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Engstrom's Idea to Help Enrollment

tnt said:
First of all it isn't a scaled graph so it wouldn't show that there have been at least 4 drops in enrollment over the years far more significant than the most recent. In fact the ones in 52, 76, and 88 were very much proportional to the most recent. They also had a very similar occurrence.
The Korean War, Student Unrest, and the 1987 Stock Market Crash are not "similar." And those were paralleled at MSU. This one isn't.

Indeed, UM's own VP in Charge of Sitting by the Door acknowledged that the "Rape Nation" -- a fabrication encouraged by Engstrom himself -- was the only explanation for the enrollment drop that she could think of.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/01/university-of-montana-enrollment-sexual-assaults_n_1927896.html

And it erased the gains of over 15 years.



Note that the decline is accelerating.

And, this one is why they are in full panic-Mode at Main Hall. After millions of dollars of recruiting efforts, including emails encouraging UM prospects to attend MSU (and apparently it worked!), after five years of efforts including TV ads showing kids breakdancing on rocks and interviewing students speaking with accents on campus, redesigning the UM logo to look like an indeterminate lightning bolt headed off in the wrong direction, came up with a single word slogan "Vibrate!", oh, oops, no it was a word designed to excite and attract 17 year-olds -- "Thrive!" -- and intentionally dropping the distinctive "The" so that UM is recognized merely as an "A" -- in other words exercising every iota of public relations willpower and imagination that bunch could muster -- the decline in freshman class size is accelerating. Engstrom is losing the battle, he can't turn it around, and he has no idea what to do next. None whatsoever. After two failed efforts to hire recruiting professionals, he gave up on those bungled efforts. He's bringing recruiting back to the campus folks that were handling it when things went south in the first place. He has nothing left to propose. No alternatives. He's done.

 
And this sums up the fallacy of placing your trust in bureaucracy. If the UM was a corporation I would guarantee RE would have been forcibly REtired long ago and instead gets a bonus. Oh, you might note that the last graph actually DOES exhibit a cyclical nature so guess I was wrong... It does go up and down on a regular basis as it approaches zero. I stand corrected. My UM (not Hellgate High) statistics classes let me down... Explains why I went into engineering I guess.
 
Grisly Fan said:
And this sums up the fallacy of placing your trust in bureaucracy. If the UM was a corporation I would guarantee RE would have been forcibly REtired long ago and instead gets a bonus. Oh, you might note that the last graph actually DOES exhibit a cyclical nature so guess I was wrong... It does go up and down on a regular basis as it approaches zero.
And those stats have everybody in an uproar. Those are Fall Semester numbers. Spring Semester is closer to 1900 Frosh. Assuming a 100% retention rate from here on out, and no further freshmen enrollment declines, and that's a University of Montana with 7,600 total students in three years. With enrollment declines continuing at the same rate, that's 5,000 students attending the University of Montana six years from now.

And, as has been noted, there is no "plan" in place; no Strategic Plan at all, and everything that Engstrom has attempted has failed, and not because of any inherent problems, but just because of bungled implementations for which Engstrom is habitual because of his personal lack of attention to detail, and his apparent complete lack of imagination.
 
Engstrom's one strong suit must be chemistry. Perhaps he should mix a concoction together that will enlighten 17 year olds and provide them a smooth path to UM. To him this must seem like a jungle. And he just takes the advice of the brown noising few that lie to him while they know the U is in deep doo doo. All the while he sits in his chair in a black fog knowing he is getting deeper into the bungled fumbled enrollment jungle.
Resign Royce!
 
UMGriz75 said:
Grisly Fan said:
And this sums up the fallacy of placing your trust in bureaucracy. If the UM was a corporation I would guarantee RE would have been forcibly REtired long ago and instead gets a bonus. Oh, you might note that the last graph actually DOES exhibit a cyclical nature so guess I was wrong... It does go up and down on a regular basis as it approaches zero.
And those stats have everybody in an uproar. Those are Fall Semester numbers. Spring Semester is closer to 1900 Frosh. Assuming a 100% retention rate from here on out, and no further freshmen enrollment declines, and that's a University of Montana with 7,600 total students in three years. With enrollment declines continuing at the same rate, that's 5,000 students attending the University of Montana six years from now.

And, as has been noted, there is no "plan" in place; no Strategic Plan at all, and everything that Engstrom has attempted has failed, and not because of any inherent problems, but just because of bungled implementations for which Engstrom is habitual because of his personal lack of attention to detail, and his apparent complete lack of imagination.

Great... Now we'll start getting move down threads...
 
http://missoulian.com/news/local/um-revamps-recruitment-looks-ahead-to-fall-enrollment/article_1bb5c88b-643d-58be-b896-4f61ff8bc1a7.html


UM revamps recruitment, looks ahead to 2016 fall enrollment

KEILA SZPALLER [email protected]


If you're a high school student sharing a ZIP code with an REI store, maybe one in California or Vermont, chances are the University of Montana may come knocking.

It'll pay 40 cents to buy your name from the SAT or ACT, which run college placement tests.

Here's another way UM is recruiting: Recently, a student debated on Twitter about whether she should go to school at UM or head to Alaska.

UM recruiters track mentions of the school on social media, and Sharon O'Hare, associate vice president for enrollment and student success, sent the student who was on the fence a T-shirt from UM.

Just this week, faculty from the College of Humanities and Sciences made direct calls to students who had been accepted into their programs. The reason? Data show more students who talk with a professor end up enrolling.

A couple of years ago, UM overhauled its recruitment communication strategies, and the students who enroll in the fall 2016 will be the first who have been through an entire round of the revamped effort, from snazzy print brochures touting ceramics and welding to targeted emails written to inform students about financial aid – and also make them laugh.

One reads: "Would you like to save yourself the cost of additional college tuition and the social awkwardness of explaining what a 'Super Senior' is to your relatives?"

Enrollment has been in decline at UM since 2009, but this year, the number of freshman applications has jumped. UM officials are not counting their chickens, but the increase is sizable, O'Hare said.

"We're significantly up over where we were last year," she said.

She would not share the amount of the increase, and she also said there's no guarantee the bump in applications will translate into higher enrollment because UM cannot control external factors. For instance, Washington state has been a feeder for UM, and it's dropping tuition to four-year public institutions 15 percent, which could affect the Missoula campus.

Nonetheless, UM is just a few months away from seeing the results of its recruitment redesign. In recent weeks, O'Hare has been sharing "The Recruitment Roadmap" with the campus, and Tuesday, she said the strategy has one overarching theme.

"We are the university of real people, and it's that personal contact that will help a student be successful," she said.

***

UM had contracted with an outside company, RuffaloCODY, for some $750,000 plus $300,000 in printing and mailing for its fall 2014 entering class and part of its 2015 recruitment, but the effort didn't pay the dividends UM needed.

The university opted to pull recruiting communications and management back in house, with part of the theory being that building a stronger bridge between recruitment and academic units would bring in more students.

Here are some of the actions UM has taken in bringing the effort in house:

•It's spending $450,000 on customized printed materials, and doubling the amount of new print pieces. O'Hare said the invoices come from Missoula now, not from a company out of state, and UM's Mario Schulzke and his marketing team are doing superior work that reflects UM and Missoula – and doesn't look like the cookie cutter mailings from many other universities contracting with outside firms.

•It is targeting individual students, such as the Twitter user who debated about attending UM. (No word yet on her decision.)

•It is using data analytics in its marketing. For instance, UM knows which email subject lines work best because it tracks the open rates. It knows whose emails get opened. Dean Larry Gianchetta of the School of Business Administration has an open rate of 77 percent, "phenomenal" compared to industry standards, O'Hare said.

•It's ramping up one-on-one conversations between prospective students and faculty. The percent of accepted students who actually enroll is called the "yield." O'Hare said data show the yield rate in 2015 for entering freshmen who talked with a faculty member on the phone was 52 percent compared with 22 percent for students who only heard a voicemail. "The faculty are calling about their programs and their departments. They're doing something that Admissions can't do. These faculty can talk about the opportunity for undergraduate research. They can connect with the students. 'You'll be in my freshman class in psychology.' It's very personal. They don't have a script." Admissions staff talk with students as well, but the topics are different and include things like student orientation. Faculty talk about academics. "We've done that before, but we have a much more invigorated effort."

•UM is recruiting at the 50,000-foot level. For instance, O'Hare said Larry Abramson, dean of the UM School of Journalism, teaches journalism in high school. Music professors routinely adjudicate festivals that aren't in Montana. UM is reaching out to high school counselors, who with parents have a significant influence on where a student goes to college. "We're really reclaiming that ground with them and focusing on that relationship," O'Hare said.

•UM makes 420 visits to high schools and community colleges in Montana each year, going to every high school in the state twice. It goes to 270 high schools and colleges outside Montana each year.

•It has automated its outreach management using sophisticated tracking, and it is ensuring a personalized approach at the same time.

***
As part of her presentation around campus, O'Hare shares a detailed flow chart of all the actions UM takes in the outreach process. It includes finding high school students who are beginning to consider college and could come to Missoula – think state high school students, those in the REI ZIP codes, and ones enrolled in feeder schools, for instance – to talking about financial aid and a commitment to graduate in four years.

In one of the early contacts, UM sends students a "UTube," an 18-inch tube filled with posters depicting students who are skiing, rock climbing, heading up Mount Sentinel or attending a concert, all listing the approximate distance between the activity and campus - it's zero feet for a concert at Washington-Grizzly Stadium.

The students featured in those posters look white and athletic, but O'Hare said that mailing is just one slice of the entire bundle. Others show more diversity, and a glossy booklet about academics that comes right after the UTube has several students, including a darker-skinned woman, standing in water with a net, possibly doing specimen collection.

"It has to be judged in its entirety," O'Hare said. "There are some print pieces and emails that will resonate with one person but not another, which is why you need to have a lot of them."

The students go from getting the materials featuring outdoors activities and concerts to an overview of the campus and community to detailed information about academic programs on the main campus and at Missoula College. The mailings include emails interspersed with postcard testimonials from students with interesting experiences.

O'Hare herself sends a personalized email to the families of accepted students, empathizing with the overwhelming process of choosing a college: "I recall my son's senior year – the college application year – was simultaneously thrilling and terrifying for both of us. It all ended well, he graduated in four years, is a fine young man and gainfully employed. Makes a mom proud."

She's had parents tell her the note brought them to tears, and she responds personally to follow-up emails.

***

The big push comes once students are accepted because UM wants to turn the acceptance into an admission. Students are weighing their options, wondering how the experience they'll have at UM compares with the one they'll have elsewhere, and at this juncture, UM brings its faculty in for the one-on-one connection.

"That's the value proposition," O'Hare said. "We know we're a public university. We know we're limited in what we can spend on scholarships and tuition waivers, but it's the strength of our programs that meet that value proposition."

Another way she puts it: "This is when faculty and deans and academic programs become the secret sauce."

According to a recruitment report from Ruffalo Noel-Levitz (RuffaloCODY merged), four-year public institutions spent a median $457 per student to recruit new undergraduates in the 2012-13 school year. O'Hare said UM is in the midst of calculating its recruitment costs, which include staff time.

With a new platform, Hobsons, UM tracks recruitment information and allows recruiters to use data analytics to make improvements to outreach in real time. At last report, the program had recorded 151,000 names in its database for a single class; 280,000 print mailings for the first phase of recruitment in the flow chart; and 1.6 million emails, also for that first phase.
 
Here we go again? Engstrom should ask his profs to do a sing along for new students...I can see the kids flocking to the U.



This will not end soon in my opinion.
 
Missoulian/Florio......Engstrom......Krakauer.

Sure it's more complicated than that but in my opinion.....it really isn't. U of M and Missoula is no longer in the national spotlight. The worst part of the perfect storm is over. Things will get better, unless Keila has her way or Engstrom hasn't learned his lesson. Now that I think about it.....ugh.
 
signedbewildered said:
A couple of years ago, UM overhauled its recruitment communication strategies, and the students who enroll in the fall 2016 will be the first who have been through an entire round of the revamped effort, from snazzy print brochures touting ceramics and welding to targeted emails written to inform students about financial aid ...
Oh Lord, please tell me that is not true ..... :yikes:

Well, at least they are "snazzy!"
 
If you give a shit about the U, get the fvck on board and help out in whatever way you can. Sure its easier to bitch about RE and cheer when he screws up but what, exactly, does that get you?

Go Griz!
 
Bjorn Bjornstein said:
If you give a shit about the U, get the fvck on board and help out in whatever way you can. Sure its easier to bitch about RE and cheer when he screws up but what, exactly, does that get you?
It gets you the same place that supporting failure, over and over again, and expecting a different result gets you. You may not have realized that yet. Nobody's "cheering," esp not the 200 career people laid off. That's just twisted. Are you volunteering to the teach the ceramics class?
 
Bjorn Bjornstein said:
If you give a shit about the U, get the fvck on board and help out in whatever way you can. Sure its easier to bitch about RE and cheer when he screws up but what, exactly, does that get you?

Go Griz!

If you care about UM, get on board and help send Engstrom on his way. He is ruining UM. With enrollment continuing to decline and budgets cuts, UM may come unglued. UM needs a leader who knows what he's doing and is competent.
 
Saw today that UM set a record for research grants this year, absolutely blowing AWAY the next closest year.

Congratulations to all involved in that. Pretty damn cool.
 
PlayerRep said:
Bjorn Bjornstein said:
If you give a shit about the U, get the fvck on board and help out in whatever way you can. Sure its easier to bitch about RE and cheer when he screws up but what, exactly, does that get you?

Go Griz!

If you care about UM, get on board and help send Engstrom on his way. He is ruining UM. With enrollment continuing to decline and budgets cuts, UM may come unglued. UM needs a leader who knows what he's doing and is competent.

I agree and I am on board but how does this process actually happen? Not sure "impeaching" (if that's even plausible) a university president is the best for a University and town that is seemingly coming out on the other side of a storm. RE needs to go...on that note, I'm not sold on what's going to happen in the next few years. Lots of universities seeing some tough times right now. However, I almost sense that UM might be getting its feet under it again after a shitstorm of recent bad press (among other things)...we shall see.
 
EverettGriz said:
Saw today that UM set a record for research grants this year, absolutely blowing AWAY the next closest year.
Congratulations to all involved in that. Pretty damn cool.
This is pretty early in the "year," I think you are referring to the $45 million grant last year for ecosystems research, which put UM around $80 million in total research.

If you want a glowing summary of UM:

Top rated for combining academic quality and outdoor recreation, The University of Montana boasts one of the most scenic campuses in America. A number of unique programs combine academics with experiential learning in the surrounding outdoors.

Ranking seventeenth in the nation, and fifth among public universities in producing Rhodes Scholars, UM also boasts eight Pulitzer Prize winners and several Fullbright, Truman and Goldwater Scholars. It has been named a top university for Udall Scholars, receiving the most in 2005 and the most since the award's 1996 inception.

CPA candidates continue to achieve among the highest first-time pass rates. Seventy-eight percent of all UM pre-med students are admitted to various medical schools (well above the national average of 40 percent). UM boasts a number of unique programs: Radio-TV's student documentary program; the Entertainment Management Program, addressing the business of entertainment and event management; and Wilderness and Civilization (campus courses and wilderness fieldwork), among others.

UM Journalism students have established the first student chapter of the Native American Journalists Association. UM was honored among 81 "Colleges with a Conscience" and ranks 52among the top ten in the nation in producing Peace Corps volunteers.

Two NASA Earth Observing System satellites currently monitor the planet with software designed at UM. The UM ROTC program has been ranked ninth (out of 271) in the nation. Sports Illustrated ranked UM in its top twenty-five best college sports towns (UM was the only I-AA Football school on the list).

Monte, UM's mascot, was the 2004 and 2002 Capital One National Mascot.

The Grizzly football team has had twenty-five consecutive winning seasons since 1986, has won or shared fifteen conference championships since 1993, has reached the NCAA Division I-AA national playoffs nineteen times since 1993, and been to the national championship seven times, winning it in 1995 and 2001.

Street & Smith's magazine, the bible of college hoops, named the women's Lady Griz basketball program seventh among the all-time best women's basketball programs in the country (its sixteen regular season conference championships and fifteen conference tournament titles rank second in the nation).

UM ecologist and forestry professor Steve Running, one of the nation's foremost experts on climate change, was a co-recipient of the 2007 Nobel Peace Prize awarded to Al Gore and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), of which Running is a member.
UM didn't write that.

US News & World Report did.

http://colleges.usnews.rankingsandreviews.com/best-colleges/university-of-montana-2536
 
signedbewildered said:
In one of the early contacts, UM sends students a "UTube," an 18-inch tube filled with posters depicting students who are skiing, rock climbing, heading up Mount Sentinel or attending a concert, all listing the approximate distance between the activity and campus - it's zero feet for a concert at Washington-Grizzly Stadium.

The students featured in those posters look white and athletic, but O'Hare said that mailing is just one slice of the entire bundle. Others show more diversity, and a glossy booklet about academics that comes right after the UTube has several students, including a darker-skinned woman, standing in water with a net, possibly doing specimen collection.
Lord.
 
UMGriz75 said:
Bjorn Bjornstein said:
If you give a shit about the U, get the fvck on board and help out in whatever way you can. Sure its easier to bitch about RE and cheer when he screws up but what, exactly, does that get you?
It gets you the same place that supporting failure, over and over again, and expecting a different result gets you. You may not have realized that yet. Nobody's "cheering," esp not the 200 career people laid off. That's just twisted. Are you volunteering to the teach the ceramics class?

Who's supporting failure? Beside being the chief pitchfork holder, what exactly are you doing to improve the situation? Do you want REs job?
 
Bjorn Bjornstein said:
Who's supporting failure? Beside being the chief pitchfork holder, what exactly are you doing to improve the situation? Do you want REs job?
Advocating for his removal, based on the record. This is the seventh year of enrollment declines, and the rate of decline is accelerating. How long do you think a CEO should have to "turn the ship around" as opposed to be held responsible and accountable for its beaching? That's what's missing here, you know, "the speech." The one that started all this: "I think it's time for new leadership," given while staring at his shoes. The source? Chief Pitchfork Holder Royce Engstrom.

When do you start teaching "Ceramics" in blind support of RE? It's the least you can do now that he's identified it and welding as key offerings at UM.
 
Steps in the right direction. Doesn't change my mind about Engstrom, but props to those others on the university payroll who are doing their best to turn this around. Stepping into more current marketing strategies will make a difference. Hopefully the data mining & leverage of the right communication channels will continue to net positives and mods that get @ more potential students. Now do something about growing relevant programs for these kids.
 
You really don't know much about the U of M do you 75 when it comes to fine arts. Ceramics is a huge deal. Likely one of the tops in the world even though Autio is emeritus (that's what tenured faculty become) The connection with Archie Bray Foundation is still there as well as top awards internationally.

Then there is welding, one of the more sought after professions. The program at Missoula college is renowned. Placement if it was possible of those grads would exceed 100%
 
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