collegewebeditor.com

Social networking content management: the next big thing to recruit and retain college students?

It might be.

And, you’d better keep reading if you want to find out what Social Networking Content Management is all about.

You already know that social networking websites LiveJournal, Xanga and MySpace have become central in the life of our main target audience: prospective and current students. They spend hours and hours on these sites connecting with friends who share the same interests and exchanging information about what matters to them.

So, when it’s time to make a decision about their education, high school seniors keep listening to this wide technology-powered network for information about colleges and advice on how to fit in.

“Millennials are concerned with fitting in. The only way they know whether they fit in is if they know the people they are going to be joining. Any two-way communication between prospects and current students facilitates their knowing,” explained Dimitri Glazkov from Gandalf Inc. and Robertson-Boyd from Capital University in the presentation titled “Social Content Management,” made last week at the Stamats conference in San Francisco and recapped on Fuzzy Content, a wiki created for this occasion.

Universities and colleges have started to respond to this need by launching their own student blogs to offer some real insights about the whole college experience at their universities. Student blogs sponsored and promoted by admission offices have been cast as the best way to provide prospective students with information from the only expert sources they will trust – current students – while allowing the employers of these bloggers to monitor easily what’s said about their institution.

Even if these controlled student blogs offer an interesting alternative, they will probably never replace the social networking websites. This is why admission offices should work on a larger and more comprehensive “Social Content Management” strategy.

Dimitri and Bob made the following suggestions to delve into this new practice of “Social Content Management:”

Personally, I think it might be a good idea to send a few student ambassadors on these social networking websites with the mission to answer questions and point prospective students in the right direction when they feel lost. Some universities have already started to pay (with cash or tech-toys) students to post on their admission blogs. So, why not hire a few current students to browse the social networking websites and help prospective students to find out if they can fit in?

What do you think?