Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Abe Gruber
Author Note
This thesis was completed by the author as a M.B.A. student of Hawaii Pacific University in
Honolulu, HI in late 2009. Correspondence regarding this study should be addressed to Abe
Gruber at abe_gruber@bloomfield.edu.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 2
Abstract
This paper explores the impact of social media (social networking, blogs, etc.) on university
enrollment and the disconnect that exists between the social media-related expectations of
prospective students and the actions of university admission offices. Through the national
distribution of two surveys sampling 200 prospective freshman students and 70 admission
offices, this study gauges the usage of social media and its impact on enrollment behavior
between these two populations. The research presents that social media has a significantly
positive influence on applications and enrollment, and Facebook is the most influential among all
social media technologies. Additionally, there exists a sizeable disconnect between the
expectations of prospective students and how admission offices are utilizing social media with
Looking at the social media preferences of prospective freshmen and current/future usage by
admission offices, universities are out of touch with social media and their prospective students.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 3
TABLE OF CONTENTS
PAGE
INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………………... 4
Problem Statement……………………………………………………………….. 7
LITERATURE REVIEW………………………………………………………………… 9
The State of Social Networking………………………………………………….. 9
What is Social Networking?…………………………………………………….. 10
Which Social Network is On Top?...................................................................................12
How Does Social Media Fit into the Recruiting Playbook?..........................................14
How Are Admission Offices Embracing Social Media?...................................................15
METHODOLOGY……………………………………………………………………….. 18
Research Design………………………………………………………………….. 21
Data Collection Procedures………………………………………………………. 22
Method of Analysis………………………………………………………………. 24
Assumptions and Limitations…………………………………………………….. 31
FINDINGS………………………………………………………………………………... 32
Initial Profiling of Social Media Usage…………………………………………... 33
Impact of Social Media on University Applications & Enrollment……………… 47
Facebook Communications and Interactions……………………………………... 61
Other General Trends…………………………………………………………….. 67
Meanings of Findings…………………………………………………………….. 84
CONCLUSION…………………………………………………………………………… 88
Summary………………………………………………………………………….. 88
Practical Applications & Recommendations……………………………………... 89
Recommendation for Further Research…………………………………………... 91
WORKS CITED………………………………………………………………………….. 92
APPENDIXES
A. PROSPECTIVE STUDENT SURVEY………………………………………………. 97
B. ADMISSION OFFICE SURVEY……………………………………………………. 104
C. PROSPECTIVE STUDENT SURVEY – RAW RESULTS…………………………. 111
D. ADMISSION OFFICE SURVEY – RAW RESULTS………………………………. 123
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 4
Chapter I
Introduction
Figure 1. “Finally starting my thesis on Electronic Comm./Social Media in Higher Ed. Admission” Facebook status
Figure 2. “So, I'm Writing my Thesis About Facebook, Twitter, and Stuff” comments in response to Facebook note
Two quick posts on Facebook, and within a short few hours, one status update and Facebook
note receives over 20 direct and meaningful replies from people in three countries, and eight
In the late 1990’s, the rise of the internet gave way to the birth of email – a fundamental
paradigm shift in the way people connected with each other. With a few clicks of a mouse,
messages with recipes, memos, and fishing pictures were instantly sent around the globe to
friends, coworkers, and family alike. Sending an email became the equivalent of calling a long
lost friend once a week. Conversations were continued on a semi-frequent basis, and the
messages themselves were essentially comprehensive updates on the happenings of that week.
For years, email was the status quo for most, if not all, electronic communication standards.
However, in 2005, the Web 2.0 revolution gave rise to a new ideology of what the internet was
all about. The internet wasn’t just about websites and email anymore. The focus shifted to such
ideas as participation, usability, design, and accessibility, and web technologies shifted focus to
RSS, CSS, AJAX, and an overall convergence of these technologies within single platforms
(O’Reilly, 2005).
The Web 2.0 revolution led to the birth of social networking and blogging – two trends that
truly hit home with people all across the internet. Social networks and blogs gave users instant
access to updates on the happenings in their friends’ lives. For example, Twitter, a popular
micro-blogging site, asks users, “What are you doing” and limits responses to only 160
characters (Razzell, 2008). As soon as a user submitted their answer, it was propagated across
Unlike email, where communicating was semi-frequent and drawn out, social media is short
and instantaneous letting people share their lives online 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Now, in 2009, social networks have officially surpassed email in global usage and these
networks are growing in popularity twice as fast as search engines and web portals (Social
Networks & Blogs Now 4th Most Popular Online Activity, Ahead of Personal Email, 2009).
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 7
In today’s global economy, many industries are attempting to capitalize on the power of
social media, but there is one industry in particular that is best suited to adapt to these new
mediums – institutions of higher education. As social networking has become one of the most
are beginning to utilize these technologies to communicate with current and prospective students.
As of January 2009, 40% of Facebook’s US population were of age 18-24 (Corbett, 2009). In
addition to being a popular social network among current undergraduate students, there are more
than 5 million Facebook users currently in high school – the primary target audience of
As most prospective undergraduate students are fully utilizing social media platforms, it is
best connect and communicate with prospective students through these mediums. With an
accurate understanding of the role these technologies can play throughout the admission process,
universities can tailor their recruitment strategies to utilize social media technologies to increase
Problem Statement
This study attempts to answer the question, “does a university’s use of social media positively
impact enrollment”. The study will analyze the role of social media in the realm of higher
education admissions and determine which forms of social media are the most effective in
building successful and higher yielding relationships between students and institutions of higher
education.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 8
As an added component, the author will be making this study interactive with members of his
own social networks. As the author discovers new articles, information and insight regarding the
topic, he will post it to his various social media outlets with the intent of soliciting feedback
from others he is connected with (currently over 1,000 people). The author will include valuable
feedback where appropriate with the intent of demonstrating the power and impact of social
media.
To assess the impact of social media on university enrollment, there are two primary areas of
inquiry of which this researcher chose to investigate and answer through the means of relevant,
1. Which forms of social media are the most effective in increasing university applications
and enrollments?
expectations of prospective students differ with the actions of universities with respect to
Often, it is common for universities to be far behind mainstream businesses and organizations
when it comes to their level of technology usage – both in the classroom as well as in their
recruitment and marketing. When schools have limited money and resources, technology is often
the last area to receive funding, and universities should not be expected to be on top of social
Therefore, it should be anticipated that universities do not have an adequate grasp on the
concept and usage of social media. With this being said, this researcher believes that there is a
natural disconnect between admission offices and prospective students in the social media realm.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 9
In addition to the “experience gap” between the 16-24 age demographic and institutions of
higher learning, there also exists a difference in motive of usage. Whereas 16-24 year olds are on
sites like Facebook and YouTube to keep in touch with friends and share their daily lives,
university admission departments are slowly migrating to these sites with the intent of increasing
With this inherent inexperience with social media and disconnect with their primary audience, it
benefits university admission departments to strive to better understand these mediums and learn
which ones are the most effective in recruiting students. Additionally, as universities study these
mediums and properly ascertain their effectiveness, they can incorporate successful technologies into
their communication plan and adjust their strategy of how to best reach out and recruit students while
Chapter II
Literature Review
In February of 2009, the Nielsen Global Corporation released a new study finding that for the
first time in the history of the Internet, the average time spent on social networks exceeded that
of e-mail (Nielsen, 2009). Furthermore, from 2007 to 2008, social networking sites (SNS) grew
in membership at a rate twice that of e-mail and almost triple of both search sites and general
Time spent on social network and blogging sites growing at over [three times] the rate of
overall Internet growth. This increase in popularity is only half [of] the story when it comes to
the social networking phenomenon – the time people spend on these networks is also increasing
dramatically. The total amount spent online globally increased by 18% between December
2007 and December 2008. In the same period, however, the amount of time spent on [social
The Educause Center for Applied Research (ECAR) Study of Undergraduate Students
within a bounded system, 2) articulate a list of other users with whom they share a
connection, and 3) view and traverse their list of connections and those made by others within
However, surveying individual users of social networking sites revealed varying opinions on
this matter. Shayna Mérçëdês considers these SNSs more than just a way to “articulate a list” of
people whom she shares connections with, but it is also a way to meet new people from around
the world (personal communication via Facebook, June 3, 2009). While most SNSs allow users
to meet new people that are only connected to their network of friends/connections, most modern
SNSs allow users to search for and contact users beyond their extended network of friends. Bob
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 11
Sigall, a professor of marketing with over 30 years of consulting experience calls social
networking “hanging out 'round the cyber water cooler or on the cyber street corner” (personal
communication via Facebook, June 3, 2009). One interviewee took it as far as to define social
networking as follows:
A vortex of narcissistic self-indulgence using past and present friends, lovers, exes and
serving attention spans comprised of pithy one liners such as this (A. De Castro, personal
De Castro’s interpretation may be a bit vivid, but it is not far off from reality as a recent study
by the University of Georgia found that the number of friends and postings by a person on
Facebook was directly correlated to narcissism (Study: Facebook profiles can be used to detect
narcissism, 2008). Across various definitions of social networking, three common themes seem
to be apparent: 1) community among one’s current friends and acquaintances, 2) the ability to
reach out and meet new people not currently in their social or professional circle, and 3) a
technology-based infrastructure to foster the relationships between one’s friends, relatives, and
colleagues.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 12
According to recent statistics, it’s said that one in five Americans still believe that it is the
sun that revolves around the earth (Steward, n.d.), one in five adults around the world are
illiterate (Global Campaign for Education, n.d.), and one in five births in the Indian village of
Kodinhi result in twins (Fox News, 2009). More interestingly, as of November 2008, one in five
of all people on the internet visited Facebook, and traffic to the site grew by 10.8% in the next
month to a whopping 222 million visitors (Arrington, M., 2009). That is more than the
populations of Canada, Spain, Australia, Mexico, and Greece combined (World Atlas of Travel,
n.d.). While MySpace is the currently the number one social networking site in the United
States, Facebook still leads in the social networking arena with a global online reach of 29.9% -
It is no surprise that Facebook continues to lead the pack in social networking based open
recent news and events. Since MySpace was founded in 2003, it has become known for being a
safe-haven of sorts for sexual predators, and from 2007 to early 2009, MySpace has removed the
profiles of over 90,000 sex offenders (Brunswick, M., 2009). While MySpace was reacting to
the outcry of many MySpace users, as well as concerned parents, Stephanie Reitz of Time.com
reported that Facebook took a more preventative stance towards protecting younger users of the
site including: “banning convicted sex offenders from the site, limiting older users' ability to
search online for subscribers under 18 and building a task force seeking ways to better verify
users' ages and identities” (2008). Although, MySpace continues to dominate the US market, all
of the negative press has contributed to MySpace being held back from the global expansion
Facebook is currently seeing. Between December of 2007 and December of 2008, the total time
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 13
spent by users on Facebook grew “by a massive 566% – from 3.1 billion minutes to 20.5 billion”
(Nielsen, 2009).
With respect to Twitter, the micro-blogging site has seen tremendous expansion as their
growth over the last year is five times more than that of Facebook (Kress, 2009). The Twitter
demographic is more geared toward 30-45 who have already graduated from college with no
teenagers in their household (Quantcast, n.d.), and in recent weeks, Twitter, too, has seen their
fair of negative attention as profiles of the presidents of the University of Texas and Georgetown
were found to have been created by imposters (Young, 2009). Studies have also shown that
while Twitter is seeing tremendous growth, 60% of all new Twitter users quit after just one
month – approximately double that of both Facebook and MySpace (Eaton, 2009).
Today, Facebook has naturally become the paramount SNS of the college-age demographic.
This is largely in part to how Facebook was initially designed for college students only –
requiring proof of enrollment via a campus-based “.edu” email address (Arrington, 2005). As
the site took off, the next natural progression was to include high school students as well, and
while MySpace was open to virtually anyone of any age, Facebook built itself around the 16-24
year old demographic of high school and college students. According to CollegeRecruiter.com,
as of January 2009, 83% of college students were actively using Facebook, compared to 65%
using MySpace and 21% using LinkedIn (Rothberg, 2009). However, there have been reports of
even higher saturations of Facebook among undergraduate student bodies across America at
levels of 85%, 94%, and as high as 95 (Arrington, 2005; Ellison, Steinfield, & Lampe, n.d.;
At the very heart of the university recruiting cycle is the admission funnel where schools
attract and receive interest from hundreds to thousands of students for each term and work to
matriculate these inquiries through the admission process and into enrolled students (Deutsch,
n.d.). As Deutsch reports, the admission funnel starts with the pre-funnel: the population of all
people who are potential prospective students. Once a high school student directly expresses
interest in a university, they become an inquiry, and then they can move along the funnel to
become applicants, enrolled students, and finally the freshman class of the next semester. As
students progress through the admission funnel, universities use a variety of recruitment and
marketing techniques to advise students and encourage enrollment including: direct mail
campaigns, campus visits, e-mail & website traffic, high school visits, college fairs, telephone
Today’s prospective student is “far more likely to scroll down a Web page than thumb
through a university view book,” and for several years now, university admission officers have
been relying on the power of the Internet to help make admission decisions for applicants
(Schworm, 2008). With the power of sites like Google and Yahoo! at hand, it is estimated that
over 25% of prospective students are screened using search engines (My College Guide, 2009).
A Kaplan survey of over 300 admission officers showed that 10% had visited applicant profiles
on social networks (Kaplan, 2008), and to add insult to injury, 38% of these social network
While “very few students … [are] actually aware of the academic and professional
networking opportunities that the [social networking] sites provide,” universities are becoming
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 15
more aware than ever and are using more technologies than just search-based websites and
scanning through social networking profiles (Science Daily, 2008). In recent years, university
admission offices have begun to utilize social media in their recruitment strategy beyond just
researching applicants.
One of the only published studies looking at social media in university admission is a
longitudinal study of university admission officials in 2007 and in 2008 by Nora Ganim Barnes,
PhD and Eric Mattson entitled Social Media and College Admissions: The First Longitudinal
Study. The study shows a significant increase in usage of social media technologies from 2007 to
2008 and uncovered that over 60% of admission offices are using social networking – double
that of the 29% found in 2007 (Barnes & Mattson, 2009, p. 3). There was also significant usage
increases with 48% utilizing video blogging – compared to 19% one year ago, 36% utilizing
message boards – formerly 27%, and the usage of wikis jumped threefold from 3% to 10% (p. 4).
In regards to blogs, higher education is actually outpacing Fortune 500 companies 41% to 39%
There is evidence of enthusiasm and eagerness to embrace these new communications tools
but there is also evidence that these powerful tools are not being utilized to their potential.
However, while schools are jumping on the social media bandwagon, there is much room for
improvement. Schools using social media must learn the “rules of engagement” in the online
That is still not to say, that schools are making progress. In 2008, the number of schools not
using any form of social media dropped from 39% down to 15% clearly indicating that schools
are heading in the right direction (Barnes & Mattson, p. 4). While 55% of those surveyed in
2008 indicated that social media is “very important” for their recruiting strategy, of those
respondents not using social media, 40% and 29% plan to use blogging and social media in the
future, respectively.
Admission offices around the country (and around the world) are focusing on Facebook to
help with recruitment. On official Facebook Pages, schools are posting orientation information,
important deadlines, and allowing new students to meet up with one another so they have
friends before they arrive on campus (McRory, 2009). Some admission offices are directly
contacting students through Facebook and reaching out via friend requests and wall posts
(California State University – Northridge, 2009). Some schools are even employing a complete,
across the board offensive utilizing Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and online chats – all at the
Due to social media being very new, and even newer to higher education, many schools are
trying to grasp both the needs of their prospective students as well as understand which social
media strategies to use. Noel-Levitz answers part of this by saying that “as prospective students
seek to break through marketing messages to get to the ‘real’ experience of attending a
university, [social networking] sites provide unique opportunities to present unvarnished views
of student life” (Noel-Levitz, 2007). Therefore, as students engage universities through these
new mediums, they are in search of a more honest viewpoint of the school that they expect from
said mediums. In doing so, prospective students also get to communicate with current students
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 17
to get a true perspective of the university that they would not be able to get from a view book
When designing a social media strategy for higher education admissions, Stamats
recommends building a powerful network founded on user-generated content while giving that
network an identity of its own (McDonald, 2008). By combining this technique with well-
thought out metrics, social media can be leveraged to expand a university’s inquiry pool and
improve conversion rates and yield. Jeff Olson, Executive Director of Research for Kaplan Test
Prep and Admissions, admits that schools are still searching for the right strategy, saying that,
“the social networking frontier is a bit like the Wild West for colleges and universities --
While there has been no direct proof of social networking presenting direct opportunities for
enrollment, social networks still add “another layer of context for prospective students and their
families” (Noel-Levitz, 2007). Integrating social media becomes even more valid these days as
70% of students expect colleges to have some presence in social networking and 50% of students
do not mind being contacted directly through a social network (Reuben, 2009). However, while
email and social media are slowly replacing traditional view books and brochures, some schools
are hesitant to engage social media (Queijo, 2009). Queijo sums it up best saying that, “when it
comes to admissions recruiting, it’s a lot like sorting the laundry: you have to decide among what
to keep, what to toss, what needs cleaning and, most importantly, what still fits.”
As social media is relatively new, scholarly research is hard to find these days. Furthermore,
it is only within the last two years that there has been evidence of social media being used as a
recruitment tool in the realm of higher education. After extensive research into the matter, the
only educational study published is the Barnes/Mattson study. However, this study does not
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 18
investigate the effectiveness of these tools or their impact on yield conversion and enrollment.
The author hopes to address this directly by surveying prospective students and admission
offices directly and uncovering the direct impact of social media upon higher education
admissions.
Chapter 3
Methodology
As university admission offices around the country continue to search for and cultivate their
next incoming class, social media is slowly being adopted as a key component of their
recruitment strategies. It becomes a natural fit for universities as social media outlets are already
a major hub for prospective freshmen, and there are virtually no monetary resources needed to
utilize these new mediums. However, one of the biggest issues facing admission offices’ use of
social media, as well as the focus of the primary research question, is whether universities’
An initial response from this researcher suggests that the usage of social media in higher
education admissions must have some impact, even if marginal or inconsequential, on enrollment
simply by way of being an active component of schools’ recruitment strategies. However, the
utilization of social media in admissions is so new that universities have not yet had the
opportunity to analyze the outcomes or, more specifically, the impact these technologies have
This section follows with two hypotheses: one, suggesting that the students who interact with
universities on social media outlets are more likely to enroll, and two, that there is a disconnect
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 19
between universities and prospective students as to how best to interact with prospective students
via social networking. The research involving these two hypotheses was designed to include a
definition of important terms as used in this study, to detail the data collection procedure for each
survey group, to describe the rationale and method of data analysis, and to conclude with
Research Area #1. Determine if students who interact with university admission offices via
Hypothesis: Students who interact with admission offices using social media are
Research Area #2. Determine if there is a disconnect between university admission offices and
prospective students as to how to best utilize social networking to interact with each other.
actual actions of admission offices with regards to what kind of interaction that takes
Definitions
Social Media. Social media is a fairly new and general term, but it can best be defined as
technologies are quite scalable and allow for interpersonal networking as well as the
interpersonal distribution and sharing of media – both new, traditional, and user-generated. For
the purposes of this study, social media will include the following technologies: social
networking, blogs, podcast, video podcasts, instant messaging, message boards, online group
chat, social bookmarking, video-sharing, and RSS. With regards to social networks, preference
will be given to Facebook as there are statistically more prospective freshman students using that
Prospective Students. The term "prospective students" generally includes all persons
actively seeking admission for an upcoming term at a college or university. Because this
definition can include people of virtually any age or background, it is too general for the
purposes of this study. Thus, this study will only focus on high school seniors inquiring or
applying for university admission for the upcoming fall 2009 semester.
student’s movement from stage to stage of the admission funnel (Deutsch, n.d.) and is a ratio of
the number of students in one stage of the funnel compared to another. Yield, often the most
Disconnect. For the purposes of this study, a disconnect will exist when there is a divide
between the expectations of prospective students and the actions of universities with respect to
the usage and implementation of specific aspects of social networks including, but not limited to
private messages, public messages, and communication of admission decisions and deadlines.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 21
Research Design
This research project was based on two distinct and independent survey groups. The first
group, “Prospective Student Survey,” took a random sample of 200 high school seniors who
have indicated interest in attending a university for the fall 2009 semester to determine if they are
more likely to enroll at universities utilizing social networking and what their expectations of
these universities using social networking were. The second data set, “Admission Office
Survey,” was a random sampling of 70 admission professionals across the United States
inquiring as to their usages of social media technologies and its impact on their recruitment.
The two surveys were very similar to one another with respect to usage and expectations of
usage of varying forms of social media technologies. However, the Admission Office Survey
also included questions pertaining to the integration of social media into their admission
departments/divisions. The Prospective Student Survey was delivered via email and
administered using SurveyMonkey.com, a popular online survey tool, while the Admission
Office Survey was delivered in paper format to admission professionals from around the
country at an annual conference for enrollment management technology (EMT). Both surveys
The two surveys were first analyzed separately to determine trends and usage with regards
social media and then together to investigate the relationship(s) between the two populations,
prospective students and universities. Data was analyzed to determine if there was, in fact, a
positive result from admission offices’ use of social media – does social media help increase
enrollment? Conclusions were then drawn as to the success of social media initiatives in
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 22
recruitment and whether or not a disconnect exists between the expectations of students and the
actions of universities.
The data collection procedure consisted of four steps of each of the two survey groups: (1)
identifying the data collection method used, (2) characterizing the demographics and of the
proposed respondents, (3) describing the sampling procedure used to identify prospective
respondents in each set, and (4) detailing the survey procedure used to collect data. The two
survey groups provided the information to form two data sets to challenge the two
aforementioned hypotheses. This four-step data collection procedure was applied to each survey
1. Type of data collection. A brief, yet thorough, questionnaire of social media habits and
usage was delivered electronically via a hyperlink within e-mails sent to research participants
(see Appendix A). Respondents were intended to be graduating high school seniors actively
seeking admission into a university for the fall 2009 semester. This survey method was used due
to its ease of distribution and the ability to ensure that the questionnaire was administered the
2. Research participants. There were 20 respondents in the sample, 157 of which fully
completed all questions of the survey. While the 43 respondents may not have answered all
questions, their responses to the questions they did answer will be included in the final survey
results. All respondents were pre-qualified as being a graduating high school senior pursuing
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 23
admission for the fall 2009 semester, living in the United States (except Hawai‘i), and 18
years of age or older on the day the survey was distributed. Respondents were identified using
a customer relationship management (CRM) tool by this researcher, who is familiar with the
research target population. Hawaii was excluded from the target group due to a heavy skew in
Hawaii, a random convenience sample was used as all 20,621 prospective students were
emailed the link to the Prospective Student Survey. These prospective students were members
of the university’s admission pool and willingly opted in to receive communications from the
university. From this email blast, 200 prospective students responded – an overall response rate
of 0.97%.
4. Interview procedure for the Prospective Student Survey. The survey instrument used in
and open-ended questions. The survey was administered via a hyperlink embedded in an email
that contained a brief overview of this study and basic instructions on how to access the survey.
1. Type of data collection. A brief, yet thorough, questionnaire of social media habits, very
similar to that of the Prospective Student group, was administered in paper format to admission
of social media technologies. This survey was chosen to be identical in nature to that of the
Prospective Student Survey for purposes of mutual comparison and relation to the study’s
hypotheses.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 24
2. Research participants. There were 70 respondents in the sample, and everyone fully
completed all questions of the survey. All respondents were attendees at an annual conference for
enrollment management technologies and audience members of a discussion panel on social media
usage in university admission. This researcher, who is familiar with recent trends in admission-
related usage of social media, collected all respondent data at the EMT conference.
convenience sample of the session attendees. Two hundred paper surveys were randomly distributed
and instructions were given to the audience detailing how to complete the survey and to ensure that
only one person from each school in attendance completed the survey. Out of all
200 that were distributed, 70 surveys were completed and returned for an overall response rate
of 35%.
4. Interview procedure for the Admission Office Survey. The survey instrument used in this
open-ended questions.
Method of Analysis
The method of data analysis was divided into four primary sections: 1) an initial profiling of
social media usage, 2) the impact of social media on university applications & enrollment, 3) an
in depth look at Facebook communications and interactions, and 4) a study of other general
trends found during the study. For sections one through three, questionnaire responses from each
survey, the Prospective Student Survey and Admission Office Survey, were first individually
analyzed to build a profile of each population to better understand the attitudes and behaviors of
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 25
each group. Second, the responses from each group were directly compared to one another to
determine if any correlation or dissention exists between the two populations. This was a direct
The data was initially sorted using the Survey Monkey online software to prepare initial
reports from each individual survey and generate cross-tabulated results where needed. After the
online tool generated basic reports, Microsoft Excel was used for further investigation and
evaluation of the responses. For part two of the data analysis, Excel was used again to compare
The first six questions inquired as to all of the social media technologies the students
currently used and via which social media technologies, if any, prospective students have used or
wish to use to interact with universities during their college search. This data was used to
establish a profile of the prospective incoming class of 2009 as to which social media
Questions seven through nine were designed to ascertain the impact on these technologies on
the students’ decision to apply and attend their university of choice – thus answer if these
technologies had a positive impact on their matriculation with their respective schools.
Question 10 asked which types of communication students wanted from the universities
that they expressed interest in via Facebook. This was designed to establish a reasonable set of
Questions 11-14 asked what interactions, if any took place between prospective students and
current university students on Facebook. Then, if any interactions did take place, did this result
Question 15 investigated which form of social media was most desirable by students once
they matriculated to an enrolled student to determine any potential social media relationship
Finally, question 16 was an open-ended question asking prospective students for any
Questions one, two, and five were designed to determine which social media technologies were
in use (or will soon be in use) by university admission offices and whether or not the content posted
on these platforms were specifically targeting inquiries, applicants or both. This gave a frame of
reference to compare the technologies in use by schools versus those used by prospective students to
Questions three and four were to ascertain the impact on these technologies on freshman
applications and enrollments and are modeled exactly after questions seven and nine in the
Prospective Student Survey. Thus, the two subsets could be analyzed to determine if the trends
Question six, a direct reciprocate of question 10 from the Prospective Student Survey asked
which types of communication admission offices utilize via Facebook. When compared directly
against the responses from prospective students, it was the hope of this researcher to determine if
Questions 7-10 inquired as to the place social media has within university admission offices
– if any at all. A detailed analysis of these responses would reveal the level of involvement
social media has within admission departments, whether schools have social media strategies,
and whether or not schools have the ability to track/measure ROI from social media initiatives.
Finally, question 11 is an open-ended question asking respondents for any additional thoughts
The purpose of collecting responses from both students and admission offices was to 1)
compare responses of questions regarding the impact of various social media technologies on
university applications and enrollments to establish consistency between the two groups, 2)
students to determine if a disconnect exists, and 3) uncover any other general trends among the
two populations.
1. Impact of social media on applications and enrollment. First, questions seven & nine in
the Prospective Student Survey and questions 3-4 in the Admission Office Survey were analyzed
HA0 = The usage of social media by universities has a negative impact on the number of
The null hypothesis purported that both the university outreach via social media had a
negative impact on the likelihood of prospective students to apply and enroll. This would be
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 28
represented by majority responses of “negative impact” in both the prospective student and
admission office surveys. The purpose for testing these two data sets, then, was to reject the null
hypothesis and to acknowledge its alternate hypothesis (HA1); i.e., that social media has a
HA1 = Students who interact with universities using social media are more likely to apply
The null hypothesis was tested via a general analysis of trends within the Prospective Student
and Admission Office Surveys, respectfully. For the analysis, the total “negative” responses
were subtracted from the “positive” responses (ignoring “no impact” responses) to create a
score of impact. Arbitrary “levels” were established to better characterize the results whether
they were found to have either positive or negative influence; 0% indicated “no influence”,
Additionally, there was a need to weigh the positive influence levels of each form of social
media against its actual usage among the surveyed population. For example, if the positive
influence level of “Social Media A” was 100%, yet only 5% of respondents actually used it, it
would have a much less overall impact to admission offices compared to “Social Media B” that
had 80% positive influence – but was used by 50% of students. Thus, this researcher developed
the Applicant Impact Factor (AIF) and Enrollment Impact Factor (EIF). These two benchmarks
weigh the positive influence levels of social media upon applications and enrollment,
The AIF and EIF prevented social media technologies with lower usage from overshadowing
those that would be proven to have more of an impact on applications and enrollment.
Next, a secondary analysis of the data was conducted to compare the overall results between
the prospective student and admission office responses for consistency, and a tertiary analysis
of the data investigated any other trends related to the null hypothesis.
2. Disconnect between prospective students and universities. Question six from the
Admission Office Survey and question 10 from the Prospective Student Survey asked
respondents about the kinds of interactions preferred by prospective students and performed by
HB0 = No disconnect exists between the expectations of prospective students and the actual
This secondary null hypothesis purported that universities are utilizing social media outlets
in the same methods that are expected by prospective students. As there are many different
forms of social media to test this hypothesis, Facebook was chosen as the primary focus due its
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 30
emergence as the leading social media platform for the prospective freshman demographic. The
purpose for testing these two data sets, then, was to reject the null hypothesis and acknowledge
its alternate hypothesis (HB1); i.e., that there is a significant difference between what universities
are doing via social media and what prospective students what them to do.
HB1 = There is a disconnect between the expectations of prospective students and the
actual actions of university admission offices with regard to what kinds of interaction
The secondary null hypothesis was tested via the aforementioned survey question presented
in both surveys. The responses of each answer choice were individually compared among
responses from both prospective students and admission staff. Arbitrary “levels” were once
again created to characterize and identify disconnects between the two populations; 0%
“marginal disconnect”, and anything greater than 10% was considered “significant disconnect”.
3. Other exploratory research. Finally, an analysis of general trends and correlations was
performed utilizing the remaining questionnaire questions. These questions were asked to
provide supporting evidence/information for the results of the two hypothesis tests. For
prospective students, questions were asked to learn more about the influence of Facebook
communications with current students on their decisions to apply and enroll at their school of
choice. Prospective students were also asked which social media medium they would most like
to use to stay in touch with their school as a current student. Admission staff respondents were
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 31
asked about strategy integration, tracking & ROI, and the use of social media in other non-
admission-related departments.
Assumptions. In order to confine this study into a realistic work and to define its parameters
1. Most prospective freshman students have similar social media habits and share similar
preferences to how they want to interact with universities through social media during their
college search.
2. Most prospective students have similar levels of access to all of the social
Limitations. This research study was conducted in an environment absent of prior work in
the specific field of this study’s focus. Given the focus identified by the hypotheses and
definition of primary terms, the following are the limitations as pertaining to this study.
1. Social media is relatively new in concept, and as a result, there is very limited academic
research available. Furthermore, as of the writing of this study, there is virtually no research in
the academic arena about the usage of social media in higher education admissions with
2. Due to the nature of the CRM database used to deliver survey invitations to prospective
students, there are no Hawaii respondents in the Prospective Student Survey. The school in
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 32
question had a disproportionate amount of prospective students living in Hawaii, and thus those
records were excluded. However, as the study was targeted to residents of the 49 other states, it
3. While both the prospective student and Admission Office Survey were distributed to a
bona fide national audience, the surveys were convenience samples, and no consideration
Chapter IV
Findings
The purpose of this study was to determine 1) if students who interact with universities via
social media are more or less likely to enroll at these universities, and 2) is there a disconnect
between the expectations of prospective students and the actions of universities in regards to the
usage of social media in the recruitment process. This chapter reports the results and findings of
a study on those two points of inquiry and is divided into five primary sections:
5. Meanings of Findings
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 33
This first section is designed to report on this researcher’s findings from the Prospective
Student Survey and the Admission Office Survey as they pertain to the usage of social media
technologies. Responses will be analyzed from each population individually, and then a
Prospective students.
1. Social media technologies used by prospective students. The first question in the
Prospective Student Survey asked respondents to identify all of the social media technologies
they currently used (see Figure 3). All 200 respondents answered the question, and YouTube
was the most used social media technology among prospective students at 81%. Facebook was a
very close second at 79%, and instant messaging, MySpace, and blogging rounded out the top
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 34
five at 53%, 46.5%, and 31%, respectively. The only other social media technologies used by
more than 10% of prospective students were message boards (19%), audio podcasts (16.5%),
Twitter (16%), and video podcasts (12%). Rounding out the bottom four technologies were
group chats (8%), RSS (5.5%), LinkedIn (4%), and Social Bookmarking (3.5%). Four
prospective students, 2% of respondents, indicated that they did not use any of the social media
technologies listed within the question – meaning that 98% of prospective freshman use some
Figure 4. Social media technologies prospective students would like universities to have/use during their college
search. n = 192.
2. Social media technologies wanted by prospective students for use during their college
search. In contrast to question one of the Prospective Student Survey which asked which social
media technologies were used by prospective students, question two investigated which social
universites during their college search. Out of 192 respondents, 59.9% of prospective students
indicated Facebook as the preferred social media technology to connect with universites during
the college search (see Figure 4). At 51.6%, university-hosted blogs was chosen as the second-
most desired social media outlet followed by YouTube (47.9%), instant messaging (41.7%), and
Despite YouTube being the top social media technology used by prospective students, it is
interesting to note that Facebook was the top preferred by students for use in their college search.
Looking more specifically at the difference between question one and two (see Figure 5),
YouTube is the most underdesired technology when it comes to what prospective students use in
general versus what they want to use to connect with potential universites. The usage of
YouTube for students’ college search was 33% less than their usage in general, and MySpace
was also underutilized for students’ college search by 29.3% (see Figure 6a). Furthermore, only
blogs, group chats, message boards, and video podcasts were wanted more for their college
search than their personal use. In total, 91.7% of prospective students indicated that they want to
utilize some form of social media during their college search (compared to 98% total usage
Figure 5. Social media technologies used in general versus social media technologies that prospective students want
Figure 6a. Social media technologies used to connect with universities minus those used in general by prospective
Figure 6b. Social media technologies used to connect with universities minus those used in general by prospective
Figure 7. Blog interactions among prospective university freshmen. n = 69 (185 respondents minus 116 that chose “I
Survey asked which social media technologies students actually used to interact with universities
during their college search for the fall 2009 semester. With regards to university hosted blogs, a
total of 69 respondents, 34.5% overall, indicated that they had some form of interaction with a
university-hosted blog (see Figure 7). 75.4% of these students reported reading blogs from
current students, and video blogs from current students were second-most popular at 40.6%.
21.7% of prospective students who interacted with university blogs read blogs from admission
Overall, video blogs were used less than their traditional text counterparts for the three main
types surveyed: student, faculty, and admission staff blogs. Also of worthy note, 11.6% of
prospective students who interacted with university-hosted blogs posted a comment, and 4.3%
Prospective Student Survey asked how prospective students were interacting with universities on
Facebook. Of the 179 respondents, 149 indicated that they are general users of Facebook, and
56.4% of those, have interacted with a university on Facebook (see Figure 8).
Figure 8. Percentage of students using facebook who did or did not interact with a university. n = 149 (179
The most popular type of interactions between prospective students and universities on
Facebook were centered around university-created Facebook Pages. 89.3% of those interacting
with universities on Facebook have looked at a universty Facebook Page, 70.2% browsed photos
of a university, and 66.7% became “fans” of a university during their college search (see Figure
9). Other popular forms of interaction included participating in discussion boards (35.7%),
browsing videos (32.1%), and posting questions to other current students (29.8%) – all on
indicated they use MySpace, and only 8% of those indicated they have ever interacted with a
university on MySpace (see Figure 10). Because the total number of prospective students
interacting with universities via MySpace was so low, it was deemed by this researcher
unnecessary to further breakdown the types of interactions as was done with Facebook in the
previous section.
Figure 10. Percentage of prospective students on MySpace that have/have not interacted with universties.
that Facebook is the dominant social network of choice for prospective students
during their college search. In a direct comparison of the two social networks,
Facebook is utilized during the college search seven times more (56.4% vs 8.0%)
confirms that Facebook is more likely to be used for prospective students’ college
Table 1
via via
Facebook MySpace
Interacted with a University 56.4% 8.0%
Did Not Interact with a University 43.6% 92.0%
7. Other social media interactions. Question six of the Prospective Student Survey inquired
what other forms of social media interactions prospective students had with universities. As
shown in Figure 11, the top three responses were reading postings on university message boards
(22.5%), participating in university-hosted group chat sessions (14.5%), and asking questions on
Figure 11. Other university-based social media interactions (besides blogs, Facebook, and Myspace). n = 92.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 42
Admission offices.
1. Social media technologies used by admission offices. From all 70 respondents to the
Admission Office Survey, 47 admission offices indicated that Facebook was, by far, the most
popular social media technology for reaching out to prospective students at a usage rate of
67.1% (see Figure 12). The second-most popular social media technologies were blogs, group
chat sessions, and Twitter – all at 40%, and both YouTube (37.1%) and instant messaging
(32.9%) were not far behind. Looking at other notable social media technologies, RSS was used
by 28.6% and MySpace was by 14.3% of students. Overall, 85.7% of admission offices currently
comparison to question one of the Admission Office Survey, question five investigated which
forms of social media would be adopted within the next 6-12 months. This data would provide
readers with an idea of the “future” of social media usage in admission offices as well as provide
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 43
a foundation of comparative analysis for later in this chapter. Twitter was determined to be the
most up-and-coming social media technology as 34.8% of admission offices indicated they were
planning to start using Twitter within the next 6-12 months (see Figure 13). Other popular forms
of social media scheduled for implementation included blogs from admission staff members
(27.5%), RSS feeds (26.1%), blogs from current students (23.2%), blogs from faculty (21.7%),
and Facebook Pages and profiles (21.7% and 17.4%, respectively). It should also be noted that
85.5% of university admission offices are planning to implement some form of social media
Figure 13. Social media technologies to be implemented by admission offices in the next 6-12 months. n = 69.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 44
Figure 14. Percentage of admission offices planning to implement some form of social media in the next 6-12 months.
n = 69.
Figure 15. Social media technologies wanted by prospective students during their college search versus social
Figure 16a. Amount of social media usage by admission offices minus the percentage wanted by prospective
students broken down by social media type (top seven varying results).
Figure 16b. Amount of social media usage by admission offices minus the percentage wanted by prospective
students broken down by social media type (bottom six varying results).
After initial profiles of both the prospective student and admission office populations were
established, this researcher was able to construct a visual comparison between the social media
technologies wanted by prospective students for their college search and those currently in use
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 46
by university admission offices (see Figure 15). At first glance, one can easily notice a
significant disconnect between the forms of social media used by admission offices and those
admission offices are both over and underperforming against the preferences of prospective
students.
The most significant disconnect exists with admission offices’ usage of Twitter, RSS, and
message boards (see Figure 16a). Currently, 40% of universities are utilizing Twitter compared
to 15.1% of students who indicated an interest in using the micro-blogging site during their
college search (a disconnect of 24.9%), more than any other form of social media. The second-
most overused social media technology is RSS at 24.4% (28.6% of admission offices vs. 4.2%
wanted by students).
Following the overutilized Twitter and RSS, four other forms of social media were shown to
have a significant disconnect between prospective students and admission offices; however,
these four were underutilized by admission offices based on the preferences of the prospective
student population. At a disconnect of 24.2%, message boards were found to be the most absent
from the social media arsenal of admission offices. Blogs (11.6%), video podcasts (11.4%), and
YouTube (10.8) were also utilized significantly less than student expectations.
Overall, of the 13 social media technologies referenced in the survey question, six
technologies (46.2%) showed a significant disconnect (variance of 10% or more) between the
social media technologies used by admission offices and those preferred by prospective students
during their college search. In addition 10 social media technologies showed marginal (5-10%)
Figure 17. Dispursement of disconnect based on level of variance between social media technologies offered by
admission offices and those desired by prospective students during their college search. Disconnect is measured by
the absolute value of the variance (e.g. -24.2% variance for message boards = disconnect of 24.2%).
In this section, results from the two surveys will be presented as they pertain to the impact of
social media technologies on both the applicant stage as well as the enrollment stage of the
admission funnel. This division was created in response to the varying nature of the two stages
within the admission funnel and should provide insight on any difference of effectiveness of
Table 2
Positive Negative
Social Media Technology* n Influence No Impact Influence
University podcasts 9 88.9% 11.1% 0.0%
IM with admission counselors 13 84.6% 15.4% 0.0%
A university MySpace profile 6 83.3% 16.7% 0.0%
University group chat sessions 27 74.1% 25.9% 0.0%
A university Twitter feed 6 66.7% 33.3% 0.0%
University message boards 42 64.3% 35.7% 0.0%
A university Facebook Page 73 57.5% 42.5% 0.0%
University blogs on their website 47 57.4% 42.6% 0.0%
1. Prospective student response. Question seven of the Prospective Student Survey asked
which forms of social media used by the university(ies) they applied had in impact on their
overall decision to apply. Respondents were asked to indicate the influence of each social media
technology as having either “a positive influence”, “no impact”, “a negative influence” or if the
form of social media was “the deciding factor in [their] decision to apply”. Since respondents
were only able to chose one option for each social media technology listed, the “positive
influence” and “deciding factors” choices were treated as one response for “positive influence”.
Also, because the SurveyMonkey technology had limited technical options, all respondents were
able to answer question seven. However, to ensure the integrety of this study and its results, only
responses from respondents who actually indicated use of the various social media technologies
in questions as indicated in questions three through six were reported in this section.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 49
Table 2 highlights that all eight social media technologies surveyed in question seven had a
positive impact of 57.4% or higher on students’ decision to apply. “University podcasts” (which
includes both video and audio) had the highest impact on student applications at a positive
influence level of 88.9% followed by instant messaging with admission counselors at 84.6% and
Table 2 on its own only presents the influence level without any regard for how many
students are actually utilizing the various forms of social media. Thus, to accurately judge the
impact of these social media technologies on application levels, it is necessary to weight the
influence of each technology against its usage by prospective students. The most appropriate
way to account for both the influence and the usage together is to weight both against each other
Table 3
Impact of social media technologies on prospective students’ decision to apply (weighted); Positive Influence times
To calculate the Application Impact Factor (AIF), the level of positive influence was
multiplied by the percent of usage derived from Prospective Student Survey questions three
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 50
through six (see Table 3). Ultimately, Facebook was determined to have the highest impact on
students’ decision to apply with an AIF of 0.245. This contrasts greatly with the initial reporting
th
of influence in Table 2 where Facebook was ranked 7 most influential and demonstrates that
influence of a specific form of social media is irrelevant if it is not widely used among
prospective students.
Following Facebook, blogs (AIF = 0.198), message boards (AIF = .18), and group chat
sessions (AIF = 0.107) were also found to have a significant impact on students’ likelihood to
messaging, podcasts (both audio and video), and MySpace were found to have only a marginal
impact (AIF between 3.1%/0.031 and 10%/0.1) on applications, and Twitter was the only
It should also be noted that out of all survey respondents, there were zero responses that any
form of social media had a negative impact on prospective students’ decisions to apply to a
university. That plus the high rates of positive impact denote to this researcher that social media
2. Admission office response. Similar to question seven of the Prospective Student Survey,
question three of the Admission Office Survey asked the impact of various social media
technologies on application numbers. Admission office respondents were given answer choices
“very positive influence”, “somewhat positive influence”, “no impact”, “somewhat negative
influence”, “very negative influence”, “no data available”, and “do not use”. Respondents were
only able to select one choice for each type of social media, and positive and negative influence
responses.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 51
Table 4
Impact of social media technologies on freshman applications (unweighted) as reported by admission offices; out of
all 70 respondents there were none that had data on their usage of message boards, and thus message boards
was ommitted
Positive No Negative
Social Media Technology n Influence Impact Influence
Podcasting – Audio 5 100.0% 0.0% 0.0%
Podcasting - Video 2 100.0% 0.0% 0.0%
Blogging – Student blogs 10 90.0% 10.0% 0.0%
Group Chat Sessions 15 86.7% 0.0% 13.3%
YouTube 13 84.6% 15.4% 0.0%
Twitter 10 80.0% 20.0% 0.0%
Instant Messaging 13 76.9% 23.1% 0.0%
Facebook Profiles 17 76.5% 23.5% 0.0%
Blogging – Admission staff blogs 4 75.0% 25.0% 0.0%
Facebook Pages 20 75.0% 25.0% 0.0%
RSS 11 54.5% 45.5% 0.0%
MySpace 6 50.0% 33.3% 16.7%
Social Bookmarking 4 50.0% 50.0% 0.0%
Blogging – Faculty blogs 3 33.3% 66.7% 0.0%
LinkedIn 1 0.0% 100.0% 0.0%
Blogs - all
(Student/Faculty/Admission Staff) 17 76.5% 23.5% 0.0%
Facebook (Pages & Profiles) 37 75.7% 24.3% 0.0%
Table 4 shows the influence of various social media technologies as reported by respondents to
the Admission Office Survey. For each form of social media, only the respondents who
indicated positive, negative, or no influence were recognized – thus excluding those who did not
use the respective social media or had no data to answer the question. Additionally, separate
results were identified for the cumulative results of Facebook (pages & profiles) and blogs
Out of all social media technologies surveyed, both audio and video podcasting were shown to
have a positive influence level of 100%, while student blogs and group chat sessions were
determined to have a 90% and 86.7% positive influence on applications, respectively. Also, as seen
with the prospective student population, there was barely any negative influence from social media
on applications except in isolated responses about MySpace and group chat sessions.
Table 5
Impact of social media technologies on prospective students’ decision to apply (weighted) as reported by admission
Application
Social Media Technology Positive Influence Usage Impact Factor
Facebook Pages 75.0% 62.9% 0.472
Facebook Profiles 76.5% 54.3% 0.415
Group Chat Sessions 86.7% 40.0% 0.347
Blogging – Student blogs 90.0% 35.7% 0.321
Twitter 80.0% 40.0% 0.320
YouTube 84.6% 37.1% 0.314
Instant Messaging 76.9% 32.9% 0.253
RSS 54.5% 28.6% 0.156
Podcasting – Audio 100.0% 14.3% 0.143
Podcasting - Video 100.0% 10.0% 0.100
Blogging – Admission staff blogs 75.0% 12.9% 0.097
MySpace 50.0% 14.3% 0.072
Blogging – Faculty blogs 33.3% 12.9% 0.043
Social Bookmarking 50.0% 8.6% 0.043
LinkedIn 0.0% 2.9% 0.000
However, it was necessary to weight the positive influence levels against each social media’s
own usage to determine its AIF. This was done in the same manner as with the results from
question seven of the Prospective Student Survey, and the level of positive influence was
Table 5 reports that the two forms of social media with the highest impact on freshman
applications, as reported by admission offices, are Facebook Pages (AIF = 0.472) and Facebook
profiles (AIF = 0.415) – a cumulative AIF for Facebook of 0.508. Rounding out the top five
most impacting social media technologies were group chat sessions (AIF = 0.347), student blogs
(0.321), and Twitter (AIF = 0.32). In total, 10 out of the 15 social media technologies in question
(66.6%) had a significant impact (AIF = 0.1/10% or greater) on applications, four had a marginal
impact (AIF = 0.031/3.1% to .1/10%), and only LinkedIn was shown to have no impact (AIF =
0) on freshman applications.
3. Comparison of prospective student and admission office responses. After the Application
Impact Factor (AIF) was calculated and analyzed for the prospective student and admission
office populations, a ranking of social media technologies was established using the AIF values
in ascending order (where one was assigned to the social media with the highest AIF). This
ranking was established, as opposed to a direct comparison of AIF numbers, due to the failry
high variance in AIF scores. The ranking of message boards for the admission office population
was excluded as none of the respondents to Admission Office Survey had any data on its
effectiveness.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 54
Table 6
Application Impact Factor, compared between prospective students and admission offices by rank
Social Media Technology Student AIF Rank Admission Office AIF Rank
Blogs 2 4
Facebook 1 1
Group Chat Sessions 4 2
Instant Messaging 5 5
Message Boards 3 -
MySpace 7 7
Podcasts 6 6
Twitter 8 3
The AIF ranking comparison, shown in Table 6, indicates that the order of AIF scores among
the two populations are fairly consistent with one another, thus confirming the relative validity of
the responses from prospective students and admission offices. In most cases, the ranks for each
form of social media only differed by two positions or they were identical to each other.
However, Twitter was ranked lowest in AIF from the prospective student data, yet, it was
the third-most impacting social media as reported by admission offices – a difference of five
rank positions between the two poulations. This could signify a serious disconnect between
admission offices and prospective students, or it could be possible that admission offices have
Table 7
Positive No
Social Media Technology* n Influence Difference Negative Influence
A university MySpace profile 4 100.0% 0.0% 0.0%
IM with admission counselors 10 80.0% 20.0% 0.0%
University podcasts 8 75.0% 25.0% 0.0%
University group chat sessions 19 73.7% 26.3% 0.0%
University message boards 31 58.1% 41.9% 0.0%
University blogs on their website 40 55.0% 45.0% 0.0%
A university Facebook Page 69 52.2% 47.8% 0.0%
A university Twitter feed 6 33.3% 66.7% 0.0%
1. Prospective student response. Question nine of the Prospective Student Survey asked
which forms of social media used by the universities they applied had an impact on their overall
decision to enroll (as opposed to their decision to apply in question seven). Respondents were
asked to indicate the influence of each social media technology as having either “a positive
influence”, “no impact”, “a negative influence” or if the form of social media was “the deciding
factor in [their] decision to apply”. Since respondents were only able to chose one option for
each social media technology listed, the “positive influence” and “deciding factors” choices were
treated as one response for “positive influence”. Again, to ensure the integrety of this study and
its results, only responses from respondents who actually indicated use of the various social
media technologies in questions as indicated in questions three through six were reported in this
section.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 56
Table 7 identifies MySpace and instant messaging to be the most influencial on prospective
students’ decision to enroll at levels of 100% and 80%, respectively. Other top influencers
included podcasts (75%), group chat sessions (73.7%), and message boards (58.1%).
Table 8
Impact of social media technologies on prospective students’ decision to enroll (weighted); Positive Influence times
However, once the positive influence responses are weighted against each social media’s
usage, the Enrollment Impact Factor (EIF) tells a much different story. Identical to the
Application Impact Factor (AIF), the EIF is calculated by multiplying positive influence
and usage. This, in turn, cancels out the disproportion created from influence responses of
Facebook, once again, reigns supreme with the highest EIF (0.222) among surveyed social
media technologies (see Table 8). After Facebook, blogs (EIF = 0.19), message boards (0.163),
and group chat sessions (0.107) were all found to have a significant impact (EIF = 0.1/10% or
greater). Instant messaging, podcasts (both audio and video), and MySpace were found to have
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 57
only a marginal impact (EIF between 3.1%/o.031 and 10%/0.1) on enrollment, and Twitter
was the only social media found to have an insignificant impact (0.1%/0.001 – 3%/.03).
Table 9
Influence of social media technologies on freshman enrollment (unweighted) as reported by admission offices
Table 10
Admission office respondents: Impact of social media technologies on prospective students’ decision to apply
Positive Enrollment
Social Media Technology Influence Usage Impact Factor
Facebook Pages 73.3% 62.9% 0.461
Facebook Profiles 75.0% 54.3% 0.407
Twitter 85.7% 40.0% 0.343
Group Chat Sessions 76.9% 40.0% 0.308
Blogging – Student blogs 85.7% 35.7% 0.306
Instant Messaging 92.3% 32.9% 0.304
YouTube 72.7% 37.1% 0.270
Podcasting - Video 100.0% 10.0% 0.100
Blogging – Admission staff blogs 75.0% 12.9% 0.097
Podcasting – Audio 50.0% 14.3% 0.072
Blogging – Faculty blogs 50.0% 12.9% 0.065
RSS 22.2% 28.6% 0.064
MySpace 25.0% 14.3% 0.036
Social Bookmarking 25.0% 8.6% 0.022
LinkedIn 0.0% 2.9% 0.000
2. Admission office response. Similar to question nine of the Prospective Student Survey,
question four of the Admission Office Survey asked the impact of various social media
technologies on freshman enrollment. Admission office respondents were given answer choices
“very positive influence”, “somewhat positive influence”, “no impact”, “somewhat negative
influence”, “very negative influence”, “no data available”, and “do not use”. Respondents were
only able to select one choice for each type of social media, and positive and negative influence
responses.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 59
Table 9 shows the influence of various social media technologies as reported by respondents
to the Admission Office Survey. For each form of social media, only the respondents who
indicated positive, negative, or no influence were recognized – thus excluding those who did
not use the respective social media or had no data to answer the question. Additionally, separate
results were identified for the cumulative results of Facebook (pages & profiles) and blogs
Out of all social media technologies surveyed, video podcasting and instant messaging were
shown to have a positive influence level of 100% and 92.3% respectively (see Table 9).
Rounding out the top four was student blogs and Twitter – both with positive influence levels of
85.7%. Also, as seen with the prospective student population, there was barely any negative
influence from social media on applications except in isolated reports around MySpace, group
Upon calculating the Enrollment Impact Factor in Table 10, the two forms of social media
with the highest impact on freshman applications, as reported by admission offices, are
Facebook Pages (AIF = 0.461) and Facebook profiles (AIF = 0.407). Rounding out the top five
most impacting social media technologies were Twitter (0.343), group chat sessions (AIF =
0.308), and student blogs (0.306). In total, 8 out of the 15 social media technologies in question
(53.3%) were shown to have a significant impact (AIF = 0.1/10% or greater) on applications,
five had a marginal impact (AIF = 0.031/3.1% to .1/10%), and only LinkedIn was shown to have
3. Comparison of prospective student and admission office responses. After the Enrollment
Impact Factor (EIF) was calculated and analyzed for the prospective student and admission
office populations, a ranking of social media technologies was established using the EIF values
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 60
in ascending order (where one was assigned to the social media with the highest EIF). This
ranking was established, as opposed to a direct comparison of EIF numbers, due to the high
variance in EIF scores. The ranking of message boards for the admission office population was
excluded as none of the respondents to Admission Office Survey had any data on its
effectiveness.
Table 11
Enrollment Impact Factor compared between prospective students and admission offices by rank
Social Media Technology Student EIF Rank Admission Office EIF Rank
Blogs 2 5
Facebook 1 1
Group Chat Sessions 4 3
Instant Messaging 5 4
Message Boards 3 -
MySpace 7 7
Podcasts 6 6
Twitter 8 2
The EIF ranking comparison, shown in Table 11, indicates that the order of EIF scores
among the two populations are fairly consistent with one another, thus confirming again the
relative validity of the responses from prospective students and admission offices. In most cases,
the ranks for each form of social media only differed by two or three positions or they were
However, Twitter was ranked lowest again in EIF from the prospective student data, yet, it
was the second-most impacting social media as reported by admission offices – a difference of
As documented in Chapter 2 and proven throughout this chapter, Facebook is one of the
prime forms of social media for interactions and communications between universities and
prospective students. This section analyzes the the types of interactions between the two
populations with respect to what prospective students want versus what universities actually
do on Facebook.
1. What prospective students want. Question 10 of the Prospective Student Survey asked
respondents to chose which kinds of communications and interactions they wanted to have with
universities during their college search. Where appropriate, a division was made between private
The most popular option was receiving invitations to admission events, which was preferred
by 65.1% of respondents (see Figure 18). The next three most popular response were all private
acceptance notices (41.4%), and PMs telling students houw to apply to a university (38.2%).
Also of interest, 30.3% of respondents indicated that they would want admission counselors to
Figure 18. Types of Facebook communications and interactions wanted by prospective students. n = 152.
After analyzing the results of question 10, it was clear that there was also an overwhelming
trend of students preferring private communications to public communications (see Figure 19).
In the three instances where a type of communication was split into private and public,
prospective students chose the private option two to five times more than public messages (see
Table 12). This indicates a clear message from prospective students saying that they do indeed
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 63
want colleges to communicate with them on Facebook, but they strongly prefer private
communications.
Figure 19. Preference of prospective students to receive private messages versus public messages on Facebook.
Table 13
2. What universities do. Question four of the Admission Office Survey asked respondents
to chose which kinds of communications and interactions their university had with prospective
students. The answer choices were identical to that of question 10 of the Prospective Student
survey:
None of the above, but our admission office will contact a student if they
None of the above, and our admission office has no direct contact with
students on Facebook.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 65
Figure 20. Types of Facebook communications and interactions done by universities. n = 59.
Looking at what communications and interactions universities have with prospective students
in Figure 20, there is only one major interaction – inviting students to admission events (54.2%).
At 18.6%, admission counselors adding prospective students as friends and private messages to
students on how to apply are tied for second, but there are no other major interactions initiated by
Figure 21. Facebook communications & interactions – what prospective students want vs. what universities do.
Figure 22. Percent of interactions by universites minus percent of interactions wanted by prospective students.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 67
direct comparison of answers from both population, it is clear that there are significant
disconnects between prospective students and admission offices with respect to which types of
communications and interactions are preferred by prospective students (see Figure 21). After
subtracting the expectations of prospective students from the actions of univerties, as shown in
Figure 22, all but one of the eight forms of communications/interactions showed definite
According to respondents, the biggest disconnect was the amount of private messages about
indicated they wanted private messages regarding how to complete their application, while
only 10.2% of universities are doing so – an overwhelming difference of 43.7%. The second
and third-most differing responses were about acceptance notifications with a 36.3%
difference/disconnect for private accept notices and 21.3% for public ones. In all, six of the
While parts one, two, and three of this chapter focused directly on the primary hypotheses
of this study, there remained a wealth of data from the rest of this study. The general findings
presented in this section consist of two parts: 1) responses of additional questions within the two
surveys and 2) salient observations from this researcher. These additional offerings are intended
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 68
to suppliment the findings presented earlier in this chapter and provide further insight into the
In effect, the following findings will help readers understand “why” prospective students
via Facebook.
Questions 11-14 of the Prospective Student Survey asked respondents if they had direct
contact with current students prior to applying and enrolling at a university. If students incated
“Yes,” they were presented a follow-up question asking about the impact of “reaching out to a
Figure 23. Percent of prospective students who have reached out to a current university student on Facebook before
Figure 24. Impact of communicating with a current student on decision to apply (prior to applying) . n = 60 (only
152 prospective students answered question 11 and 60 respondents (39.5%) indicated they
had communicated with a current university student before deciding to apply (see Figure 23).
The 60 respondents were then presented with question 12 which ascertained the impact of
communicating with a current student on their decision to apply to that university. Prospective
students were given four options: “This was the deciding factor in my decision to apply”, “It
had a positive influence on my decision to apply”, “It had no impact on my decision to apply”,
One respondent (1.67%) indicated their communication with a current student was the
deciding factor, 45 respondents (75%) reported that it had a positive impact on their decision to
apply, 12 students (20%) indicated no impact, and only two prospective students (3.33%)
Figure 25. Percent of prospective students that reached out to a current university student to get their opinion about
Figure 26. Impact of communicating with a current student on decision to attend (after applying, but before deciding
153 prospective students answered question 13 and 49 respondents (32%) indicated they had
communicated with a current university student after applying but before deciding to attend
(see Figure 25). The 49 respondents were then presented with question 14 gauging the impact
of communicating with a current student on their decision to attend to that university. Like
question 12, prospective students were given four options: “This was the deciding factor in my
decision to attend”, “It had a positive influence on my decision to attend”, “It had no impact on
This time, five respondents (10.2%) indicated their communication with a current student
was the deciding factor in their decision to enroll, 33 respondents (67.3%) reported that it had a
positive impact on their decision to apply, 9 students (18.4%) indicated no impact, and again,
only two prospective students (4.1%) indicated a negative impact (see Figure 26). When
considering “deciding factor” as an alternate response for “positive impact”, it can be concluded
that, in total, 77.5% of respondents indicated that talking to current students through Facebook
Questions 8-10 of the Admission Office Survey intended to gain insight about how social
media used within the enrollment management function of universites. These questions
investigate social media strategy, recruitment goals, and usage of data capture technologies.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 72
Figure 27. “Does your admission office have a strategy regarding the usage of social media technologies in the
Question seven asked if admission offices “have a strategy regarding the usage of social
media technologies in the recruiting process.” Out of the 60 admission offices that use social
media, 13 (21.7%) had a social media strategy, while an overwhelming 78.3% did not (see
Figure 27).
Figure 28. “Does your admission office have any specific recruitment goals with respect to social media? (i.e. is there
a goal number of inquiries, applicants, etc. that should come from social media initiatives?)” n = 60.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 73
Question nine asked admission offices if they had any specific recruitment goals tied to their
social media efforts. Virtually all admission offices, 96.7%, responded “No”, and only two
(3.3%) had specific recruitment goals for their usage of social media (see Figure 28).
Figure 29. “Does your admission office use any data capture technologies that allow you to track and quantify the
number of students entering your admission funnel from your social media initiatives? (i.e. are you able to track
the students that come directly from social media sources like Facebook?)” n = 60.
Question 10 asked if admission offices had any data capture technologies allowing them to
track students that enter their admission funnel from social media initiatives. Only 10
respondents (16.7%) were able to track and quantify students from social media sources, and
the other 50 admission offices (83.3%) were not (see Figure 29).
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 74
Additional survey reponses – social media usage outside of the admission office.
Figure 30. Social media technologies used by non-admission university offices vs. those wanted by prospective
students to keep in touch with their university when they become a student.
Taking a brief look beyond admission, prospective students were asked which form of
social media they would most like to use once they become a student, and admission offices
were asked which forms of social media were in use by other non-admission departments at their
university to communicate to current students. This would determine any potential social media
relationship between university admission offices and student life/services offices. The
assumption of this research was that if there was a demand from students that exceeded what
was being offered by universities, the usage of those forms social media by admission offices
could serve as a bridge to connecting with current students. However, with a slight excpetion of
admission staff blogs, there were no social media technologies with heavier demand than what
Question two of the Admission Office Survey was exploratory in nature, and asked if
admission offices were posting content/communications on various social media sites that
targeted inquiries, applicants, or both. Among the 60 admission offices utilizing social media,
there was a total of 285 unique implementations of social media (averaging almost five types of
While 82.8% of the social media implementations had content/communications targeting both
inquiries and applicants, it was found that 17.2% of admission-based social media is targeted
Figure 31. Percentage of social media technologies used by admission offices with respect to the content offered
1. User-generated content. During the analysis of question one of the Prospective Student
Survey, it was discovered that 15.5% of prospective students write their own blogs and 12%
2. Do prospective students know which university they will attend in fall of 2009? As a
qualifier for question nine of the Prospective Student Survey, question eight asked prospective
students if they knew which college they would be attending in fall of 2009 (only respondents
that answered “Yes” were allowed to answer question nine). 88.5% responded that they knew,
6.4% indicated “no”, and 5.1% said they were no longer planning on attending college that
Figure 33. Percentage of prospective students that knew which college they were attending for the fall 2009
3. Social media as a deciding factor for applying and enrolling. Table 12 presents the
total “deciding factor” responses from questions seven and nine in the Prospective
Student Survey. These numbers represent which social media technologies were
the most influential in prospective students’ decisions to apply and enroll (see
Table 12). The most deciding forms of social media at the applicant level were
(4.5%). At the enrollment level, instant messaging (IM) was indicated as the most
deciding social media technology at 8.8%. Following IM was group chat sessions
Table 12
Looking at the difference between deciding factors at the applicant and enrollment level,
seven of the eight social media technologies were more “deciding” when it came time for
students to enroll. Thus, it can be concluded that social media, as a whole, has a more decisive
Furthermore, it should be noted that the top three deciding forms of social media at the
enrollment stage was IM, group chat sessions, and message boards – all social media
interactions between admission counselors and prospective students are more effective at
4. Admission offices’ current social media usage plus future anticipated use. Looking at
the combined current and future usage of social media in Figure 34 (and assuming that university
admission offices follow through with their plans), it is projected that by July of 2010,
approximately 95% of university admission offices across the country will have a presence on
Facebook (see Figure 35). Furthermore, blogs and Twitter initiatives will be in use by 85% and
Figure 34. Current number of admission offices using social media plus future use. (LinkedIn = 2 current + 2 future)
Even more remarkable, out of the 10 universities that indicated no current use of social media
in question one of the Admission Office Survey, 8 of them (80%) are planning to implement
some form of social media in the next 6-12 months (see Figure 35). This means that by July of
Table 13
Raw data of admission offices’ usage of social media (current & future); * = denotes # of admission offices
Figure 36. Cumulative representation of current and future usage of social media in admission offices broken down
by type of social media. (Facebook = pages + profiles & blogs = student/faculty/adm staff)
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 81
Prospective student responses. The following are notable prospective student responses to
question 16 of the Prospective Student Survey, “do you have any comments or thoughts about
universities using social media (e.g. Facebook, YouTube, etc.) to connect with prospective
“I log onto my [Facebook Page] at least twice a day, and having alerts and other helpful
information from my university on my Facebook will lead me to pay more attention and
“I do not agree with using social media such as [Facebook], [MySpace] etc. to contact
students. The thought of the admission office telling students they are accepted to a university
via [Facebook] is completely ridiculous. I think contact between a student and the university
“…‘posting to my wall’ as one of the questions suggested, would be too much, I'd
“It makes me feel comfortable towards applying to the schools who keep in touch with
“[Social media makes] it easier to get answers about schools and talking to counselors for
help.”
“I think that using [social media] is fine, but putting certain messages up should be kept
private. I doubt all my friends want to see that ‘X University’ has told me to apply in this
way. I wouldn't mind getting good news, like if I've been accepted, because I would want
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 82
to share that, but other things people don't really need to see. Also, getting rejected on
“For me, Facebook helped more when I was wondering what a school's social life was
like. It was nice to get on that particular school's Facebook page and look at the pictures that
students had posted from events they had attended. Not to say that the school websites didn't
help me. School websites just helped more with the facts and figures, not so much the student's
social life. Basically, Facebook pages help out a little more when you want to know if this could
be a place that you could fit in well. Universities should continue using social media.”
“I find universities that use social media to be very personable, which is an attractive
character in a university. For most cases in my experience, it provides a very clear and honest
picture. Very few times has it ever been deceiving. So, I would encourage it in small amounts,
but not to excessive amounts. I personally still value the traditional methods of the college
search/experience important.”
“While I wouldn't mind (and would actually enjoy) a university contacting me via
Facebook or social networking, it would be only under the condition that all of said contact is
through private means only (i.e. no wall posts, only private messages) and should probably
include an option to not communicate by social networking should the student desire.”
“I think that it is great that universities/colleges are using social networking sites to reach
their students. While I personally think that is a positive and a necessity for the future,
colleges need to know their boundaries with their students and respect their students’
privacy.”
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 83
Admission office responses. The following are notable admission office responses to
question 11 of the Admission Office Survey, “do you have any other thoughts or comments
“[Our] use of social media should be about pulling together our online presence rather
than jumping on trendy bandwagons, which may put us at risk of putting resources into
something that results in very little return (e.g. focus groups have shown that our prospective
students are not yet using twitter so at the moment, this is not an appropriate place to be).”
“I realize the importance of social media well "adding" the use of social media but
it's difficult to find the time - our office only has 2 people (one part time).”
“For us, it is very new – [we] must feel our way for awhile.”
“How do you balance counselor responsibility w/also now social media management?”
“Our institution has not revised marketing plans to incorporate social networking. Many
social media initiatives have been started by individuals outside admissions - our library
has a [Facebook Page] - but admissions does not have their own. Administration is
They are oddly resistant to use internet marketing, even if we can provide metrics and
results. There is an attitude that if it's not broken, don't fix it - even though it's
completely broken.”
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 84
Meanings of Findings
The findings in this study have been organized around the expectations of prospective
students and the actions of universities with respect to social media usage as well as the impact
of social media on freshman enrollment. The meanings of those findings have been divided into
three parts for discussion: social media usage, social media’s impact on enrollment, and the
disconnect existing between the expectations of prospective students and admission offices.
1. Social media usage. With social media being used by 98% of prospective students (see
Figure 3) and 85.7% of admission offices (see Figure 12), it is the ideal tool for university
admission departments. While YouTube is the most used social media by prospective students
(81%), Facebook is the social media of choice (see Figure 4) during their college search and is
Given that Facebook was initially created for college students, it makes sense to this researcher
that Facebook would be the primary social media of one’s college search. As previous studies have
shown high concentrations of undergraduate college students on Facebook (80% and higher), it is a
Through Facebook, prospective students have the ability to browse university photos and
videos, participate in discussions, and become more allegiant to universities via the “become-a-
fan” feature – all while seeing a more personal and student-oriented side of universities not often
Thus, Facebook is seen in such a positive light during the college search and universities with
pages and relevant/fun content appear to be much more earnest and forthcoming than schools
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 85
relying solely upon their traditional marketing mix. This is a positive sign for universities as
Additionally, with Facebook’s dominance across the internet, universities are more accessible
than on other forms of social media, and whereas MySpace used to be the king of social media,
it has been dethroned and decapitated by Facebook. According to the study, both MySpace and
Twitter had extremely low rates of interaction by prospective students at 8% and 3%,
respectively. While these two social networks still have popular name recognition, their role in
However, Twitter is heavily used among admission offices (40%) – a difference of almost
25% more than what prospective students want during their college search. Twitter was found in
the study to be the most discrepant of all social media technologies between the two populations
with regard for both applications and enrollment. It is this researcher’s opinion that this “Twitter
Anomaly” is a result of a generation gap between higher education professionals and the
Literature has shown Twitter to be prevalently used by adults, and the micro-blogging site
has become a staple at higher education conferences across the country. Thus, Twitter is more
familiar and well received to admission offices than Facebook is, and admission professionals
are receiving the false impression that Twitter is where they should be, when, as proven by this
study, Twitter is one of the least utilized forms of social media amid prospective students. Also,
a recent study by The Harris Poll indicated that 69 percent of adults do not even know what
Twitter is (Ostrow, 2009). This is an area of great concern for this researcher, since by July of
2010, Twitter is expected to be in use by 74.3% of universities (see Figure 35) yet only 15.1% of
prospective students actually want to use Twitter for their college search.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 86
2. Social media’s impact on enrollment. This study determined that social media, as a
whole, had a positive impact on prospective students’ decisions to apply and enroll at
universities. Positive influence levels of social media technologies (for prospective students
using them) were generally higher than 50% (as reported by both prospective students and
admission offices). By utilizing the Application Impact Factor (AIF) and Enrollment Impact
Factor (EIF), it was found that Facebook had the biggest impact on both applications and
enrollment, and blogs and group chats were also identified as having a significant impact
consistently among responses from both populations. While there was no data from admission
offices regarding the impact of message boards, prospective student responses indicated it as
Furthermore, there were zero responses from prospective students throughout the survey that
any form of social media had a negative influence on their decisions to apply or enroll at
universities, and there were only six total reports of negative influence by universities. Thus, this
study affirmed the primary hypothesis - Students who interact with universities using social
media are more likely to apply and enroll with these universities.
Despite all of the positive results of social media’s impact on enrollment, this researcher
came upon the “Twitter Anomaly” once more. When comparing the rankings of impact of the
various forms of social media on applications (see Table 7) and enrollment (see Table 12),
Twitter was found to be the third and second-most influential as reported by admission offices.
However, the student AIF and EIF rankings both showed Twitter to have the least impact on
their decision to apply and enroll. Because of prior explanations of the “Twitter Anomaly”, this
researcher does not believe Twitter to have a significant impact on applications or enrollment.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 87
admission offices. Evidence of disconnect between the prospective student and admission office
The comparison of social media usage by admission offices versus social media technologies
desired by prospective students during their college search (figure 16a) shows significant
disconnect as high as 24.9% (Twitter), and 46.2% of all social media technologies surveyed also
showed a significant disconnect of 10% or higher. This clearly demonstrates that admission
offices are not in tune with which forms of social media prospective students want them to use.
Looking at the comparison of what kinds of specific interactions students want on Facebook
versus which types of interactions universities initiate (see Figure 22), the study shows much
higher disconnect – up to 43.7% between the two populations with regard to sending private
messages about missing documents and completing the application. In all, six of the eight forms
admission offices and students. Additionally, the aforementioned “Twitter Anomaly” should
also be considered a significant disconnect between the two populations as it has been
As a whole, the presence of these significant disconnects emphatically rejects the secondary
null hypothesis – No disconnect exists between the expectations of prospective students and the
This researcher believes there to be two primary causes for this disconnect. First, the
generation gap between the two populations is apparent as social media did not even exist a
decade ago. So, as the gap between prospective freshman and admission professionals is usually
a decade at least, admission professionals shouldn’t be expected to be completely “in touch” with
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 88
the social media trends and technologies of today. When they go to conferences, and all they
hear is “Twitter! Twitter!”, it is natural for them to assume that Twitter is a major form of
Second, the fact that nearly 80% of admission offices don’t have a strategy for social media
(see Figure 27) indicates the lack of attention to the subject. Without a social media strategy (or
the formulation of one), admission offices do not have the research on what their prospective
students want and expect, as that kind of information would be apparent in a proper strategy
formulation. Most admission offices do not even know what they want out of social media, so
how can they be expected to know what prospective students want out of them.
In essence, admission offices are out of touch with social media and the related expectations
of prospective students.
Chapter V
Conclusion
Summary
The findings presented by this study are a solid affirmation of the initial assertion that social
media does indeed have a positive impact on freshman enrollment and is a tool that should by
highly regarded and embraced by university admission departments. With barely any negative
side effects, social media has been documented to have a positive influence on applications and
enrollment well above 50% in most cases. Additionally, as Facebook was found to be the social
media technology with the highest influence as determined by the Application Impact Factor and
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 89
Enrollment Impact Factor, admission offices should embrace Facebook as their primary form of
As social media (as a whole) was found to have such a positive impact on enrollment,
admission offices should take these results as reason enough to devote the resources needed to
take full advantage of its potential. At the same time, the implementation of social media within
a university’s recruitment strategy should respect the desires and expectations of prospective
students. With such a high disconnect found between the expectations of prospective students
and the actions of admission offices, mechanisms should be put in place to respect these
expectations. If admission offices understand their prospective students, they can potentially
avoid traps like the “Twitter Anomaly” and encourage meaningful and successful relationships
The following are practical applications and recommendations for admission offices based
the desire to receive admission-related communications via Facebook, it could serve admission
offices to create a virtual “Facebook Concierge.” Here, admission offices would create an
students, upon inquiry, would opt-in to receive direct communications from that profile with
regards to admission events, notifications about missing documents, and any other kind of
communication students would request. Then, students could choose if they wanted private or
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 90
public messages about their application status, and Facebook could become an admission portal
for universities looking for an easy and accessible way to connect with their prospective
students.
Social media surveys. As this study has revealed significant disconnects between what
students want via social media and what admission offices do, it would serve the best interests of
admission offices to conduct routine surveys of their inquiry pool to identify what is expected of
them on social media outlets. Then, based on responses, admission offices can create clear and
Formulation of a social media strategy. Since 78.3% of admission offices don’t have an
official strategy for their usage of social media, it is evident that not enough time and attention is
being devoted to social media as a recruitment tool. As admission offices report that it is
“difficult to find the time” for social media, it is common to find situations where there is only
one or two people in an entire admission office working with Facebook and blogs. If more effort
was devoted to social media in an official capacity, admission offices would become more aware
of their own disconnects, and they could do a much better job of actually incorporating social
In light of these findings, there are two areas of future research that would appropriately
compliment this study – advanced enrollment tracking and Twitter’s true impact on
freshman enrollment.
Advanced research of freshman application and enrollment data. While this study
directly looks at the influence of social media on applications and enrollment, it would serve the
university admission sector better if a future study was able to look directly at actual enrollment
data from universities. This kind of study would survey prospective students and look directly at
whether or not they withdraw or enroll while presenting quantitative evidence of students’
enrollment behavior based upon which forms of social media they found to be influential.
Therefore, for each survey respondent, it would be known exactly how they matriculated through
the admission funnel, and a more advanced statistical study could be performed.
The “Twitter Anomaly”. The presence of the “Twitter Anomaly” presents a conundrum for
this researcher. While it is more likely that the discrepancy of Twitter’s true impact on
enrollment between admission offices and prospective students is due to a generation gap, this
cannot be stated for sure. It is certainly plausible (while still highly unlikely) that Twitter could
have a positive impact on freshman enrollment, further research in this area could provide the
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Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 97
Appendix A
Appendix B
Thank you for taking the time to complete this survey. This study is researching the usage of
social media technologies within the area of higher education admissions.
The survey is only 11 questions and should take approximately 5‐7 minutes to complete. You will not need
any materials to complete this survey ‐ just your knowledge of social media usage in your admission office.
During this survey, you will not be asked to provide any personal information, and your answers will be
completely confidential. If you would like more information regarding this study or would like to request a
copy of the final paper, please contact Abe Gruber at agruber@hpu.edu.
Question 1
Please check which of the following technologies your university’s admission department/division
currently use to reach out/communicate with prospective students:
Twitter YouTube
None of These
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 105
Question 2
Considering your admission department’s usage of the following technologies, is the content posted on these
social media platforms more geared towards inquiries or applicants? (Please select only one per row)
Facebook Pages
Facebook Profiles
Instant Messaging
LinkedIn
Message Boards
MySpace
Podcasting – Audio
Podcasting ‐ Video
RSS
Social Bookmarking
Twitter
YouTube
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 106
Question 3
Please rate the impact of the following technologies on the number of freshman applications you have
received for the fall 2009 semester. (Please select only one per row)
Somewhat No Data
Very No Somewhat Very to
Positive Positive Difference Negative Negative Answer Do Not Use
Blogging – Student
blogs
Blogging – Adm.
staff blogs
Blogging – Faculty
blogs
Facebook Pages
Facebook Profiles
Instant Messaging
LinkedIn
Message Boards
MySpace
Podcasting – Audio
Podcasting ‐ Video
RSS
Social Bookmarking
Twitter
YouTube
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 107
Question 4
Please rate the impact of the following technologies on the number of freshman enrollments you have
received for the fall 2009 semester. (Please select only one per row)
Somewhat No Data
Very No Somewhat Very to
Positive Positive Difference Negative Negative Answer Do Not Use
Blogging – Student
blogs
Blogging – Adm.
staff blogs
Blogging – Faculty
blogs
Facebook Pages
Facebook Profiles
Instant Messaging
LinkedIn
Message Boards
MySpace
Podcasting – Audio
Podcasting ‐ Video
RSS
Social Bookmarking
Twitter
YouTube
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 108
Question 5
Please check which of the following technologies your university’s admission department/division does
not use but plans to start using it in the next 6‐12 months:
Twitter YouTube
None of These
Question 6
With respect to Facebook, please indicate which types of communication your admission office uses to
reach out directly to prospective students? (please select all that apply)
Invite prospective students to upcoming admissions events (open houses, online chat sessions, etc)
None of the above, but admissions staff members will respond to prospective students if they are messaged
first.
None of the above, and no admissions staff members have any direct contact with students on Facebook.
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 109
Question 7
Does your admission office have a strategy regarding the usage of social media technologies in the
recruiting process?
Yes
No
Question 8
Does your admission office have any specific recruitment goals with respect to social media? Is
there a goal number of inquiries, applicants, etc. that should come from social media initiatives?
Yes
No
Question 9
Does your admission office use any data capture technologies that allow you to track and quantify the
number of students entering your admissions funnel from social media? Are you able to track the
students that come directly from social media sources like Facebook?
Yes
No
Question 10
Are any of these social media tools being used by other departments in your university to
communicate/engage with current students? (please select all that apply)
Twitter YouTube
None of These
Question 11
Do you have any other thoughts or comments regarding the usage of social media in university
admission departments?
________________________________________________________________________
________________________________________________________________________
Running head: SOCIAL MEDIA IN UNIVERSITY ADMISSIONS 111
Appendix C
Appendix D
Question 3: Please rate the impact of the following technologies on the number of freshman
Question 4: Please rate the impact of the following technologies on the number of freshman