Transcript
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The High Red Marketer podcast is sponsored
by the ZEMI APP enabling colleges and universities
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to engage interested students before the even
apply. You were listening to the Higher
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Ed Marketer, a podcast geared towards
marketing professionals in higher education. This show
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will tackle all sorts of questions related
to student recruitment, don'tor relations, marketing
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trends, new technologies and so much
more. If you are looking for conversation
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centered around where the industry is going, this podcast is for you. Let's
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get into the show. Welcome to
the High Reed Marketer podcast. I'm troy
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singer here with Bart Taylor and this
week we speak with Dr Scott Feller.
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He's the president of Wabash College.
It is an all men's college in the
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State of Indiana, and we talked
to Dr Feller about leaning in and marketing
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your distinctives and he brings his message
very boldly and very dynamically. Yeah,
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Troy, it's a great conversation.
I was really excited to have Dr Feller
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on the on the podcast today.
He was an introduction via Ethan Braden from
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purdue, and so Ethan really encourage
me to reach out to Dr Feller.
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He had heard him talk about,
you know, trying to switch the emphasis
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to outcomes as opposed to, you
know, selling the academics necessarily, and
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I think that Scott does a great
job of articulating that and explaining how he
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leverages those distinctives of a small private
men's college into really the benefit that that
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students and families can understand. I'm
excited to get into this conversation with Dr
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Scott Feller. It's our pleasure to
welcome Dr Scott Feller, president of Wabash
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College, to the High Red Marketer
podcast. And Scott, before we get
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into some of the uniqueness of how
your marketing Wabash, if you could give
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our listeners a little bit about the
college and some of the unique things about
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it if for some of them that
are not familiar that they should know?
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Thank you very much. Yeah,
we're very unique college. We're one of
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only three all male liberal arts colleges
in the country. So we're locating Crawford
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Zool, Indiana, with a hundred
percent residential campus. It consists of about
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eight hundred and fifty young men.
I've been the president here for about eighteen,
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nineteen months, but I've spent this
my twenty four year at Wall Bays.
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I began my career as a faculty
member, served as the college is
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chief academic officer and July of two
thousand and twenty I moved over to the
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president's room. Thank you, Scott. And one of the things that sticks
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out to me as we speak to
you and reading about the college is that
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the college is unapologetically a residential Liberal
Arts College for men in Indiana. That
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very much right. We're we have
a unique mission. We know it.
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Every student, Faculty and staff member
knows our mission. We're very committed to
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it. We know it's not for
everyone, but we think that for many
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young men it's a really excellent option
and and we're very committed to you know,
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traditional liberal arts. The education here
is both timeless in terms of based
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on a liberal arts curriculum that emphasizes
clear written in oral communication, critical thinking,
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moral reasoning the ability to work with
others, but it's also timely in
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that it's very much focused on sending
young men from Wabash college out into the
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world. Thank you. I think
some would even say that some of your
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marketing and how you compare yourself to
the others could be bold so if we
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can start out our conversation by how
wabash leads with the great outcomes. Yeah,
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we've probably been about three or four
years in a model where we really
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lead with outcomes. I think traditionally
small liberal arts colleges we tend to lead
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with what we are, not what
we get done. Everyone says they're a
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unique small community and they're right,
but at the end of the day I
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think students and their families want to
know what is going to be my experience
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through an after Wabash College. So
we talked a lot about graduation rates.
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Young men are not graduating from college
at great rates, so we're very proud.
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We think our focus on young men
and their success gives us an advantage
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there. We also know that families
are concerned about the return on their investment.
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Wabash is quite an affordable option for
families, but we're still asking people
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to invest their time and their money. So we're very proud. We lead
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with the fact that ninety eight to
a hundred percent of our graduates are settled
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in their first destination a couple of
months passed graduation. We lead with our
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position in national rankings. We end
up at the top of some very good
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lists. One that were particularly proud
of is that we have the number one
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alumni network in the country as part
of the secret and how we get these
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guys placed in internships and jobs.
We also have some really enviable numbers from,
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for example, pay scale on the
salary data ten years out, salary
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data, big career where we're among
the top liberal arts colleges in the Midwest.
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So student can come to Wallbash,
student can get a liberal arts education
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and the student can set themselves up
for a lifetime of both satisfaction and professional
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success. As far as we're concerned, that's great. And I really like
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this idea of outcomes because, I
mean, I've been in high red marketing
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for number of years and you know
consistently over at least the less last five
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or ten years that whenever you look
at the surveys from parents or even just
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from from students them solves, they
always want to know that return on the
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investment. What what is it going
to be for the outcome? And I
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know that we've talked with Jeff Fanter, used to be the executive vice president,
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and I've I've at Ivy Tech here
in Indiana, the community college network
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he was really pushing outcomes because their
data was showing the same thing that a
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lot of high school students and even
nontraditional adults who are likely to go to
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community colleges looking for that outcome data
and actually are. We were introduced through
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Ethan Braden, a friend of ours
from Purdue University that that has been on
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the podcast a couple times, and
he said, you know, you really
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need to talk to to Scott at
wabash because they're doing some really great things
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with outcomes, and I'm just always
fascinated with that because I do think you've
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got something there. Is that people
want to understand where they're where they're going
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to be after this investment, and
I think that colleges, especially traditional liberal
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arts colleges like wabash. Is Been
Easy for us as academics to emphasize learning
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for the sake of learning, right
the the many benefits that accrue from studying
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the liberal arts. But you know, we actually have to make sure that
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those of us who are not true
believers, those of us who are not
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from the inside, we've got to
translate this into the objective measures of success
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of a college. So we are
we think that learned we think a lifelong
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love of learning is something that we
impart in every student. But I guess
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at the end the day we don't
maybe lead with that right we lead with
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things like graduation rate, first destination
rate, salaries, awards that our students
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went. Yeah, I think that's
interesting because I've also seen a lot of
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schools that are making a little bit
of a pivot to you know, it's
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called kind of story branding, in
the idea that you make the student the
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hero of the story. Traditionally,
I think a lot of time schools try
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to make themselves the hero, to
say hey, look at us, look
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at what we've done, look at
our accolades or rankings, and not that
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you're doing that at any way.
You were actually making this the student,
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the hero, by telling them what
they can expect out of their out of
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their experience. That's exactly right.
On Friday I spoke to about a hundred
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perspective students at a visit day we
had there, and my message to them
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was to talk to Babash students,
current students, so that they could understand
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the trajectory they could be on next
year, because we do. We want
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the students to imagine themselves as a
successful wabash student and that, at the
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end of the day, is very
important us. We're very proud that we
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meet each student where he is and
and so the student story is the important
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story. The student outcome is the
most important story. That's great. Thank
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you. Along with outcomes, you
also have the philosophy about embracing comparison and
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would like to know if you could
share that philosophy with our listeners. Yeah,
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we've decided we're going to be pretty
bold and put this stuff out there.
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I think there are it's a crowded
market residential liberal arts colleges in the
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Midwest where we're located, and we've
got to distinguish ourselves from others. So
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we emphasize often are are placing rankings, you know, most accessible faculty,
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top career center, best athletic facilities, a lot of metrics like that where
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you can see wabash ranked among the
top colleges in the nation. So and
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when we look at something like we
look at pay scale and we look at
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those salary data, they are incredible
on their own, but I think what's
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really incredible is to look and see
the neighborhood of other colleges that were with.
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It's the top colleges in the country
and, quite frankly, those colleges
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they roll a lot more students who
had a pretty good head start in life.
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We continue to draw students, lot
of pilgrim recipients, lot of first
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generation college students. So the fact
that our value ad is really high and
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we're not afraid to put that up
and compare it with another college. We're
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also very transparent. All our retention
data, all our graduation rate data,
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everything about student of factory ratios,
you name it. We put pages and
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pages of that out there and that
we share with people because we're quite friendly.
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Were pretty proud and you should be, and I think that that's I
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think that would be a good note
for our listeners. There's always something that
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you can share that's distinctive about your
school. You know, we've talked to
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here wabashes, a small men's Liberal
Arts College, and you can say,
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well, you know, they're special
because there are men's only. Well,
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yes, they are, but that
also adds a general that as as some
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challenges because you just cut your market
place and half. So I think that
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one of the things, though,
that I'm kind of thinking through. Scott
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that you've talked about. That I
just want to kind of emphasize a little
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bit is this whole nature of really
kind of leaning into who you are and
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then making the most of it and
then you know and then being bold about
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that. I mean, I love
the fact that you might be the Best
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College in America. You kind of
claim that and I think that takes some
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some hood spot to do that.
But I think you also have some things
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that you can vary articulately put out
there and say this is why we think
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so and this is the data that
supports it, and I think that I
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would really challenge a lot of schools
to look at your data and find where
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are those places that set you apart
from everyone else and try to stop being
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the me too in your marketing and
start trying to be a little bit more
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of this is who we are,
and I think you're going to find more
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mission fit students because they want to, they're drawn to the places that they
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want to be. Yes, certainly
we are looking for the mission fit students.
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You know, Bart, when you
say we, when we describe ourselves
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as Liberal Arts College for men,
now we lose a lot more than half
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of the market with that state backly. Yeah, all right, we definitely
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lose sixty percent at least of the
Liberal Arts College market. And then the
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fact is that a single sex college
is not whatever the experience. Everyone is
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looking for. So we're going after
a particular student who is driven, who
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wants to get somewhere, and so
that's why I think our comparative approach to
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marketing fins so well with who we
are. We're also very competitive here.
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So we're celebrating on this campus last
week. Are Wrestling team play second in
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the nation and division three and our
basketball team played the final four. This
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place is competitive. That's part of
in our DNA. So what we tell
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students is we're going to compare with
others. We tell students you're going to
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learn more, you're going to earn
more, you're going to lead more and
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you're going to play more. And
so that's our that's our promise to students
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and, as you say, we
work. We work hard to back it
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up. Yeah, well, being
a alumni of Anderson University, I can
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attest to the competitiveness because we always
played wabash in in football. I was
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not on the team, but I
was in the stands cheering during those games.
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So that was that's exciting. Scott. A conversation that I've had the
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privilege of being privy to that Bart
has with schools is for liberal arts colleges
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to really realize who the real competition
is, and it might not necessarily be
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the other liberal arts colleges around you. Well, like to know your thoughts
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about that and your approach to the
school saying who you consider is your competition.
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Yeah, try, you're exactly right. You know, we we have
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some crossover with the Paul and early
for example, but that is dwarfed by
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our crossover applications with Purdue University and
Indiana University. The competition is about drawing
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students to private residential colleges away from, you know, let's say, the
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familiar names, the the large are
one flagships in their state. In Indiana
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that happens to be particularly tough competition
because in Purdue University in Indiana University we
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really are competing against two very strong
flagships and we know it. But when
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we go out of state, when
we go to Texas again, we're not
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necessarily competing with a Texas Liberal Arts
College. Were more likely competing with the
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University of Texas at Austin were competing
with, you know, university Texas southwest.
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So that for us is we know
that's where we lose the students.
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We have to differentiate the college experience
here. We think that we're in a
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great position to differentiate that, but
we also know we have to work really
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hard to get people's attention perdue and
I you have such great built in ways
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to grab a student's attention. You
know, if I could be on ESPN
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game a day, everyone's blow,
I think I'd feel pretty good about our
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jets is with seventy year old young
men. But that's all the way the
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worlds. That's right and I think
I think you're so right in that because,
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I mean, I've often told a
lot of my clients who are small
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faith based institutions here in Indiana.
I know you can drive up interstate sixty
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nine and hit five or six schools
that maybe appear to be similar. They're
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very different, but I've often told
them that you're not competing a guest one
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another. You might cross APP with
each other, but at the end of
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the day you're competing against, you
know, the the state schools, and
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sometimes you're even a competing against life
itself. More and more students are looking
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at gap years. More and more
students and families are considering other creative ways
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of looking at it because, I
mean, you know, let's be honest,
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even though schools make it affordable for
students, the public, many times,
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especially Firstgen students and pell grant recipient
family households don't quite understand how everything
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works, with with discount rates,
with with scholarships, with financial aid,
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with grants, and so I think
that part of it is recognizing who the
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true competition is and many times that's
just life itself and and what I would
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consider a little bit of just Nativity
with with some of the families that they
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just don't understand and they think I
could never afford a private college because that
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sounds elite and expensive. I'm going
to have to go either to a public
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school or to a community college.
How do you address those types of questions?
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You know what I talked with the
family. I trying to share with
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them that we offer an elite education
without any elitism. Right. We want
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to bring everybody to the table.
So we've worked really hard at a couple
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of things. Transparency and financial aid
is one of the ways that we go
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about we're very straightforward. With an
Indiana student WHO's a pell grant recipient,
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for example, of He's been receiving
free introduced lunch. He's going to receive
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pell grant, he's going to receive
a grant from the State of Indiana and
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Wabash is going to write off the
rest of the tuition with scholarship. So
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we say that from day one you're
admitted to Wabash College, tuition is covered,
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and so that's been a big part
of our messaging, as well as
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emphasizing our net price calculator or people
can find out what the cost it is
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is going to be. I don't
know what the answer is in terms of
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a sticker price versus the net price
and the depth counting I feel that are.
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I guess I like our net price
because it reflects how much we spend
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on students. Yeah, and that's
not true in every college, but if
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you take our college's budgets, around
forty five million dollars and you divided it
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by eight hundred eight under fifty students, you get our staker price. Now.
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Now the fact is that our students
are paying a fraction of that because
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of philanthropy. You know that our
students are typically, if they have any
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kind of financial lead, they're not
really going to pay much more here than
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they would to go to produce or
I you, because the this college runs
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on philanthropy. But admittedly it took
me a long time to explain that in
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this podcast. It's not a sound
bite, it's it involves developing a relationship
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with a family and and trying to
explain it. So I wish there was
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a slogan that would help people see
through the fog of scholarship and pricing.
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But on the other hand I want
people to know this is an elite education.
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Somebody is going to spend more than
Fiftyzero on your education at Wabash.
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Around two thirds of that is going
to come for our alumni and friends in
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philanthropy, either the accumulated philanthropy of
our endowment or hand you will give it
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right. So that's the tricky one. How do I explain to people this
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college is different? We're going to
invest in you like no one else and
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and someone that you don't know is
going to slap down two dollars for every
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one dollar that you and your family
bring to the table. I love that
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right there at the very end.
I think that's great and I think also
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just it plays in so well to
your alumni. I mean you talked about
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that earlier, how that alumni network
and and the job placement in the in
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the you know, the you know
after the outcomes with things. I mean
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you've got alumni that are engaged with
your students even before they even set foot
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on campus because of of all of
this, and I think that's just a
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one full story. A few years
ago, at the breakfast before graduation,
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I address the students and I asked
the students to stand if a Wabash,
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a lamb, had been part of
their process to get to Wallbash. Every
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single student who wasn't an international student
stood up at that breakfast. That's great.
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That's that's really great. We talked
a lot about it on the show.
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Schools are really struggling today to make
the same ads been work. Cepms
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00:19:57.200 --> 00:20:02.440
are up eighty nine percent you over
year. On facebook and Instagram, our
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00:20:02.440 --> 00:20:06.920
college clients are no longer looking for
rented audiences. They're looking for an owned
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community where they can engage students even
before they apply. This is why Zeemi
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00:20:11.440 --> 00:20:15.880
has become so crucial for our clients. With over one million students, close
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00:20:15.960 --> 00:20:19.960
to tenzero five star ratings, consistently
ranked as one of the top social laps
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00:20:19.960 --> 00:20:23.880
and recently one of apples hot APPs
of the week, there is simply isn't
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00:20:23.920 --> 00:20:27.400
anything out there like it, and
we have seen it all. Zeemi not
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00:20:27.440 --> 00:20:32.680
only provides the best space for student
engagement, but the most unique in action
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00:20:32.720 --> 00:20:37.079
will data for their one hundred and
sixty college and university partners. We know
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00:20:37.519 --> 00:20:41.279
firsthand from our clients that Zee me
is a must have strategy for Gen Z.
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00:20:41.000 --> 00:20:48.880
Check them out now at colleges dot
Zee mecom. That's colleges dot Zee
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00:20:48.079 --> 00:20:56.240
m eecom. And yes, tell
them Barton Troy sent you. Scott.
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Being a all men's college, would
like to know if you've heard heard of
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the where are the men or where
the men are and, if you have,
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with the shortage of men going and
participating in higher education, how you
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are responding as a college or how
you address that. Would like to hear
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your thoughts and approaches to that.
You can't be the president of Walbash College
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without having people send you every editorial
and news story about where are the men.
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So I wish I wasn't quite so
familiar with that literature and I think
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I'd say two things. First is
often when we disaggregate the data on men's
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college attendance, what we see is
that there is a substantial part of that
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loss that's happening in community colleges,
for example, and is not directly relevant
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to Wabash College. But even in
the private residential college sphere, on most
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campuses women outnumber men. So our
response to it is again to double down
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on who we are where a college
for men. Everybody here is focused on
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young men's success and getting them to
a graduation and getting them to a job.
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So what we can offer is perhaps
an antidote to the observation that young
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men are not thriving in higher education. Then come to Walbash college and this
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is the one place that that's completely
committed to you on been thriving. If
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you women don't thrive at Wabash,
you know there is no future for Wabash
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College. We produced graduates, because
graduates are who primarily funds our philanthropy.
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Like to tell the perspective students that
the relationship between a student and the college
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is a little different at wabash.
It's not transactional we are necessarily looking for
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00:22:56.599 --> 00:23:02.240
your tuition check right. We're looking
for you to come and have a great
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experience and a decade down the road, for you to give back Philanth philanthropically,
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for you to complete that virtuous cycle. So I'm on the hook to
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give every student a great experience and
you know they we don't just cash people's
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check and and have them walk away, because we lose money on every student.
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We've got to produce graduates, because
the payoff for Wabash college it's not
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the tuition that comes in in the
fall, it's the philanthropy that comes in.
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Your wrath. Great. That's very
good and I think that that's so
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important that even there, I think
a lot of other schools could learn from
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that because I think that it is
important to create that experience. Not only
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will that produce retention, because I
mean, I think a lot of schools
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fall into the trap of, and
Nate Simpson from the gates foundation made a
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comment on one of the podcasts,
that we work so hard to recruit them
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and then we when we hand them
off to student life, we just hope
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they do well and we don't do
much beyond that. And especially at risk
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groups like first Gen and pel grant
recipients. I think that we need to
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do a little extra work and I'm
so encouraged to hear the work that Wabash
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is doing, not only because it's
the right thing to do and it helps
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with three tension, but also it's
going to it's going to build that legacy
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for the future. I mean you're
talking about, you know, generation Alpha,
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the kids that are under eleven years
old, are going to benefit from
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the senior that's in in Wabash right
now that in another six seven years might
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start giving to the annual fund that's
going to impact that generation Alpha student,
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and so I really love the way
that that works at Wabash. Yeah,
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we're trying to be very intentional about
that cycle. So my Luve's time meeting
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today was with a foundation that provides
US substantial financial aid for Indiana students and
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we had twenty nine of our students
there who are recipients of these awards to
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meet the folks that run this foundation, and that was as much we obviously
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we wanted the foundation to see the
results of their philanthropy. But when I
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address the students, I asked them
to for them to reflect on how philanthropy
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is affecting them so that down the
road they'll understand. Okay, yeah,
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well, I stu did a lot
for me. I'm going to find a
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way to support Wallbash. God,
that's Great. That's very good. We
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wind every episode of the podcast up
with a question to our guests and it's
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if they have something, an idea, anything that they would like to share
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that could be impactful for our listeners
soon after, maybe even immediately. Do
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you have something that you can share
as we pose that question to you,
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Scott, I do. I'm going
to I'm going to use something and bartment
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reference to it at the very beginning. I think the message is you've got
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to be bold. Okay, I
think the most college leaders, and I
327
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count myself among them, you know, come up through the academy, where
328
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we tend to getting it right tends
to take precedence over getting the work done
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quickly, right and making an impact. I think also academics, you know,
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we also always often assume our work
stands on its own, but the
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fact is, students and families want
to know what makes you great right.
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They don't want to have to figure
out how is wabash different from de Paul
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or how is wabash different from perdue? So I think be bold, differentiate.
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These are the things that your families
need to hear so that they can
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00:26:37.920 --> 00:26:44.160
understand. Don't expect them to figure
out what the outcome is a great liberal
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00:26:44.240 --> 00:26:48.880
artification. tellent to thank you,
Scott. Well said. How would one
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00:26:48.920 --> 00:26:52.880
get in touch with you if,
after listening to the PODCAST, they would
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00:26:52.920 --> 00:26:56.960
like to reach out? Oh,
the easiest way as email me and president
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00:26:56.039 --> 00:27:00.240
at Wabash doted. You go to
the wabash email noll or what they slip
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00:27:00.279 --> 00:27:03.720
page, you can find my phone
number, but President at wall based,
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00:27:03.759 --> 00:27:07.480
I need to use a great way
to reach out. Thank you, Scott.
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00:27:07.559 --> 00:27:10.920
Thank you for your time and thank
you for the wisdom that you were
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00:27:11.079 --> 00:27:15.279
so generous with today. Bart,
any last comments or thoughts from you?
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Yeah, I just want to kind
of pull back and kind of you highlight
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a couple things at Scott said that
I think is really important for audience to
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walk away with. And I really
love the fact that Wabash has done such
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a great job of leaning into the
distinctiveness that they bring to the market place
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and I think that every school can
do that. You don't have to.
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You don't have to have a special
everybody has a special element. You have
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to discover that, figure that out
and be able to start promoting that,
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and so I would really encourage you
to do that. Once you understand what
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that distinctiveness is, be bold in
that. You know, don't don't hide
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it, don't don't apologize for it. Lead with it and lead well with
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it, because I think that that's
going to allow you to start comparing yourselves
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and contrasting yourself to other options and
it's also going to give you that value
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add that, you know, somebody
looks at and says, I think I
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need that, and I think I
would also really applaud wabash and Scott on
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this legacy building that they do from
day one, even at even in the
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you know, as he mentioned,
he had the prospective students on campus recently
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and had them stand up on those
who were influenced by alumni, and a
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lot of them were doing that.
Don't take your alumni for granted if your
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marketing doesn't include your alumni and you're
not talking with them and you're not building
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a relationship with them, and all
they hear from you as the annual gift,
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you know, bell go off in
November. Be Sure you're doing more
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more with your alumni. Make it
friend building rather than fundraising. It's a
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friend friend raising, I think it's
what they call it, rather than fundraising.
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You have to do both. And
so you know, a smaller school
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like wabash that you have, you
know, not as big alumni network,
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but even if you're alumni network is
really big. I'm sure Wabash is living
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in alumni network is in the T
s. If you have more than that
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or if you have less, it's
something that's worth doing and something to kind
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of take to your marketing team and
figure out ways that you can kind of
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stay in front of that to build
those legacies of not only enrollment but philanthropy
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going forward. So thank you,
Scott. This was a great conversation and
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thank you, Bart for bringing us
to a very powerful but soft landing.
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The hired Marker podcast is sponsored by
Kaylor solutions and education marketing and branding agency
377
00:29:18.680 --> 00:29:25.559
and by thing patented, a Marketing
Execution Company specializing and bringing customization, in
378
00:29:25.720 --> 00:29:30.400
personalization, to your outreach. On
behalf of Bart Taylor, the cohost,
379
00:29:30.440 --> 00:29:37.400
I'm troy singer. Thank you for
joining us. You've been listening to the
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00:29:37.519 --> 00:29:41.880
higher at marketer. To ensure that
you never miss an episode, subscribe to
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