Do you Twitter?
I do (feel free to follow me @karinejoly) as more and more people in the web and PR higher ed world.
But, what about our prospective students or their parents? Do they?
We’ll probably find out in a few months by measuring the success of an initiative Colgate University has just launched, as Charlie Melichar, VP for PR & Communications, mentioned in an exchange via Facebook (and when I get contacted by a university VP via Facebook, it’s probably a good indicator that he will be a good source of interesting new initiatives):
We just launched a twitter stream on our homepage. We have a first-year student posting pretty consistently — though it’s just day one
When I checked it out yesterday around 6PM, Ajay Chahar (aka @colgateunvrsty), who is as far as I know one of the first official student Twitterers (please, correct me if I’m wrong), had only 10 followers.
The experiment was introduced to the world in a news story about this special student published Wednesday on Colgate website:
Now, after choosing Colgate, he’s ready to share his experiences in a real-time way so high school students and others can get a sense of what it is like to be a student here, a place he said offers the “complete college experience.”
Chahar is using a service called Twitter to provide brief regular updates on what he is doing. Pretty much anything and everything is worth a new “tweet,” and anyone can read these slices of college life.
What’s really interesting (and should I say “bold”) is that Colgate chose to include the Twitter updates on its homepage – at the bottom left though, not front and center:
The stream doesn’t link directly from the homepage to the Twitter account though, but to a page where contextual information is provided along with the latest updates.
I’m not sure Twitter is the tool to communicate with students (although I do find it very useful in my daily job), but this experiment might prove me wrong. I’ll keep an eye on it and will let you know.
In the meantime, I’d love to hear your opinion about this unconventional initiative.
Do you think it’s going to work?