Blogs - Blogs are becoming a very popular form of interactive, digital communication by internet users and are now necessary for schools and their school marketing plans. Content may be brief or extensive.
Explained
Blogs are used to allow interaction between the website’s administrator/s and the website’s visitors.
Schools could benefit considerably through the effective use of Blogs. These are ideal avenues to promote your school and the various messages you wish to place in the public or private domain.
These days so many people wish to be valued through their involvement and feedback - blogs are one highly regarded avenue for them to achieve this.
Blog Posts
The website’s / blog’s administrators write a Blog Post (comment, information, news, challenge, etc.) and publish this to their website’s blog page. Blog Posts may also include photos, videos, audios and other graphic presentations.
The visitor to your website’s blog page would then have the option to comment on your blog post’s content.
Blog Posts may be of any length and literary style depending on the target audience. However, in most cases, brevity is the norm in these days of mass communication overload. Think newspaper article lengths for most blog posts. As a general guide I work on 200-300 words per blog post. 300 words is often quoted for a good SEO.
You need to make sure that the administrator has the option to accept or reject all comments posted in response to the blog post. If the blog post is available to the public, you need to be prepared to receive all sorts of comments, including spam (mainly advertising links). Unsuitable comments would then be deleted.
Two Major Blog Uses for Schools
School Marketers could use blogs in two primary ways:
• School website Blog
• External Blog sites, which you would point (link) back to your school website.
The DETAIL
For more detail showing how necessary schools need school blogs and school marketing blogs, check out the e-book: School Marketing Manual for the Digital Age (3rd ed) 2010 by Bryan Foster.
Showing posts with label school marketing plan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label school marketing plan. Show all posts
Thursday, April 29, 2010
Sunday, April 25, 2010
School Marketing Plan and School Marketing Strategies
The School Marketing Plan (SMP) and associated School Marketing Strategies are the foundation for success in marketing your school. An example Overview of a SMP follows. Specific details for each step are found in the School Marketing Manual for the Digital Age (3rd ed), 2010, by Bryan Foster. An analysis of the plan follows the overview.
School Marketing Plan Overview
Define what you have to offer:
Define your target group:
Budget:
Personnel and Talents available - including School Marketing Manager:
Develop School Marketing Aims and Objectives – from previous information:
Select Marketing Strategies:
Evaluation:
Analysis of the School Marketing Plan
• The School Principal is ultimately responsible for the SMP.
• The School Marketing Plan is based on the School’s Vision and Mission Statement.
• A SMP is the plan used to market the school to the community. The community includes all people who know, or those who you want to know, about the school. These include the general public in your catchment region, parents, potential families, school staff, parish staff, other schools’ staff especially from feeder schools, present and past students, parents, etc.
• The SMP includes the strategies used within a defined budget.
• The plan is used to inform all stakeholders, and other targeted groups, of the benefits and successes of the school.
• It also informs about aspects which may be of interest.
• It also needs to plan for issues which may arise of a controversial nature.
• The plan should inform and emphasize the real nature of the school and the direction the school is planning or presently implementing.
• A realistic budget is part of the SMP.
• Marketing is relatively inexpensive when viewed in the terms of the potential gains made – reputation, new parents, supportive present parents, enrolments, etc.
• The SMP can benefit from the combination of views of staff and others
associated with the school community.
• In the initial stages of developing the school’s first real plan it is often best to include a variety of interest groups for gaining ideas and suggestions about how best to market your school. These thoughts may then be used as felt necessary.
• The School Principal needs input and has the overall responsibility to implement the plan.
The School Marketing Manual for the Digital Age (3rd ed), 2010, written by Bryan Foster details the essentials for a successful school marketing plan and associated strategies.
School Marketing Plan Overview
Define what you have to offer:
Define your target group:
Budget:
Personnel and Talents available - including School Marketing Manager:
Develop School Marketing Aims and Objectives – from previous information:
Select Marketing Strategies:
Evaluation:
Analysis of the School Marketing Plan
• The School Principal is ultimately responsible for the SMP.
• The School Marketing Plan is based on the School’s Vision and Mission Statement.
• A SMP is the plan used to market the school to the community. The community includes all people who know, or those who you want to know, about the school. These include the general public in your catchment region, parents, potential families, school staff, parish staff, other schools’ staff especially from feeder schools, present and past students, parents, etc.
• The SMP includes the strategies used within a defined budget.
• The plan is used to inform all stakeholders, and other targeted groups, of the benefits and successes of the school.
• It also informs about aspects which may be of interest.
• It also needs to plan for issues which may arise of a controversial nature.
• The plan should inform and emphasize the real nature of the school and the direction the school is planning or presently implementing.
• A realistic budget is part of the SMP.
• Marketing is relatively inexpensive when viewed in the terms of the potential gains made – reputation, new parents, supportive present parents, enrolments, etc.
• The SMP can benefit from the combination of views of staff and others
associated with the school community.
• In the initial stages of developing the school’s first real plan it is often best to include a variety of interest groups for gaining ideas and suggestions about how best to market your school. These thoughts may then be used as felt necessary.
• The School Principal needs input and has the overall responsibility to implement the plan.
The School Marketing Manual for the Digital Age (3rd ed), 2010, written by Bryan Foster details the essentials for a successful school marketing plan and associated strategies.
Sunday, February 28, 2010
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