationUSA PDF format
As we all come to grips with how to reach our intended student audiences overseas, as international educators, at EducationUSA we've taken a huge step forward. Those who know our network of 400 advising centers in 170 countries, may have heard of our Weekly Update before. This newsletter goes out every week to all centers, and up until the last three months was a simple email, PDF or word document that then got parsed out by centers, or simply posted to their center's student contact, put up on their websites or in their centers.

While there was certainly value in this approach, it didn't always meet students where they were. After surveying our advisers earlier this year we learned that we needed to provide them greater control and choices over how they receive and distribute Weekly Update content. For those not familiar with Weekly Update (WU), it contains typically announcements of scholarship & financial aid assistance available for international students, and a "Campus News" section highlighting new academic programs that might be attractive to international students, or major events that would be relevant for international students to know. We collect these stories from U.S. institutions that submit information through the higher ed section of our EducationUSA site. The online form (for those institution representatives who have been approved for login access to our site) allows for a substantial amount of information including institutional logo, website, all social media links, related video url/embed code for the post, as well as specifics on the award or news story.

The end result allows us to maximize the effectiveness of this higher ed institutional content for our student audiences abroad. In so doing, when we publish our WU each week, our EducationUSA Advisers have the ability to choose how they wish to receive these announcements (in html email, PDF, and/or in pre-packaged social media-ready posts, all versions replete with bit.ly url shorteners that allow us to track globally how and where these posts are read. Since we launched this program in June, our WU posts have increased from about 10,000 click-throughs to currently 14,000 each week. That number will only increase as the academic year kicks into gear.

More importantly for U.S. representatives (and for students) the content from both of these sections of the WU are also fed automatically into two RSS feeds on our site for financial aid and for news. In addition to the posts, and RSS feed content formats, we also for the scholarship/financial aid announcements create individual pages for your WU submission on our site that feed into a growing financial aid database, that will also soon include national scholarships from various countries around the world that students can access to study in the U.S.

So, I invite all my U.S. higher ed colleagues at accredited institutions to:

  1. Request your U.S. higher ed login access to our site if you haven't already 
  2. Submit your institution's scholarship & financial information for international students into our Weekly Update
  3. Stay tuned for more developments on how the financial aid database will become a great resource for you as well.
Until we meet again...





Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Where Does Your Audience Live?

From AllFacebook.com
The world of social media moves incredibly fast. No news there, but just how fast may shock you. Facebook continued growth overseas should continue to raise the profile of this platform in U.S. international admissions circles. For example, in December 2010, Brazil was beginning to see some dramatic growth in Facebook users and stood at about 8.8 million users. a short six months later at the end of June, over 21 million Brazilians were on FB, many of which have moved over from their Orkut accounts to Facebook.

In terms of other social networks, the AllFacebook.com graphic here shows those countries where Facebook is not yet the #1 social media platform in the world. Interestingly,  the GlobalWebIndex Social Networking Map 2011 shows the penetration rates of social media in various countries. Guess what the top 3 most connected countries are with regards to social media usage as a percentage of their online users? The Philippines, Indonesia and Malaysia each with between 67-76% penetration. 

For U.S. colleagues looking to explore Facebook as a main platform to reach international students, you would be very much barking up the right tree. Using the semi-annual format produced by Nick Burcher out of the UK of the Top 30 countries on Facebook, here is that top 30 list with some additional data related to the college age demographic (16-25 years old) for users in each country.
for EducationUSA July 2011
Pay particular attention to the highlighted countries (India, Mexico, Brazil, Thailand, Egypt, Poland, Peru, Pakistan, and Russia) which enjoyed triple digit growth in the last 12 months in terms of Facebook users. Not including the U.S. you'll find that of the top 29 countries, 254 million are in the 16-25 year old demo. Happy hunting!




Monday, June 27, 2011

Facebook Now Has 750 Million Users

Facebook Now Has 750 Million Users
For those keeping score at home, based on the average percentages, this number now translates to:
- 70% of users outside the U.S. = 525,000,000
- 60% of users outside the U.S. are ages 16-25 = 315,000,000
This means that outside the U.S. the equivalent of the the U.S. total population now logs onto Facebook at least once a month that is between the ages of 16-25. Any U.S. international admissions reps out there who still don't think you need a presence on Facebook?




Wednesday, June 22, 2011

EducationUSA Forum 2011: Bigger and Better

Today marks the start of the EducationUSA Forum 2011 (Wednesday through Friday). After the success of the first Forum last June, we knew we needed a bigger venue. While we were packed to the gills in an M St. hotel with about 250 total participants a year ago, we knew we could do better.

We found the perfect site for this year's Forum at the Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Center that will welcome nearly 450 attendees. Among those guests will be over 360 members of the U.S. higher education community, 50+ EducationUSA advisers, regional directors, and DC-based staff, as well as several U.S. Department of State officials. Under Secretary of State, Judith McHale and at least three other prominent senior leadership from the State Department will be addressing the Forum over the course of the next three days.

Why is this event important?

EducationUSA represents, for lack of a better phrase, your tax dollars at work. In terms of "bang for the buck," this U.S. Department of State-supported network of 400 advising centers in 170 countries has connected with well over 10 million contacts since the start of the FY2011 (October 1, 2010). Through visits to their centers (900K), mobile outreach activities (1.5 million), and an extensive virtual and social media presence (7.8 million), EducationUSA represents the official source on U.S. higher education around the world. Advisers from 36 countries, including many of the top sending countries to the U.S., will be presenting throughout the conference on key issues such as recruitment opportunities in their areas, national scholarships available, and education system changes/updates.

Much like guidance counselors in U.S. high schools, for my colleagues in U.S. admissions offices, our network of advisers perform much the same role in guiding prospective students through the increasingly complex process of applying to U.S. colleges & universities. Their role is to be unbiased, and provide information on all available accredited options given the student's interests and family's means. The connections the U.S. institutional representatives attending this Forum make, the relationships renewed and developed, and the knowledge gained will assist their colleges in better informing and enhancing their international education strategy. The agenda is packed full of great content for those invested in the U.S. international education community.

In an era where most institutions are seeing budget belts tightened and travel abroad cut, opportunities for this kind of interaction are rare. At least four sessions during this event will focus on virtual, armchair and social media-based recruitment efforts and ways to connect with our advisers and their students. With four separate networking/country cafe breaks, a Global Showcase where our advisers will be joined by representatives of two dozen DC-based foreign embassies, and a major Opening Reception Wednesday evening, we hope to provide multiple chances for our EducationUSA staff to interact with our U.S. colleagues.

Welcome to DC!


Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Live Where Your Audiences Live: International Student Recruitment Through Social Media

For as long as I've been in my current position, social media has become a second professional passion of my life, surpassed only by my love of international education.  In the last two and a half years, our EducationUSA network's use of social media is truly transforming and expanding our reach beyond the physical walls of our centers. Later this year we will be launching a useful new tool for prospective students that will be using social media extensively, as we spread the good news about the five steps to U.S. study.


Our chief guiding principle in marketing EducationUSA is to "Live Where Our Audiences Live." Not simply physically, through our network of 400+ centers in 170 countries, but in the virtual world on platforms that our key audiences are using. For purposes of this post, part one of a series on social media in international admissions, we're talking students. 


We all know how Facebook started on a U.S. college campus, and has grown like wildfire to the point now, where recent ComScore data (as reported by InsideFacebook.com) showed that 72% of all U.S. internet users were on Facebook, that works out to over half the U.S. population. While the U.S. is a fairly mature Facebook country with, at present, more baby boomers signing up than any other age demographic, the rest of the world is a different story. Facebook will reach, based on conservative projections, 700 million users worldwide in June. Here are a couple of staggering numbers for international admissions folks to chew on. This data comes direct from Facebook's advertising module.
  • 70% of all Facebook users reside outside the U.S.: 490,000,000
  • 60% of FB users outside the U.S. are in the college age demographic (16-25 yr. old): 294,000,000
If you haven't already considered using social media more actively in your international student recruitment, these numbers should give you some motivation. To see the incredible growth particularly in the college-age demo in some of the most populous Facebook countries, check out my earlier blog this year. Even more revealing is the level of penetration Facebook currently enjoys in some countries. Social Times, an excellent social media resource/RSS feed to follow, recently profiled the Top Ten Countries Where Facebook Rules that outlined internet usage stats v. Facebook usage where each of the top 10 had more than 86% of its internet users on Facebook. Those 10 countries are:
  1. Philippines
  2. Israel
  3. Turkey
  4. Chile
  5. Argentina
  6. Malaysia
  7. Indonesia
  8. Peru
  9. Colombia
  10. Venezuela
But Facebook is not a universally dominant social media platform. I encourage you to check out a recent presentation I gave at the Ohio NAFSA Drive-In Meeting in April, that highlights some of the other fascinating facts on other social media platforms that enjoy dominant market positions in certain countries. 

Here are just a few places where Facebook doesn't rule (yet):
  • ChinaRenren (Facebook knockoff), QQ (like MSN Messenger chat), and others including Youku (YouTube ripoff), and Sina Weibo (Twitter clone) 600 million internet users
  • RussiaVkontakte, Russian language, 111 million users globally
  • NetherlandsHyves, 11 million (2/3rd of Dutch population)
  • JapanMixi, but Twitter is about to surpass Mixi in terms of total users
  • Brazil Orkut, but Facebook and Twitter gaining fast


Happy hunting, everyone.  


For those who'd like to connect IRL and talk more about these topics, I'll be at our EducationUSA Pavilion in the NAFSA Expo Hall in Vancouver Tuesday-Friday next week (May 31-June 3), booth #537, so please stop by to say hello!


Part two, next week, from Vancouver, will focus on how to approach social media in international admissions-Get Connected, Stay Involved, Be Relevant.


Monday, March 14, 2011

How Marco Met Sharifa: The Value of Relationships Between EducationUSA Advisers and U.S. College Reps

The Ohio State University Sends Representative to Uzbekistan 


This was the headline last month, after Marco Chavez from Ohio State University's Undergraduate Admissions office visited Uzbekistan, and specifically, our EducationUSA Advising Center in Tashkent.  Sharifa, our senior adviser in Uzbekistan, helped set-up visits for Marco during his visit.  But this relationship began a year ago, when Sharifa had the opportunity to connect with Marco when she participated in a post-NAFSA campus visit to Ohio State.  


Let's explore what happened as these two had the opportunity to work together.


Sharifa shares her experiences on this connection between her advising work and her visit to Ohio State.


What are the value of campus visits for EducationUSA advisers?
Advisers are able to see the university with their own eyes to tell students about it, to see each school at university, get to know the faculty member and admission officers. Meeting with international students studying there can give us an idea as to whether our students from Uzbekistan can do well at this university. Also getting to know the culture of the university, diversity, prices, possibilities of programs, climate and others is very useful. All of these opportunities help the adviser see the whole picture and you never forget about it.  

After your visit to OSU, what kind of communication did you have with the people you met?
We were e-mailing each other and established a skype communications, which helped us to communicate faster. I could communicate not only from work, but from home as well, since the time differences are difficult to make the communication faster via Skype.
What were you able to set up for Marco during his visit to your country?
Participation at our college fair. I posted at the www.educationusa.state.gov site, then sent him the link, so that he could participate. I set up two school visits, one to Tashkent International School and one to Academic Lyceum No. 2.
Specifically related to Marco's visit, what were the benefits for you and your students?
For me it was that I learned more about this university and learned more about U.S. Higher Education. Students were able to learn about the programs ... and learned about the options available.
Do you have any advice for U.S. institutions who are looking for ways to explore relationships with EducationUSA Advisers?
I would say that EducationUSA advisers are experts on what is going on in the country and they know really well the local systems. They have huge network of schools, language centers, students, teachers and professors, and other contacts. This expertise gives the U.S. university representatives more options to explore in reaching a broader pool of candidates to recruit to their schools. I advise the U.S. universities to contact first the EducationUSA adviser to learn about the country and options. 
Marco's shares his responses.

What are the value to US institutions of campus visits by EducationUSA advisers?
Having advisers who speak to students day in and day out provides an opportunity to learn about the trends and issues facing certain regions. The advisors provide an insight into their areas about how to best outreach to their students and make the most of our resources in targeting their students. By having them on campus they are able to see first-hand what our university is like and can then speak to their students about life on our campus in a concrete way using real examples. However, the personal connections and friendships facilitated by the visits are what make the visits truly worthwhile. J Its very nice to be able to call them and let them know you will be visiting them and having that bond already there.
While Sharifa was at OSU, what did you arrange for her to see?
Sharifa visited Ohio for an entire week. During her time here she was able to tour 9 universities and discover some parts of Columbus. We held a cookout on one of the evenings and for one half day we held a seminar. During the seminar the advisors were given the opportunity to present their centers and countries to other universities who did not participate in the hosting. We hosted Sharifa on the Ohio State campus for an entire day. During her visit to campus she was able to meet representatives from Undergraduate Admissions, Graduate Admissions, Law, MBA, American Language Program (intensive English), and the Office of International Affairs. We also had her go on a campus tour led by a current student and meet with other current students.
After her visit to OSU, what kind of communication did you have with Sharifa?
After Sharifa’s visit we mailed the material that we hoped she would disseminate at her center and sent a thank you email and survey. It wasn’t until I was thinking about traveling to Uzbekistan that we communicated again.
Specifically related to your Uzbekistan visit, what will be the benefits for you and your future students?
My visit to Uzbekistan was valuable on many fronts. Seeing the country and the facilities that Sharifa has will allow me to plan more effective outreach efforts in Tashkent. I gained a better sense of the issues and concerns that students face, better than if I had just read about it. Students were able to learn more about Ohio State and education in the US in general. And I was able to explain to students the complexities and issues revolving around applying to US universities from the viewpoint of a university.
Do you have any advice for US institutions who are looking for ways to explore relationships with EducationUSA Advisers?
Its important to get to know advisors, even if the budget doesn’t allow for hosting or traveling, there are other options such as Skype, DVCs, email, and telephone. From my experience advisors want to help universities and students connect and find the right fit for each other. It’s also important to ask questions. Each region is different and even cities within the same country may have different mobility trends or issues. Its important to know what issues are affecting your prospective students. 
Marco's and Sharifa's experiences are by no means unique.  This year, close to 100 EducationUSA Advisers will visit the U.S. for various conferences and training opportunities.  Many of them will be actively hoping to include college and university visits as part of their travel.  Likewise, we encourage our U.S. colleagues who are traveling overseas to make EducationUSA a key stop, much like the 475+ representatives who just this calendar year alone (January 1 through March 11) who have interacted with our advisers abroad.

To express your interest in hosting advisers for possible visits to your campus or your state/region if your part of an existing international education consortium of accredited institutions, we invite you to contact our new Professional Development Manager, Robin Helms.  



Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Double Digit Growth in Two Years, Okay; How About Quadruple Digit Growth? Roll on Facebook

Continued kudos to Nick Burcher, out of the UK, who has done the heavy lifting on the data mining every six months for the last three or four years on Facebook numbers by country (and willingly shares it).  His blog post today revealed the most recent Top 30 countries on Facebook in terms of members.  Interesting to note that in this year-end top 30 - four new countries have entered.  Compared to the numbers from Dec. 2009, the minimum totals required for entry into this top 30 club rose from 1.9 million (Thailand 12/09) to 3.27 million (Saudi Arabia).

The chart below shows in the top 30 only those countries who have seen quadruple digit growth over the last two years. These ten countries represent with few exceptions countries in the developing world that are markets with tremendous potential.

Rank
Country
Number of Facebook users Dec 31st 2008
Number of Facebook users Dec 31st 2009
Number of Facebook users Dec 31st 2010
12 month growth %
24 month growth %
2
Indonesia
897,040
14,681,580
32,129,460
118.8%
3481.7%
6
Philippines
390,700
8,387,560
18,901,900
125.4%
4738%
7
Mexico
1,440,640
6,505,040
18,488,700
184.2%
1183.4%
9
India
1,071,280
5,397,480
17,288,900
220.3%
1513.9%
16
Malaysia
850,420
3,975,640
9,544,580
140.1%
1022.3%
17
Brazil
209,460
2,413,900
8,821,880
265.5%
4111.7%
18
Taiwan
112,900
5,490,300
8,752,640
59.4%
7652.6%
21
Thailand
168,720
1,963,560
6,732,780
242.9%
3890.5%
23
Poland
194,820
1,609,100
4,540,320
182.2%
2230.5%
25
Peru
296,200
1,510,480
3,888,560
157.4%
1212.8%


What is even more telling about where this growth is coming from as it relates to international admissions needs, for these same 10 countries check out my own bit of number crunching below that reveals how significant the potential college age markets are in these growing nations.  With the exception of Brazil, in each of these countries, anywhere from near 63-76% of all Facebook users are in the college-age demographic.


Rank
Country
Number of Facebook users Dec 31st 2010
Number of FB users between 16-25 years old
% users 16-25 yrs. old
2
Indonesia
32,129,460
22,725,220
71%
6
Philippines
18,901,900
12,978,340
69%
7
Mexico
18,488,700
11,626,540
63%
9
India
17,288,900
13,132,400
76%
16
Malaysia
9,544,580
6,097,680
64%
17
Brazil
8,821,880
4,733,260
54%
18
Taiwan
8,752,640
5,578,520
64%
21
Thailand
6,732,780
4,523,980
67%
23
Poland
4,540,320
2,885,360
64%
25
Peru
3,888,560
2,500,000
64%


All this data from Nick Burcher and from my further drilling down, comes directly from Facebook's advertising module.  To paint a bit broader picture, if you were to take the top 25 countries on Facebook outside the U.S. and do a banner ad that displayed only on the profiles & pages of that same college age cohort (16-25 yr. olds) you would reach over 194 million potential students.


Still think Facebook is only a U.S. phenomenon?  I've realized in working with U.S. institutions that precious few have really embraced social media in their international student recruitment efforts.  In times when budgets are being tightened everywhere, the relatively cost-effective world of social media is wide open to the institution that knows how to best approach it.



Monday, January 3, 2011

Social Media in Africa a Pipe Dream? Think Again.

Africa Renewal Magazine | A social media boom begins in Africa

In the course of the last 20 years in the United States, we have gone from using land-line phones to computers to mobile/smart phones as our primary means of communicating.  In much of Sub-Saharan Africa as well as many parts of Central Asia (and other regions), just within the last five to ten years, a significant number of Africans have made the jump from no phone at all, to mobile phones, skipping the land-line and desktop computer stages entirely, as their chosen mode of communications. With over 400 million mobile phone subscribers now in Africa, it is the mobile social web that is now becoming increasingly a source of focus.   



For colleagues at U.S. institutions exploring the myriad of ways to reach students, and for those who have long wondered how to connect in Africa, here's an opportunity. From the article below: "In recent months Facebook — the major social media platform worldwide and currently the most visited website in most of Africa — has seen massive growth on the continent. The number of African Facebook users now stands at over 17 million, up from 10 million in 2009. More than 15 per cent of people online in Africa are currently using the platform, compared to 11 per cent in Asia."  


Time to have a second look at Africa...

A social media boom begins in Africa

Using mobile phones, Africans join the global conversation

More and more Africans are using mobile technologies to access social media tools on the InternetMore and more Africans are using mobile technologies to access social media tools on the Internet.
Photograph: Africa Media Online / Anthony Kaminju
In the mid-1990s, as the use of mobile phones started its rapid spread in much of the developed world, few thought of Africa as a potential market. Now, with more than 400 million subscribers, its market is larger than North America's. Africa took the lead in the global shift from fixed to mobile telephones, notes a report by the UN International Telecommunications Union.* Rarely has anyone adopted mobile phones faster and with greater innovation (see A bank in every African pocket?Better health at the click of a button).
A similar story now seems again to be unfolding. Africans are coupling their already extensive use of cell phones with a more recent and massive interest in social media — Internet-based tools and platforms that allow people to interact with each other much more than in the past. In the process, Africans are leading what may be the next global trend: a major shift to mobile Internet use, with social media as its main drivers. According to Mary Meeker, an influential Internet analyst, mobile Internet and social media are the fastest-growing areas of the technology industry worldwide, and she predicts that mobile Internet use will soon overtake fixed Internet use.
Studies suggest that when Africans go online (predominantly with their mobile phones) they spend much of their time on social media platforms (Facebook, Twitter, YouTube and so on). Sending and reading e-mails, reading news and posting research queries have become less important activities for Africans.
In recent months Facebook — the major social media platform worldwide and currently the most visited website in most of Africa — has seen massive growth on the continent. The number of African Facebook users now stands at over 17 million, up from 10 million in 2009. More than 15 per cent of people online in Africa are currently using the platform, compared to 11 per cent in Asia. Two other social networking websites, Twitter and YouTube, rank among the most visited websites in most African countries.
Along with regular citizens, African stars, thinkers, political leaders and companies have rapidly joined the global conversation. The Facebook fan base of Côte d'Ivoire's football star and UN goodwill ambassador Didier Drogba is more than 1 million people. Zambian best-selling author and economist Dambisa Moyo has more than 26,000 followers on Twitter. Media organizations in South Africa and companies such as Kenya Airways are using various social media platforms to interact better with customers and readers. During recent elections in Côte d'Ivoire candidates did not only tour cities and villages; they also moved the contest online, feverishly posting campaign updates on Twitter and Facebook.
Although Africa's gender gap remains wide, some countries have made strides in expanding girls' education and improving women's political representation.High costs and poor connections still limit Africans' use of computers to gain access to the Internet.
Photograph: Alamy Images / Peter Treanor

Constraints and opportunities

Africa's upward trend in the use of social media is even more striking given the low number of Africans connected to the Internet and the many hurdles Africans face in trying to go online.
Africa's Internet users (more than 100 million at the end of 2010) represent just a small percentage of the 2 billion people online around the world. In the US alone, more than 220 million people use the Internet. Within Africa, one person out of every 10 is estimated to be an Internet user (up from one in 5,000 back in 1998), making the continent the region in the world with the lowest penetration rate.
Among the many reasons for this poor showing are the scarcity and prohibitive costs of broadband connections (the fastest means of accessing the Internet), and the limited number of personal computers in use.
But these challenges simultaneously contribute to Africa's impressive growth rate in the use of mobile Internet, which in recent years has been the highest in the world. "Triple-digit growth rates are routine across the continent," notes Jon von Tetzchner, co-founder of Opera, the world's most popular Internet browser for mobile phones. "The widespread availability of mobile phones means that the mobile Web can reach tens of millions more than the wired Web." Mr. Tetzchner believes that like mobile phones, whose use has grown rapidly in Africa in recent years, the "mobile Web is beginning to reshape the economic, political and social development of the continent."

‘Seismic shift’ coming

Erik Hersman, a prominent African social media blogger and entrepreneur who helped drive development of the ground-breaking platform Ushahidi (see Young Africans put technology to new uses), is equally enthusiastic. In an e-mail to Africa Renewal he notes that "with mobile phone penetration already high across the continent, and as we get to critical mass with Internet usage in some of Africa's leading countries (Kenya, South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, Egypt) … a seismic shift will happen with services, products and information."
The sense that the future holds more promise is inducing major companies to show special interest in Africa's expanding pool of Internet users. Facebook, after launching versions in some of the major African languages (including Swahili, Hausa and Zulu) in May, has announced it will offer free access to its platform to mobile phone users in various countries around the world, including many in Africa. In October Google started testing a new service for Swahili speakers in East and Central Africa. Tentatively called Baraza ("meeting place" in Swahili), it will allow people to interact and share knowledge by asking and answering questions, many of them of only very local or regional interest.
Africans are also getting ready to benefit from the fast-growing mobile Internet sector. In South Africa, MXit, a free instant messaging application with an estimated 7 million users, is the most popular local social networking platform. From Abidjan and Accra to Lusaka and Nairobi, African programmers are designing, testing and launching new homegrown platforms and tools to keep the African online conversation going.