Higher ed is now following other industries, including travel, in putting a focus on the customer experience (or the student experience, in the case of colleges).  Some of that “experience” is what Iâd call a marketing façade, largely driven through social media, where undergraduates show off what itâs like to live, learn, and mainly have fun on campusâwith much of it from student creators and a little of it shaped by the university itself. Itâs why Iâd argue that large Southern universities, in particular, have seen their applications rise in recent years because of TikTok videos from packed football games and sorority parties that make college seem like fun compared to online learning during the pandemic.  But much of the effort on enriching the student experience goes deeper than curated photo shoots. Itâs about improving the day-to-day interactions that students have with anyone and everyone on campusâan outgrowth of the student success movement of the last two decades.  Last month, at the ASU-GSV Summit in San Diego, which brought together more than 7,000 entrepreneurs, educators, and ed-tech companies, the term âstudent successâ was supplanted by the phrase âstudent experienceâ in nearly a dozen sessions that I counted.  âStudents may be successful, they may get great jobs, but if they donât enjoy their experiences in college, then it doesnât come back to the institution in terms of lifelong learning, alumni participation, or philanthropic dollars,â Raj Echambadi, the president of the Illinois Institute of Technology, said on the panel I led around the student experience. âYou can win the battle on student success, but lose the war on the student experience.â  Like many colleges, the Illinois Institute of Technology has collected data on students and their interactions and coursework for more than a decade. But on many campuses this information remains stuck in a data warehouse somewhere. Higher education still tends to prioritize intuition and experience over data. Too often campus decisions are based on anecdotes and the gut instincts of administrators, staff, and faculty.  At Illinois Tech, the data led officials to build a platform they call Elevate, which mandates certain experiential learning opportunities (including virtual internships in high school), as well as gives students a peer mentor, an academic mentor, and an alumni coach. The platform allows Illinois Tech to employ what the president called three critical pieces of the student experience: (1) utilizing data, (2) making one person ultimately accountable for a seamless student experience, and (3) connecting technology to a network of humans that leads to âproductive outcomes.â  Thinking about the student experience in this holistic way also creates an important feedback loop for learners, Sarah Toms, the chief learning innovation officer at the IMD business school said during our ASU-GSV panel last month.  âWithin 24 hours, 80% of information delivered in a lecture is gone, unless you give the opportunity to those learners to practice it,â said Toms, who is co-author of The Customer Centricity Playbook: Implement a Winning Strategy Driven by Customer Lifetime Value.  âWeâre all living in this world where weâre shedding and building on skills,â Toms added, âand one of the best ways to do that is by having lots of opportunities to practice, practice, practice as you’re going through this educational experience.â  The lecture wonât die just like the commodity piece of travel remains. But by focusing more on the customer experience and less on just giving you a seat on a plane or a bed in a hotel, travel brands and lots of locales around the world have boosted consumer demand.  At a time when higher ed is shedding students, a focus on the end-to-end student experience can also boost demand and differentiate colleges in a crowded marketplace where prestige and price tend to drive a lot of the conversation right now. |
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