Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
27th Feb 2013

Incorporating experiential marketing in international recruitment

If you thought marketing to students was already intensely multifaceted, you’ve got more to consider: some observers are pointing to “experiential marketing” as an area of innovation in international recruitment. Canadian Kognitive Marketing explains experiential marketing as "‘the act of connecting consumers with a brand through a live interaction.’

This experience provides consumers with the ability to understand a product or service by using their senses and engaging with it. Whether tasting new low-fat ice cream, watching HD animation on a new flat-screen, or pressing the accelerator of a hybrid car during a test drive; providing an experience is one of the greatest ways for a brand to create new customers as well as retain existing customers.”

Creative agency 360i further expands on this:

“Two-way conversations between brands and consumers lie at the heart of these experiences. Successful experiential campaigns are able to cut through the clutter of everyday life by resonating with the behaviours and passions of the audience at hand.”

360i also notes that the power and effectiveness of experiential marketing events “amplify naturally via word of mouth.” Meanwhile, CMO.com quotes Steven Cook, CMO of FanKix, a platform that enables marketers to amplify experiential marketing online, as saying:

“It’s an explosion of content with consumers being able to be a part of it. It’s going from push content to participative content.”

Steve Stoute, founder and CEO of marketing agency Translation, told CMO.com: “In order for something to be an experience, it needs to have texture." He added:

"Effective experience marketing needs to involve the consumers before, during, and after an event."

Inspiring examples

For a university, a “live interaction” might be something like inviting prospective students to a special online lecture geared specifically to them, hosting a live chat with a star university professor, or providing a virtual tour of the campus guided by a current student. It could also occur offline: see for example Brock University’s “Both Sides of the Brain” campaign, which gave prospective students at college fairs a hands-on experience that made them think more deeply than they otherwise might about their decision on where to study, and why. “Brock University’s “Both Sides of the Brain” campaign included photo booths at education fairs where students could create customised photos of themselves.” For more inspiration, the UK Marketing Network provides further illustrative examples of successful experiential marketing campaigns in other sectors.

Revisiting a time-tested concept

The concept of experiential marketing has been around for ages, in the form of such things as in-store promotions or PR stunts – live and tangible events – but it has taken on new urgency and applications as the influence of social media has exploded. This is because of the corresponding importance of ‘sharing’ and ‘liking,’ not to mention the broader range of online interactions and experiences. Word-of-mouth has never been more important in marketing to students. Like consumers in every other sector, students can, because of social media networks, immediately ask (and receive an answer from) friends about what they think of a brand or experience. Moreover, many of them are at an age where they care deeply about peer interactions and are suspicious of overt “push” tactics from brands. They want to decide for themselves how a brand “feels” to them and are more likely to trust the opinions of current and alumni students than staid or impersonal brochures or other gestures from institutions. They may be customers, but students don’t like to be thought of – or think of themselves as – customers. They are buying education, and this investment is:

  • huge;
  • personal;
  • emotional;
  • life-changing;
  • sharable (on social networks especially).

So the stakes are high, and this is why experiential marketing is such an interesting proposition for educational marketers. The incorporation of experience strategies into the recruitment effort is an opportunity to think about the emotional core of an institution and to reflect on real ways to engage students – yes, with the aim of students sharing their positive experiences and becoming more interested in or connected with an institution – but hopefully in a meaningful, authentic way.

Let’s face it, meaningful, authentic marketing is the only way to really connect with students today; they’re too savvy for anything else, and that’s a good thing.

As 360i puts it: “Creating for your consumers, instead of directly for your brand, creates trust and an understanding that we (the brands/marketers) get them.” Writing for The Guardian, Professor Zahir Irani, Head of Brunel Business School at Brunel University, adds:

“The use of Web 2.0 technologies to promote experiential recruitment is playing an ever increasing role in the creation of communities of prospective students that can now start forming and sharing ideas well before their first lecture. This is a major advancement on the traditional 'open day' model, where students read an outdated prospectus before suffering from information overload followed by a quick walk around campus.

Rather than 'selling' the institution on its past successes, parents and students now want their confidence developed around the institution's current and future plans, to the point that they feel they can trust the university in being able to create job-ready graduates for positions in industries that may not even exist yet.”

Most Recent

  • The surging demand for skills training in a rapidly changing global economy Read More
  • US issues corrected student visa data showing growth for 2024 while current trends point to an enrolment decline for 2025/26 Read More
  • Survey finds US institutions expanding agency engagement and focusing on new student markets 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

US issues corrected student visa data showing growth for 2024 while current trends point to an enrolment decline for 2025/26 In April 2025, we reported that foreign enrolments in the US had declined by -11% between March 2024...
Read more
Survey finds US institutions expanding agency engagement and focusing on new student markets AIRC (The Association of International Enrollment Management) and BONARD have just released a second edition of the State...
Read more
Canada’s language sector buffeted by policy changes in 2024 Amid reports of mounting job losses and programme cuts across Canadian education, the country’s language education providers are...
Read more
Canada: List of non-degree college programmes linked to post-study work rights has changed The Canadian government is continuing its policy of linking eligibility for a post-study work permit (PGWP) – at...
Read more
US administration revives proposal to limit terms of student visas The Trump administration has given notice of a proposed rule change that seeks to limit the term for...
Read more
How have changes in policy settings impacted international student recruitment at Australian universities? Over the past couple of years, Australian universities have been operating within a policy framework that makes it...
Read more
New analysis sounds a note of caution for UK immigration reforms Within the UK’s higher education system, there are a group of institutions known as “Post-1992 universities”. The term...
Read more
US warns of expanded travel ban that could affect key African markets “The United States is considering restricting entry to citizens of an additional 36 countries in what would be...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links