fbpx
Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
9th Oct 2015

Pleased to meet you: The business case for face-to-face

It can be tempting, when considering ways to grow an international business, to reach for a technological solution. Our world is hyper-wired and clients, employees, and target customers are always present on one digital platform or another for conversations or meetings. But while virtual communication is certainly efficient – not to mention convenient and inexpensive – research shows that overreliance on it can hamper the achievement of important long-term business goals. Face-to-face meetings may require a greater investment of time and money in the short term, but they are powerful catalysts for establishing, deepening, and maintaining key business relationships.

It starts in your brain

Face-to-face meetings stimulate our brains in ways virtual meetings cannot. Researchers from Beijing Normal University found that face-to-face communication is unique because it allows participants to read each others’ facial expressions and body language, and because participants can actually see how involved and invested others are in the conversation. This non-verbal language can dramatically affect the result of the meeting or conversation. Researchers from MIT’s Human Dynamics Laboratory, in observing hundreds of groups interacting face-to-face for business, found that:

"Usually we can completely ignore the content of discussions and use only the visible social signals to predict the outcome of a negotiation or a sales pitch [and] the quality of group decision making."

The relatively intense eye contact present in face-to-face meetings also helps participants to build trust and connection - crucial foundations for successful long-term relationships.

Trust fuels results

In the context of international education, trust is a key consideration for educators, agents, and students. Study abroad is a big decision and a significant investment, so students need to be sure they can trust the information given to them about schools. Recruiting international students similarly involves a complex set of decisions and processes, and relies on strong working relationships between trusted partners, including educators and agents. Such trust and personal connection can be difficult to establish though virtual and/or digital means alone. Take, for example, a Crowne Plaza study of 2,000 business people worldwide that found businesses could boost revenue by 24% if they increased their face-to-face contact, because such contact delivers benefits not achievable by other means. Nearly half of the business people surveyed believed they had lost a contract or client due to insufficient face-to-face meetings, and 81% said face-to-face meetings have the edge on virtual meetings when it comes to building strong client relationships. The respondents considered "starting a new business relationship, finalising a deal, and negotiating contracts" the areas where in-person contact matters the most.

Mixing face-to-face with virtual

While business travel for face-to-face meeting time is important, most institutions and businesses will have budgetary constraints limiting how often this can happen. The good news is that quality beats quantity when it comes to in-person meeting time. For many, this means that while virtual channels – email, Skype, video conferencing, webinars, social media, and others – may compose the largest proportion of contacts over time, well-chosen face-to-face meetings (e.g., via a FAM tour or attending an education conference or student fair) will be a critical step in driving business results. In 2010, The Maritz Institute and Cornell University’s Center for Hospitality Research published a study called The Future of Meetings: The Case for Face-to-Face, which found that the best uses of face-to-face meetings are:

  1. To capture attention, especially when new ideas or particularly important ideas are being presented. People participating in a face-to-face meeting cannot multi-task the way they might in a virtual meeting, so they are more likely to be focused on the agenda and goals.
  2. To inspire a positive emotional climate and a real sense of connection.
  3. To build human networks and relationships. For example, business executives participating in a Forbes Insight research study said the most important benefit of face-to-face meetings was the opportunity to "build stronger, more meaningful business relationships."

In the context of educator-agent relationships, face-to-face meetings might therefore be most important:

  • When first deciding whether or not to work together;
  • When familiarising agents with the campus and key benefits of studying at a school;
  • As a routine check-in opportunity or reward perk when agents are clearly demonstrating they are consistently placing students who are a good match for the school, to keep the positive energy and momentum going in the relationship.

The relative infrequency of such in-person meetings relative to all the other virtual communication that goes on between an agent and the school they represent can make these meetings all the more special and productive. A school’s commitment to investing in them – whether on campus, at an industry event, at the agency itself, or on-site at an education fair with students – shows the agent they are valued partners in the school’s recruitment efforts. The personal connection they help to establish is then more likely to carry over to routine virtual communication, and to make the latter more productive as well.

Make it worth it

A face-to-face meeting is a special and important opportunity that calls for careful preparation, planning, and follow-up. Making the most of in-person contacts can be an invaluable way to distinguish yourself, and your institution or agency, in a crowded field. In a previous ICEF Monitor article, we noted how an audience member attending a seminar on FAM tours spoke up to share her memories of a tour organised by a university: "She remembered everything about the tour, from the beautiful basket of local food every participant received to red carpet treatment with a photographer capturing it all … and she summarised, ‘They take such good care of their visitors.’" As even this single example reflects, face-to-face meetings, wherever and however they occur, present a unique opportunity to create the connections that fuel lasting business results and that create competitive advantage in the marketplace.

Most Recent

  • Year in review: What we learned in 2024 Read More
  • New research on imminent enrolment challenges for US colleges Read More
  • Australia revives international enrolment caps via new ministerial directive Read More

Most Popular

  • Which countries will contribute the most to global student mobility in 2030? Read More
  • Research shows link between study abroad and poverty alleviation  Read More
  • Beyond the Big Four: How demand for study abroad is shifting to destinations in Asia and Europe Read More

Because you found this article interesting

Year in review: What we learned in 2024 We return this week to something of an annual tradition here at ICEF Monitor: a quick recap of...
Read more
New research on imminent enrolment challenges for US colleges By 2041, experts expect that the number of domestic high-school graduates in the US will drop by 13%....
Read more
Australia revives international enrolment caps via new ministerial directive It was clear by the end of November that Australia’s controversial ESOS amendment bill – complete with its widely...
Read more
UK ELT reports “new normal” with softer student numbers for key third quarter The UK’s English-language teaching sector (ELT) may have reached peak business volume in 2019, five years ago. This...
Read more
Continued growth reported for UK transnational education enrolments Almost as many international students are studying for a UK degree outside of the UK as in it....
Read more
What do international students want? The following article is adapted from the 2025 edition of ICEF Insights magazine, which is freely available to...
Read more
First-year college students in the US down by more than 6% ahead of projected “enrolment cliff” A new data analysis reveals worrisome trends for US colleges with respect to domestic first-year enrolments. The number...
Read more
Japan market report: A dual focus on attracting international students and sending more Japanese students abroad This year has witnessed a trend in some Western economies towards deglobalisation. Pressured by a conviction among large...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links