10 years from the basement to the 3rd floor
Congratulations, we’ve made it!
You’ve seen new staff members join your team and your digital budget increased over the past few years. Higher education digital professionals are now getting a seat at the decision table, several have move into director positions and a few have even “graduated” into institutional leadership positions at the vice-president level.
So, how did the “web person” whose office was in the basement – next to the web server room – 10 years ago made it to the corner office on the third floor?
It wasn’t a revolution, but a necessary evolution enabled by social media, mobile devices and… the Millenials, the first digital natives.
Show the analytics data or it didn’t happen
Yet, with increased responsibility comes increased accountability.
As the profession matures, playful experimentation alone doesn’t cut it anymore.
Asking for forgiveness instead of permission was a very good strategy to get out of the basement, but, as many of you know, it won’t keep you on the 3rd floor – too much light up there.
For this, you need to adopt a systematic approach to performance measurement – not just for bragging rights, although nothing wrong with the added bonus ;-) – but to inform decisions, course-correct underperforming strategies and predict probable outcomes of future campaigns.
Today, learning how to use analytics data to get permission, absolution and ultimately a promotion is THE winning strategy for higher ed digital pros like you.
Different stages toward digital analytics mastery
Whether or not you are a number person, you can learn to make digital analytics your friend to showcase progress, demonstrate value, highlight issues, forecast probable outcomes and ultimately open doors.
1) You’ve just heard about Google Analytics or you feel overwhelmed by all the Google Analytics reports
Don’t worry: everybody started at this point :-)
More than 200 of your colleagues working in higher education have learned how to navigate Google Analytics and put it to work to measure what matters to their institutions by taking our 4-week online course on Web Analytics for Higher Ed since September 2011. The course is constantly updated by its instructor Joshua Dodson, Digital Marketing Strategy and Optimization Manager at Eastern Kentucky Unviersity. If you want to find out why so many of your colleagues took this course, check out what they say about their learning experience.
2) You want to go beyond the basics in analytics and widen your skill set
3) You are a seasoned analytics professional working in higher education and you want to keep learning for your institution — and your career:
Learn with your team!
If your team needs its yearly dose of digital analytics goodness, get an on-demand pass for the 2015 Higher Ed Analytics Conference. It is a must-see to find out about the latest trends in higher ed digital analytics as it features many early adopters.