Transcript
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The High Red Marketer podcast is sponsored
by the ZEM APP enabling colleges and universities
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to engage interested students before they even
apply. You're listening to the Higher Ed
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Marketer, a podcast geared towards marketing
professionals in higher education. This show will
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tackle all sorts of questions related to
student recruitment, donor relations, marketing trends,
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new technologies and so much more.
If you're looking for conversations centered around
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where the industry is going, this
podcast is for you. Let's get into
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the show. Welcome to the hired
marketer podcast. I'm troy singer and,
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as usual, here with my co
host Bart Kaylor, and each week we
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quest to interview hired marketers that we
admire for the benefit and hopefully the betterment
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of the entire hired community. I
love our conversation with Kim Bartlett Martinez today
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because she is someone that has worked
in marketing for her entire life. A
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big part of that has been in
higher reed, but a big part of
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it has been outside of Higher Ed, and the perspective she brings is both
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interesting but also very resourceful. She
has a lot of knowledge that she conveys
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within our conversation. Yeah, I
think it's it's an incredible opportunity. I
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mean we've had a lot of different, different guests on the podcast who have
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had a background in corporate and then
come into higher read and different things like
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that. But I think one of
the things I really like about what Kim
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brings to the table is that,
I mean, she was managing major brands
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that we all recognize. I mean
she worked a big part of her career,
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twenty years in general mills, so
she was working on, you know,
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marketing campaigns for Cheerios, brand manager
for Pillsbury, all kinds of things
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that were very, very familiar with. But then she took all of that
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knowledge and went into the freshly minted
chief marketing officer role at University of St
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Thomas in Minnesota. And Uh,
that's a that's a medium, small to
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medium sized private faith based institution.
That I think is just amazing story to
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talk about how she kind of positioned
what she brought to the table and really
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made a big impact and move the
needle for for that school. And please
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know when we first started talking to
her she was still at St Thomas,
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but now she is the chief marketing
officer for the American Cancer Society, but
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she lent us her wisdom still and
came back and talked about higher red marketing.
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So here's our conversation with Kim Bartlett
Martinez. It is great to have
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Kim as a guest on our podcast
and it's funny because when we first approached
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her she was a Cmo at the
university, but now she is the Cmo
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at the American Cancer Society. Kim, thank you for joining us. Uh,
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if you would tell us a little
bit about your current role, but
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then after that we'll back up and
we'll follow your journey, the reason why
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we're talking to you today. Sure. So I'm currently the two marketing officer,
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as you said, for the American
Cancer Society. I've been doing that
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for all of two and a half
months, so it's still relatively new,
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Um, and in that role I'm
responsible for, uh, stewarding the American
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cancer sciety brand, consistently telling the
full story of the American cancer study all
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the impact that it has. The
brand challenge that they have is that a
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lot of people have heard of it
Um and feel positively about it, but
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not a lot of people can actually
articulate exactly what the American cancer study does.
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So it's a really fun challenge from
a marketing standpoint to be a part
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of that Um. But before that
Um, well, actually, if you
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roll all the way back, um
I actually started my marketing career at General
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Mills. I have Um, I
have been in marketing my entire my my
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entire working life. My in between
first and second year of College I was
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assigned to a I was working for
a bank and they assigned me to the
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marketing department and I haven't worked out
side marketing since. And so I basically
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spent my career then getting a collection
of different kinds of marketing experiences and I
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started out right out of school in
Um, in financial services. That met
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life in New York City. Um
quickly realized that at the age of twenty
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six I felt like I was teaching
more than I was learning and I wanted
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to actually go work for a place
where I could really learn from Um what
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I considered to be the best of
the best of the craft. So to
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do that I had to go back
at my m B, a Um,
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and then was recruited to work for
General Mills, and so spent about twenty
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years with General Mills and that was
what I would call my classic marketing training.
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Um. Big Company, Great Training
Program Great People. Um. But
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after almost twenty years it was time
to think about the next challenge and right
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around that time the University of St
Thomas in Minnesota was looking for its first
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ever chief marketing officer. and Um, even though I had not planned at
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all to target or go into Higher
Ed, Um, the opportunity just seemed
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too good to pass up, and
it was a chance to build an organization
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from from the bottom up and to
really be part of Um, the Higher
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Ed world, which I think has
a fantastic mission in terms of educating the
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next generation of leaders and so Um. So I joined. I joined them
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and was there for about five and
a half years before Um and I did
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not want to get I did.
I was not looking, but this opportunity
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with the American Cancer Society just tapped
me on the shoulder and it was something
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I couldn't say no to. And
I feel like my whole career, everything
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I've done at general mills, everything
I did at the University of St Thomas,
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prepared me for the role I have
now and in fact I don't think
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I would have been able to do
this job without St Thomas or without General
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Mills. That's great. That's great
and I think it's interesting and I was.
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I I have a mixed career as
well that I did a lot in
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corporate and and now focused in on
the Higher Ed but I always think it's
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interesting and I'd like to get your
take because I think sometimes, you know,
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fifteen, twenty years ago, uh, the word marketing was something that's
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a little bit taboo when you would
talk in academic circles. How did you
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I mean, what was your impression, you know, coming straight out of
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a large corporate you know, managing
some major brands, into a place that
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maybe saw marketing a little differently than
you did? Well, it was a
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culture shock because in the consumer packaged
goods world, you know, marketing is
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the center of the wheel, as
we always like to say. So it
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is the decision maker, it is
where General Management and marketing are merged together.
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Um. So you do have a
lot of positional power, I guess,
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I will say, in terms of
being able to Um lead change there
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and going from that environment, where
nobody questions the value of marketing, into
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the Higher Ed environment where it wasn't
that people, Um didn't see the value
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of marketing, but they had a
couple of questions about it. Like so,
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for example, on my Um,
my initial team I had, I
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had a several journalists and, you
know, as their training, journalists Um
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in journalism school. That's all about
being objective and it's all about putting the
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facts out there so that people can
draw, you know, their own conclusions,
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and so I definitely had there was
some skepticism with a mark are coming
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in that Um. Actually, even
the word unethical was one that I heard
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used, which I thought was so
strange because never in my career have I
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ever felt like I've either asked or
done anything unethical, um. And I
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I then tried to get to the
root of where that was coming from,
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and it turned out it came from
again, this belief that possibly marketers are
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spinners and that they're not going to
tell you the full truth, Um.
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And so from that that there were
some folks that felt that that was unethical
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and I had to just say,
well, we can agree to disagree,
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but here's the way I look at
it. I think of marketers as people.
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We have spotlights to shine and we
get to decide where we shine those
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spotlights and we're going to shine those, obviously in the place that tells the
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best story for the institution. But
that doesn't mean we're going to be dishonest
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about other aspects of us. And
nowadays you can find pretty much every piece
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of information you want on the web
anyway. So whether I tell you or
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not, you're going to be able
to go find it. So Um,
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that was that was one hurdle,
just having to make sure that folks felt
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comfortable with Um, with marketers,
um. And so what I had to
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do there is just be really,
really clear with the team and as we
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were forming, that this was a
marketing bus. You know, and I
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think about Um Jim Collins and the
words and his words from that wonderful book
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good to great, and he talks
about you know just where the bus is
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going and you've got to get the
right people on the bus. And I
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said to my team, I said, well, this is where our bus
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is going. It's a marketing bus
and you can get on it or not.
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That's fine, um, but um, but this is a marketing bus
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and I would encourage if you don't
feel that that alligns with your values,
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to not necessarily do that. Not
Don't get on it. From the beginning.
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The other the other thing, Um, just with regard to marketing and
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Higher Ed was this notion of Um, do you really need to sell the
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product? Shouldn't the products sell itself? I mean it's if it's good enough.
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Um. You know, do we
really need to go out and kind
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of tell people about it? And, you know, to that end,
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I was like, well, you
know, Cheerios is the number one serial
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in the United States and yeah,
we spend an awful lot of money marketing
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Cheerios to remind people that it's out
there, even though it's a fan tastic
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products. So it's one of those
things just reminding people of the importance of
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Um, breaking through and building awareness. And in St Thomas's case, we
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definitely did have an awareness issue outside
of our region, where we're very well
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known, but Um, you know, outside of Minnesota in the Upper Midwest,
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we had some room to grow.
So just trying to make the case
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for why marketing would make sense Um
and just building trust over time. It
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was the kind of thing like I
can say all of these things, but
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then obviously people are going to judge
us more on the basis of what we
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do and the results that we get. Um So it was. It was
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about building trust, though, from
the beginning. Yeah, and I think
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that that's such a such a key
element. I want to come back to
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that in a second, but I
think that one of the things too,
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that I at least when I am
on college campuses and working with marketing departments,
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and and even sometimes when they don't
have a marketing department, but I'm
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working with enrollment like really small schools, having them understand that there's a difference
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between checking boxes off a task list
and and, you know, and and
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the types of people that you have
doing it, versus true marketing. I
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mean, I think even in our
in our initial conversations, you kind of
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talked about project managers versus marketers.
So tell me a little bit about that.
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Yes, yes, yes, Um, and I actually see that to
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some extent in the organization that I'm
in today. So I actually don't necessarily
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see that as an issue specifically for
higher ed but Um, because I think
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there's lots of different flavors of marketing
out there. Um, I think that
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not everybody understands the strategic value that
a marketer can bring, and so one
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thing that we worked hard to do
when we were forming our team at St
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Thomas was to make sure we set
the expectation were strategic partners and actually deliberately
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did not call the schools and the
colleges that we worked with clients, because
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that would have implied that I had
to do whatever they asked me to do
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because I was their client and they
were, you know, paying the bills.
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Boar. We specifically said what we
were partners and, Um, you
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know, and in that means,
um I, when you come to me
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with a with an issue, please
don't come to me and say I need
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a video that does this or I
need I want, I want a flyer
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that has this picture and these bullets
and this headline. Go make that.
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Um. What I want to know
is what are you trying to do?
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What audience are you trying to reach? What do you already know about this
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audience in terms of messages that would
be you know, that would move them
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to act? And then let me
take this back to my team and let's
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let us come back to you with
what we think would be the way to
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solve that problem that you're having in
the way that makes the most sense,
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either from a budget standpoint or from
an impact standpoint. And so it was
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about Um learning to be in that
strategic partnership Um. That actually was something
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that we had to get the university
aware that this was how we were going
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to be Um acting in moving forward. So again it required some open mindedness
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on the part of our partners.
So in the beginning we had to give
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people, the folks on our internal
team, permission to be able to be
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strategic and permission to say no to
what was essentially coming in as really tactical
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requests and to permission to ask to
have that more strategic conversation with the partners.
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And then for our partners, we
had to make sure that they understood,
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hey, we're going to come at
you perhaps with some different ideas and
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some different thoughts than what you came
to us with, and what we need
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you to do is to be open
minded about that. Yeah, I think
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I think that reminds me a little
bit about a conversation that we had with
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Ethan Braden at Perdue University. He
kind of called at the difference of being
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a short order cook versus a chef. You know, the idea that that
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you know, we can take short
order cook orders all day long and just
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do what everybody wants that's not really
marketing, that's actually just, you know,
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serving up a dish, or we
can actually find out what they want
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and what they need and create a
meal. So that's a great, great
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point. Yeah, no, that's
definitely right, and it was actually funny
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because when I first got to the
university and I was thinking about roles and
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responsibilities and who would have final authority
and final accountability, you know, initially
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I had thought, when I was
working with the deans or even, you
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know, in the center of the
university, that Um, those business owners
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would have responsibility for the strategies,
right, and they would actually tell us
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then these are our strategies, these
are objectives, and then we would actually
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go to work on those. But
then I, as the CMO, would
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have final say over the creative Um
and would be able to say this is
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what I think you should do.
And what I quickly realized as we started
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all working together, that I absolutely
wanted to say in their strategies, because
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I didn't always love the way the
strategies were given over and I thought that
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actually we added a lot of value
to our partners, our schools and college
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partners, by asking some of the
questions that we did Um. They weren't
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always um in conversations where they were
really thinking, you know, about what
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they were trying to do. So
in that regard I felt like we were
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adding a lot of value to them
in terms of pushing their thinking on the
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strategic front a little bit more.
And then, at the end of the
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day too, I also wasn't going
to make them run a piece of creative
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that they hated or that they didn't
believe in. So I was like,
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okay, fine, we'll share responsibility
on the strategy side and we can also
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share on the creative side too.
So I what I learned, and this
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was kind of a theme with Higher
Ed, that nothing is like as black
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and white is maybe it might have
been when I was at general mills in
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terms of approvals. It was much
more of a blend, Um, a
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gray that actually I came to really
embrace and really like and felt like we
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got to Um really great places because
of that gray, because we weren't pushing
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to the black or the white right
from the very beginning. So it came
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to be something I really appreciated.
We talk a lot about it on the
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show. Schools are really struggling today. That makes the same at spend work.
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CPMS are up eight year over year
on facebook and instagram. Our College
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clients are no longer looking for rented
audiences. They're looking for an owned community
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where they can engage students even before
they apply. This is why Zemi has
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become so crucial for our clients,
with over one million students, close to
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ten thousand five star ratings, consistently
ranked as one of the top social lapps
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and recently one of Apple's hot APPs
of the week. There simply isn't anything
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out there like it, and we
have seen it all. Ze Me not
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only provides the best space for student
engagement, but the most unique and action
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wal data for their one sixty college
and university partners. We know firsthand from
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our clients that Ze me is a
must have strategy for Gen Z. Check
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00:15:46.519 --> 00:15:52.840
them out now at colleges dot Zem
dot com. That's colleges dot Z E
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M E dot Com. And yes, tell them which has to change over.
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When you came to be, I
believe you took the road show to
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the rest of the campus to kind
of convey this. How did that go?
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Can you kind of describe how how
that went? Yeah, yeah,
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that idea came about because, as
I was saying, we needed to train,
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if you will, the university to
work with US differently, because it
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was a completely different team, it
was a completely different strategy, completely different
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philosophy, and so we needed a
way to help people understand what it was
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that we were trying to do.
So that gave rise to the idea of
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this road show that we did,
and we did it not only with all
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the schools and colleges, but we
also did it with all the internal departments,
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you know, the Finance Group,
Um, you know, development,
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anyone who might want to know about
marketing. We were happy to kind of
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come in and tell our story and, Um, as part of this we
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covered, um, what our creative
vision was and actually, even before that,
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why we needed to have a creative
vision. Um, pointing out that
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there is a sea of Vanilla in
Higher Ed Marketing. In fact, there's
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even a book on it. It's
called three in a tree, you know,
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which is like we're just saying that
basically, you look at Higher Ed
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pictures, there'll be three students and
usually under a tree. You know,
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that's like your traditional kind of like
higher ed look and feel, and so
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we needed to explain to people why
it was we needed to break through,
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what the importance of breakthrough meant.
Um, and then Um, the skill
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set that we had to go against
that. Um, how we were going
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to be working differently. Um,
how do you even give good creative feedback?
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You know, we had a whole
slew of folks that, you know,
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when you showed them creative would say, well, I'm not sure I
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really like the color red or something
like that, which not super strategic in
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that so we had to kind of
encourage people to know, you've got to
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go deeper than that, Um and
come up with Um. You know.
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So, what is it that you're
reacting to here? Um, that actually
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might be something that would cause us
to think a little bit differently about this
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piece of creative so we also address
the issue of Um. You know,
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some books were thinking this is higher
Ed, this is a very expensive purchase,
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a very expensive purchase. You know, you can't use humor. You
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have to be really serious because this
is a really serious um purchase. And
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so we actually took examples from others. We we well, since we were
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a Catholic, a faith based institution, we actually took examples from the Catholic
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Church of times when they've tried to
go after different audiences and used Um more
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humorous means of doing it. We
have a really terrific example of that in
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our own backyard here in Minneapolis that
we were able to show people, as
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well as other universities that had broken
through by using Um, you know,
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just really fun different ways of talking
about it. So and that way we
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tried to build the case for why
it was Um that we needed to work
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differently and then how we were going
to work differently, and then we ran
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through our areas. Um at St
Thomas. Our group is called marketing,
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insights and communications, so it's called
Mike for Short, and I know that's
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a little unusual because usually you're either
marketing or maybe your Mark Holm, but
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we very deliberately um named our group
marketing, insights and communications, because that
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insights part. We didn't want that
to get lost. And again, just
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wanted to make sure that every campaign, every thing that we were doing started
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on an insight, Um, an
empathy building for who we were trying to
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talk to, and so we explained
that as part of the road show as
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well. Why was it so important
that that insights be part of Our Name?
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I think that's great and I think
that the effort of doing that road
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show probably gained you some some street
cred, if you will. I mean
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because you're inviting everyone in for the
conversation. But going back to that,
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one of those comments that you made
just a moment ago is that idea of
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utilizing humor and utilizing some things.
And I've done a lot of work in
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faith based too, and sometimes I
know that there's that that seriousness and and
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and a little bit of that is
uh, you know, there there there
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tends to be some hesitancy on that. Tell me a little bit about one
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of the creatives you came up with, and I think we talked about this
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earlier. That, I think is
brilliant and I think it kind of illustrates
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this this this point for you.
Yeah, so Um at St Thomas Um,
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one of the strategic objectives that we
had was just reminding everybody about our
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academic credentials and making sure of the
academic excellence was something that was very core
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to who we were and what we
what we did. Um, again,
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also a faith based institution, but
we also knew from research that sometimes people
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were nervous about that because they thought
that maybe they'd come to St Thomas and
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we would try and convert them to
Catholicism or something like that. So we
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knew to Um that the faith part
of what we did was important to whole
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person formation and was very attractive to
parents and students when we talked about it
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in terms of character formation in general. Um, whether you were Catholic or
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not, that was appealing and so
we were looking for something that would thread
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the needle there and what we came
up with, our our head creative Pete
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Winnicky, came up with was this
line blessed are the Nerdy, which in
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my mind was just this perfect encapsulation
of the strategy that we were trying to
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employ, where the blessed are the
you know, you get a little bit
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of that nod to the religious faith
based and then, of course, the
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nerdy nods to the academic excellence kind
of like piece of it. So it's
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a little bit of a tongue in
cheek thing and um I loved it when
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I first saw it, but I
was actually nervous about it because I wasn't
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sure where the line was on church
humor in terms of whether we put that
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out into the world. So we
did what we often do at St Thomas
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when we're faced with people who have
differences in point of views. We took
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the risk UM and made it smaller
and decided to put it in market just
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to test, to see how it
would react. I mean, and by
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smaller I mean not splashing it on
a big TV campaign right out of the
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gates, but we tried it in
a digital campaign actually that we were we
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had just lowered our summer tuition by
fifty percent. It was like right up,
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you know, I got there in
the fall and then we had decided
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that we were going to discount summer
tuition by but in order to do that
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effectively, we then needed to of
course, double the amount of credits that
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people were taking in order to be
able to break through. And it was
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one of the first big assignments that
the provost had given to me, you
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know, as part of our new
marketing department. And at first we tried
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to have we had the three in
the tree ads, you know, with
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the kids laying on the grass like
kind of with fifty percent off summer tuition,
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and we did it digitally and the
click through rates were actually below um
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the average of the higher ed norm. So like okay, this isn't working.
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Um. So then we played around
with some visuals where we literally took
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one of our students into our studio
and blew her into her face with a
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leaf blower so that her mouth would
blow back and it would look like and
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the headline was faster than you can
say half off, you know, which
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was kind of like another way into
and that actually did a lot better.
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That actually doubled our click through rates
when we actually ran that, but we
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were still right around the higher ed
norm and again our goal was to beat
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it. So that's when we tried
blessed or the Nerty was our major headline,
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with the you know, fift off
right underneath that, and that thing
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did five times better than what our
original ad had done. So we kind
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of tested our way into it and
then once we saw the success of that
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and how appealing that was, then
we started using it as a key a
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key line for us. I will
say this, though, it's not without
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its detractors. I mean we definitely, we definitely had one parent call in
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and be like, Oh, dare
you call my kid nerdy? My Kid
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does not wanted to referred to as
a NERD, you know. So,
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uh, we definitely had that.
But, um, but obviously that was
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few and far between and, as
I like to always say, and as
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we explained to the campus in the
road show, at the end of the
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day what we're trying to do is
we're trying to be remarkable. And if
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you unpack that word remarkable, it's
worthy of remark. And why I definitely
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don't believe that all PR is good
pr I mean bad PR is bad pr
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so you don't want that. But
if you're turning out things that nobody wants
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to talk about, whether good or
bad, you're gonna land in that Vanilla
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land and that's not where we want
to be. So, Um, we
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want to be remarkable, hopefully more
positives than negatives, and the blessed are
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the nerdy line gave us the opportunity
to do that and really break through.
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That's great. I love that line
and I love the fact that you know
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that that the whole comment there was
remarkable. You're right, I mean giving
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people to something to talk about actually
in today's segmented world, our culture.
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I mean, you know, there's
a you know, we thought it was
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hard when it was, you know, fifteen cable channels and all the other
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things, but I mean there's just
unlimited options that people have for their attention
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today, and so I think that's
great. So thank you. That's awesome.
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Yeah, no, I'll tell you
just an example. This is from
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I think it was from Lale is
Chicago. I'll give up credit to other
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institutions. Um, one of my
very favorite bus transit signs was Um.
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was was from them and it had
a big headline that said we want you
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and then right underneath that it said
now go away and you're like what and
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when you went in to read the
little small print, it was about their
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study abroad program. You know so, and I thought that was so clever
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because rather than most everybody else is
like sent of our kids study abroad or
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whatever. You know the you know
the status, but the way they did
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it, we want you, now
go away, caused you to invite you
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in. So it's important. So, Kim, if you would, can
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you share with US marketing principles,
marketing principles that translate across industries and,
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in your opinion, ones that do
not? Yeah, I mean I definitely
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think there's a lot of marketing principles
that translate. Um, starting with the
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objective in mind, starting with Um, understanding your audience, starting with an
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understanding of what causes your audience to
move Um as one of our my vp
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of consumer insights, used to always
say, what do you want the humans
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to do? That used to be
her phrase, and so answering that question
388
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is one that I think you need
to do no matter what industry you find
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yourself in. But one of the
biggest differences between say like Um, well,
390
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to say like just use a brand
like cheerios, versus, say,
391
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like, marketing something like St Thomas. When I was over on the food
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side of the business, you know, we were always looking for that one
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thing that we could say for our
product that nobody else could say about their
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products, so that you know,
single point of differentiation, if you will,
395
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Um, that you were always trying
to get across Um. And when
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I came to St Thomas, I
was looking for that and realizing that Um
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some there. With what is it
four thousand, five thousand colleges and universities
398
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across the United States. I mean
how difficult is it to find one thing
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that only you can say? And
so I came to evolve that thinking too.
400
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It's not the one thing, but
there is a collection of things that
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nobody else can say. So now
I think of it as almost like a
402
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cocktail. So we have a unique
cocktail that no one else has this same
403
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connection, and so that's Um,
it's still the point of trying to be
404
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differentiated, but it's a little bit
different in the way in which you go
405
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about it. I also think that
from higher ed it's really important as you
406
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think about that differentiation. So it's
not only about, like, you know,
407
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your your proof points and your cocktail
at proof points, but it's also
408
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about the culture of your institution and
then it's about the experience that people have
409
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when they come there. So that
whole customer experience part and those three things
410
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kind of coming together are really what
creates differentiation within Higher Ed, which is
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00:26:53.359 --> 00:26:57.200
a little different because not everybody has
to think that deeply all the way through
412
00:26:57.640 --> 00:27:00.240
to that Um when they're selling a
product. But I think in higher ed
413
00:27:00.279 --> 00:27:03.559
it's important to do that. Yeah, I think you're right. I think
414
00:27:03.599 --> 00:27:07.599
when we interviewed Um Brian Kenney,
Chief Marketing Officer at Harvard Business School,
415
00:27:07.039 --> 00:27:10.480
he made a comment. You know, he had been he didn't been incorporate
416
00:27:10.519 --> 00:27:11.960
before higher ed and he was like, you know, I really think that
417
00:27:12.039 --> 00:27:15.319
higher Ed is one of the most
difficult things to market. He said,
418
00:27:15.319 --> 00:27:22.200
your your audiences are so much broader, the different types of products and services
419
00:27:22.240 --> 00:27:26.000
that you're offering, that everything there's
there's variables that just kind of go on
420
00:27:26.039 --> 00:27:30.160
top of variables, and so I
think that's that's really Um interesting. But
421
00:27:30.240 --> 00:27:33.599
I think even the buying process,
I mean it's it's one thing for you
422
00:27:33.599 --> 00:27:38.319
know, the historical you know awareness
and intent and all all the the typical
423
00:27:38.400 --> 00:27:41.920
funnel that you would have in a
marketing funnel, but you know, an
424
00:27:41.039 --> 00:27:45.079
enrollment funnel, you have that in
addition to all the steps that they have
425
00:27:45.160 --> 00:27:48.920
to take to actually go from an
inquiry all the way to matriculated student.
426
00:27:49.000 --> 00:27:52.559
And so I'm sure that that's part
of the challenge that that you found.
427
00:27:52.640 --> 00:27:56.920
Two is is just being able to
see the different, um, different elements
428
00:27:56.920 --> 00:28:00.440
that maybe make higher at a little
bit different. Yeah, Oh, for
429
00:28:00.519 --> 00:28:03.359
sure. I mean it's like,
you know, not that three dollar of
430
00:28:03.440 --> 00:28:07.920
three dollar purchase of a, you
know, a bag of snack mix isn't
431
00:28:08.240 --> 00:28:14.240
isn't significant, because I'm not saying
that any outlay of cash is never inconsequential,
432
00:28:14.319 --> 00:28:18.640
obviously for somebody, but it just
takes a different Um, perhaps mental
433
00:28:18.799 --> 00:28:22.000
set of Um questions that you have
to go through. If you're only going
434
00:28:22.079 --> 00:28:23.799
to spend three dollars, you could
be like, I'm gonna spend this and
435
00:28:23.799 --> 00:28:26.880
if it doesn't work, it doesn't
work. But you know you're not going
436
00:28:26.920 --> 00:28:30.319
to lay out the cash, you
know, for a higher Ed Education Um
437
00:28:30.640 --> 00:28:33.640
and and there's the impact of that
not working out is so much higher,
438
00:28:33.720 --> 00:28:40.400
so that that Um, the funnel
then becomes so much longer because people are
439
00:28:40.400 --> 00:28:44.640
trying to make the right decision as
they go through it. So really spending
440
00:28:44.680 --> 00:28:48.559
time thinking about the awareness piece of
it and are you drawing enough leads into
441
00:28:48.559 --> 00:28:51.000
are there? Are there enough folks
that are aware of you that you're getting
442
00:28:51.359 --> 00:28:56.000
enough into your funnel? And then
how do you help folks through that consideration
443
00:28:56.119 --> 00:29:00.119
phase where you're trying to give them
their information that they're looking for that's going
444
00:29:00.160 --> 00:29:03.119
to help you get onto that short
list of schools that they're actually gonna apply
445
00:29:03.200 --> 00:29:07.599
to? Then all the way through
to okay, now they've been admitted,
446
00:29:07.759 --> 00:29:10.759
how do you get them all the
way through to committing to you? That's
447
00:29:10.839 --> 00:29:15.599
just a much longer process Um than
what I was used to, but a
448
00:29:15.720 --> 00:29:18.759
very important process and I think it's
important to really kind of understand what Um
449
00:29:18.839 --> 00:29:22.920
and we looked at it from both
the student and the prospective student and the
450
00:29:22.960 --> 00:29:29.000
parent perspective just to make sure we're
understanding like the emotions, the information needs,
451
00:29:29.039 --> 00:29:30.279
all of that, you know,
kind of like all the way through,
452
00:29:30.519 --> 00:29:33.839
although I think it's also really important
to remember, and Higher Ed as
453
00:29:33.880 --> 00:29:38.160
well, that there's a lot of
impacts on that commitment decision and a lot
454
00:29:38.240 --> 00:29:42.079
of those levers are outside of the
control of marketing. You know, we
455
00:29:42.200 --> 00:29:45.559
used to talk about the four PS
um. You know, you think about
456
00:29:45.599 --> 00:29:49.480
the product p you know that's not
something that marketing is really, you know,
457
00:29:49.960 --> 00:29:53.559
responsible for. That's that academic experience, that's the student experience, kind
458
00:29:53.559 --> 00:29:56.640
of like once you're there. And
the other big P is price, right,
459
00:29:56.880 --> 00:30:00.000
Um, you know that is actually
one of the biggest Um can be
460
00:30:00.079 --> 00:30:04.119
one of the biggest determinants and how
much money your institution is willing to invest
461
00:30:04.119 --> 00:30:10.000
in financial aid as an example.
So Um, as goes though those decisions,
462
00:30:10.119 --> 00:30:14.440
often as goes your enrollment numbers,
and sometimes it's easy for people to
463
00:30:14.480 --> 00:30:17.920
just poke over at marketing and be
like hey, if the enrollment number is
464
00:30:17.960 --> 00:30:22.319
down, you know it's because marketers
didn't do their job when maybe also you
465
00:30:22.359 --> 00:30:26.000
cut five million dollars out of the
financial aid budget or something else that's bigger.
466
00:30:26.319 --> 00:30:27.480
So what I was always reminding it
it's like, well, you don't
467
00:30:27.519 --> 00:30:30.599
know what the opportunity costs of not
having that marketing would have been, you
468
00:30:30.640 --> 00:30:33.160
know, like in terms of like
how far down that but it is.
469
00:30:33.200 --> 00:30:37.680
That's where again, people's like not
understanding, Um, that marketing doesn't own
470
00:30:37.720 --> 00:30:41.880
all of it, and I do
think marketing place a really important role in
471
00:30:41.960 --> 00:30:45.200
shaping the narrative and the perception of
an institution. So it definitely helps there.
472
00:30:45.200 --> 00:30:48.400
But I just think it's important for
everyone to remember that there's other levers
473
00:30:48.440 --> 00:30:52.720
to that are very important and they
all have to kind of be working in
474
00:30:52.720 --> 00:30:56.680
the same direction for you to have
ultimate success. Right, Kimbeth, you
475
00:30:56.759 --> 00:31:00.440
would is there a piece of advice
that you could give our list snerves?
476
00:31:03.440 --> 00:31:08.720
Um? Well, one piece of
advice that I would have is about learning
477
00:31:08.799 --> 00:31:15.119
to embrace the constraints that you have, um, because sometimes I think it's
478
00:31:15.160 --> 00:31:18.519
really easy to say, well,
I I want to do this, but
479
00:31:18.559 --> 00:31:22.359
I can't do that because of x, Y and Z reason, and I'm
480
00:31:22.400 --> 00:31:29.599
a firm believer that creativity is unlocked
in the space in between your ambition and
481
00:31:29.680 --> 00:31:33.039
your resources. And so when your
resources are high and you're I'm sorry,
482
00:31:33.079 --> 00:31:37.680
your ambition is high and your resources
are lower, in that space is where
483
00:31:37.720 --> 00:31:42.160
creativity unlocked. If your ambition and
your resources are right around the same level
484
00:31:42.240 --> 00:31:45.880
or if your resources worse, outstrip
your ambition, it's going to kill your
485
00:31:45.880 --> 00:31:51.440
creativity. So, Um, I
think that leaning in and embracing constraints is
486
00:31:51.480 --> 00:31:55.519
definitely something that people could do immediately. and Um, one of the best
487
00:31:55.559 --> 00:31:57.640
ted talks that I feel like I
ever saw was a talk called embrace the
488
00:31:57.720 --> 00:32:00.680
shake. Um, it's only about
a ten minute talk, which is another
489
00:32:00.680 --> 00:32:02.920
reason why it's so great. It's
one of the short ones, but it's
490
00:32:02.960 --> 00:32:07.799
all about an artist who did a
certain type of work and then was unable
491
00:32:07.839 --> 00:32:09.720
to do that certain kind of work
again and had to pivot. Um,
492
00:32:09.799 --> 00:32:14.400
and I've and and it's all about
what he learned that, once he embraced
493
00:32:14.839 --> 00:32:19.200
the constraints, it unlocked creativity for
him, and I feel like that's something
494
00:32:19.240 --> 00:32:22.079
that we as marketers can definitely also
benefit from as well. I mean I
495
00:32:22.119 --> 00:32:27.839
went from like Oh Gosh, marketing
budgets with many Zeros after them. In
496
00:32:27.880 --> 00:32:30.640
my general mills world, too much
fewer Zeros, you know, in my
497
00:32:30.759 --> 00:32:35.480
higher ed world. And yet,
Um, I don't know, good ideas
498
00:32:35.680 --> 00:32:37.880
get funded and if you just put
your mind to it, there's there's always
499
00:32:37.920 --> 00:32:42.079
ways to kind of get out there, and I think that that is just
500
00:32:42.119 --> 00:32:45.079
a piece of advice that I would
give to anybody. Just embrace your embrace
501
00:32:45.200 --> 00:32:46.920
the shake, as the Ted talk
says, or embrace your constraints, because
502
00:32:47.079 --> 00:32:51.920
you'll be better off for it.
Kim, thank you very much for your
503
00:32:51.960 --> 00:32:55.880
time, for your wisdom and the
interesting way you convey your ideas. It's
504
00:32:55.920 --> 00:33:00.200
been a pleasure to speak with you
today. Thank you. I've enjoyed being
505
00:33:00.200 --> 00:33:04.079
on here. I really appreciate your
invitation. If someone would like to reach
506
00:33:04.119 --> 00:33:06.960
out and contact you, what would
be the best way for them to do
507
00:33:07.000 --> 00:33:10.160
so? Um, best way is
through Linkedin. That is my favorite social
508
00:33:10.160 --> 00:33:14.559
platform, and so I'm always happy
to have people reach out and say that
509
00:33:14.599 --> 00:33:17.839
they heard the podcast and I can
accept them and we can go from there.
510
00:33:20.000 --> 00:33:22.319
You can bart. Would you have
any final thoughts that you would like
511
00:33:22.359 --> 00:33:25.519
to share before we end the episode? Yeah, this was just such a
512
00:33:25.519 --> 00:33:29.599
great episode and I would encourage you
to rewind and listen to some of this
513
00:33:29.720 --> 00:33:31.000
again, but I just want to
point out a couple of things that can
514
00:33:31.000 --> 00:33:36.000
had mentioned that I think are really
applicable for anyone at any size school.
515
00:33:36.559 --> 00:33:38.519
Um. Keep in mind that,
you know, the job of marketing and
516
00:33:38.799 --> 00:33:42.400
I think that I think some of
the illustrations that Kim use would be a
517
00:33:42.400 --> 00:33:45.960
great way for you to communicate to
others in your school is to put a
518
00:33:45.960 --> 00:33:49.359
spotlight. You know, it's it's
it's amplifying the good things that are going
519
00:33:49.400 --> 00:33:52.279
on, and Kim used that example
as as an example of, you know,
520
00:33:52.279 --> 00:33:57.400
some of the challenges that she was
receiving on campus about marketing maybe being
521
00:33:57.440 --> 00:34:00.680
unethical or or or less than what
we all know it is, but,
522
00:34:00.759 --> 00:34:05.000
you know, just being help,
helping people understand that we're putting the spotlight
523
00:34:05.039 --> 00:34:07.280
on, on the stories that need
to be told. That will help people
524
00:34:07.360 --> 00:34:10.519
make the decisions that they need to
be making. And I think that also
525
00:34:10.599 --> 00:34:14.519
just the idea that I really liked, the idea of the way that Uh
526
00:34:14.840 --> 00:34:19.440
University of St Thomas, Minnesota,
spent some time testing blessed are the nerdy
527
00:34:19.960 --> 00:34:22.519
Um. I thought that was a
really good way of of kind of looking
528
00:34:22.599 --> 00:34:25.239
at that start with a digital campaign
expand that out. I thought that was
529
00:34:25.280 --> 00:34:29.960
really wise. I think as marketers
we have a responsibility to use data in
530
00:34:30.000 --> 00:34:31.800
our decision making and I think that
that was a really good way to start
531
00:34:31.840 --> 00:34:36.119
that. And I really liked the
comment that she made about being remarkable,
532
00:34:36.679 --> 00:34:40.280
the idea of doing something that's going
to have people remember you and and have
533
00:34:40.360 --> 00:34:45.320
people talk about you. Um and
many times remarkable can, as she pointed
534
00:34:45.320 --> 00:34:47.599
out, can be good or bad. Um often if we do something remarkable,
535
00:34:47.599 --> 00:34:51.440
that we get out of that Vanilla
area, we can have something that's
536
00:34:51.440 --> 00:34:53.920
a little bit more worthy of discussion. I think we can all think of,
537
00:34:54.119 --> 00:34:58.400
you know, products or services or
schools that we see doing that that
538
00:34:58.400 --> 00:35:00.400
are getting the conversation, that things
are happening, that things are, you
539
00:35:00.440 --> 00:35:02.480
know, being talked about, and
I think that's a really good way of
540
00:35:02.480 --> 00:35:06.320
doing that. And then I think
also, just finally, that last comment
541
00:35:06.360 --> 00:35:09.039
that she made with with the you
know, the difference between ambition and resources.
542
00:35:09.079 --> 00:35:13.000
And that's where creativity is. I
remember, Um, you know,
543
00:35:13.159 --> 00:35:15.960
consulting, you know consulting in one
of my designers several years ago and they
544
00:35:15.960 --> 00:35:20.880
were so frustrated that one of the
projects came back and that the client,
545
00:35:20.960 --> 00:35:23.199
you know, put all these constrictions
on it and they wanted all these challenges
546
00:35:23.199 --> 00:35:25.800
and he was ready to throw in
the Talleng to say I'm done, and
547
00:35:25.840 --> 00:35:30.079
I said, really, this is
where this is where your opportunity is,
548
00:35:30.079 --> 00:35:31.760
is to do something totally different.
Um, you know, because now you
549
00:35:31.840 --> 00:35:36.039
have boundaries and you have to work
within those boundaries. And I think,
550
00:35:36.159 --> 00:35:38.320
you know, I saw him bloom
into something that I had never seen.
551
00:35:38.480 --> 00:35:42.599
His creativity fired up, and I
think that's exactly what Kim was saying,
552
00:35:42.599 --> 00:35:46.039
and so I really really appreciate that
comment and Kim, it's been such a
553
00:35:46.039 --> 00:35:51.159
pleasure to have you on the show. You're welcome back anytime. Oh,
554
00:35:51.199 --> 00:35:55.400
thank you, I appreciate it.
The hired marketing podcast is sponsored by Kaylor
555
00:35:55.519 --> 00:36:02.239
solutions and education marketing and branding agency
and by thing patented, a marketing execution
556
00:36:02.280 --> 00:36:10.320
company combining print and technology for personalization
for Higher Ed Solutions. On behalf of
557
00:36:10.360 --> 00:36:15.400
my co host Bart Taylor, I'm
troy singer. Thank you for joining us.
558
00:36:21.920 --> 00:36:24.559
You've been listening to the Higher Ed
Marketer. To ensure that you never
559
00:36:24.599 --> 00:36:30.280
miss an episode, subscribe to the
show in your favorite podcast player. If
560
00:36:30.280 --> 00:36:32.880
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561
00:36:32.920 --> 00:36:37.880
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562
00:36:37.599 --> 00:36:38.440
Until next time,