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Service Center: A SRM Strategy to Promote Student Retention

Service Center: A SRM Strategy to Promote Student Retention. Naj Shaik PhD University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.continuinged.uiuc.edu/outreach/ALN2005_NajShaik.pdf. Abstract.

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Service Center: A SRM Strategy to Promote Student Retention

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  1. Service Center: A SRM Strategy to Promote Student Retention Naj Shaik PhD University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.continuinged.uiuc.edu/outreach/ALN2005_NajShaik.pdf

  2. Abstract • Service Center is a web-based Student Relationship Management application developed by the staff of the Division of Academic Outreach, Office of Continuing Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. • The strategic goal is to promote student retention through consistent personalized, value-added services to students, staff, faculty, and campus administrative units. • It is based on a unified view of the system and includes student and instructor profiles, registrations, courses, reports, inquiries, and business communications.

  3. Outline • Online Higher Education Landscape • Student Profile • Education Services • Student Relationship Management • Institutional Background • Service Center

  4. Online Higher Education Landscape Convergence between face-to-face and online courses (Bates, 2000). Consortium Model - students can take courses from multiple institutions to earn a degree (Johnstone, Ewell, & Paulson, 2002). Competition is intensifying in the online learning marketplace with the entry of corporate dot.com companies (Bates, 2000). Johnstone, S.M., Ewell, P., & Paulson, K. (2002) Student Learning as Academic Currency. ACE Center for Policy Analysis.

  5. Student Profile Non-traditional students – a fast growing segment Shopping for courses with the click of a mouse. Less willing to make compromises in the quality of education and other services. Expect and even demand quality teaching and learning environment and associated services. Howell, S., Williams, P., and Lindsay, N. (Fall 2003). Thirty-two Trends Affecting Distance Education: An Informed Foundation for Strategic Planning. Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration, 4(3).

  6. Institutions: Long-term Strategy • Institutions believe that online learning is critical to their long term strategy. (Sloan Report 2004) • Institutions recognize the significance of developing a strong relationship with students and other stakeholders as a competitive strategy. Allen, I., Seaman, J. (2004). Entering the Mainstream: The Quality and Extent of Online Education in the United States, 2003 and 2004. Sloan-C Series Books on Online Education.

  7. Education: Services Core Service: The teaching and learning that occur in a(n) (un)structured virtual / traditional class is the core component. Supporting Services: create added value to the student and determine the quality of learning experience Grönroos, C. (2000). Service Management and Marketing. NY: John Wiley

  8. Approaches to Strategy Formulation • Program & Course Centric (Conventional Approach) • Student Centric (Emerging Trend) Jain, D., Singh, S. (2002). Customer Lifetime Value Research in Marketing. Journal of Interactive Marketing. 16(2).

  9. Program & Course Centric Strategies Achieve Competitive Advantage • Manage lifecycle - course / program focus • Reduce cost to match budget cuts • Increase revenue sources • tuition & fees increase (wherever possible) • offer more courses / programs • increase enrollment – transaction based • Improve quality of course/program (if feasible) Jain, D., Singh, S. (Spring 2002). Customer Lifetime Value Research in Marketing. Journal of Interactive Marketing. 16(2).

  10. Student Centric Strategies Student advocacy for strategic competitive advantage • Student is the focus • Student lifecycle value approach • Create value to the students • Beyond loyalty to student advocacy • Long-term solution (no silver bullet) Jain, D., Singh, S. (Spring 2002). Customer Lifetime Value Research in Marketing. Journal of Interactive Marketing. 16(2). Urban, G. (Winter 2004). The Emerging Era of Customer Advocacy. MIT Sloan Management Review. Shaik (2005). Student Advocacy. Working paper, Office of Continuing Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

  11. Maintaining Competitive Advantage Which is easy to replicate by competition? • Program / Course Centric Strategies • program / course lifecycle • Student Centric Strategies • student loyalty • student relationship management • student advocacy Go beyond program / course centric to student advocacy Urban, G. (Winter 2004). The Emerging Era of Customer Advocacy. MIT Sloan Management Review.

  12. Student Relationship Management (SRM) • Strategic business and process issue. • Approach is to understand and anticipate the needs of students. • Align all process and technical solutions. • Provide unique learning experiences to students so that they want to be engaged in a long-term relationship with the institution. Sweeney Group (2000) What is CRM? http://www.sweeneygroup.com/crm.htm Najmuddin Shaik (2005). Service Center - A Student Relational Management Application. Paper accepted for presentation to the Eleventh Sloan-C International Conference on Asynchronous Learning Networks, November 2005, Florida, USA.

  13. Student SRM Relationship Management Adapted from: Gray, P., & Byun, J. (March 2001). Customer Relationship Management. Center for research on information technology organizations, University of California, Irvine.

  14. Student Relationship Management: Goals An enterprise-level system to share relevant, consistent, and meaningful (student) profiles across all student interfaces and touch-points. • Recruit and retain students • Improve services • Reduce costs • Improve productivity Gray, P., & Byun, J. (March 2001). Customer Relationship Management. Center for research on information technology organizations, University of California, Irvine. http:// www.crito.uci.edu

  15. University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign http://www.uiuc.edu/ • President Lincoln signed Morrill Land Grant Act in 1862. 1867 University of Illinois founded as one of the original 37. • Mission of excellence in education, research, and public engagement. • UIUC 39,000 undergraduate, graduate, and professional students (10,000 of these are graduate and professional) from 50 states and 100 nations. • UI Online

  16. Office of Continuing Educationhttp://www.continuinged.uiuc.edu/ • Leadership for lifelong learning and distance education. • Extends campus community and mission through teaching and public service to adult students. • Facilitate the extension of academic resources to students.

  17. Division of Academic Outreachhttp://www.continuinged.uiuc.edu/outreach/ • Has a collaborative relationship with on-campus departments. • Combines administrative support with program development to deliver instruction beyond the campus via internet courses, site-based classes, and videoconferencing. • Includes course section scheduling enables registration and provides detailed course information for credit and non-credit courses and programs. • Undergraduate level courses offered in a self-paced guided individual study format.

  18. Division of Academic Outreachhttp://www.continuinged.uiuc.edu/outreach/ • Support services to students include library assistance, logins to access online materials, registration, technical support, management of student records, and providing University ID cards. • Support services to the faculty and departments include technical expertise and assistance for distance education course development and delivery online and via the division’s videoconferencing facilities on campus, class rosters, etc.

  19. Service Center • Designed, developed, and Programmed by Staff • First step towards SRM • Web-based system • Interfaces with UI-Integrate / Enterprise Data Warehouse (EDW) • Serves Continuing Education Students • Campus Departments

  20. Service Center features • Easy to use web-interface • Separate interface for staff & departments • Online registration system • Comprehensive student profile • Triggered alerts • Communication tools • Generate customized repots • Staff training – online tutorials :

  21. Service Center Architecture • Three-tier architecture • Client-tier, middle / application tier, and data tier • Scalability and upgrades • Multiple-layers of security (at server and application levels)

  22. User Interface Client (HTML) Web Browser, I/O Forms, and Browser Plug-Ins Application Server / Security Firewall Security Firewall Web Server Application Server Database Server / Security Firewall Database Database Mgmt. System Security Firewall Najmuddin Shaik. (2003). Alternatives to WebCT and Blackboard Commercial CMS: Implementation of a Generic Course Management System. The International Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Change Management. Volume 3, Article MC03-0072-2003.

  23. Staff Login

  24. Main Interface

  25. E-mail / Communication interface

  26. Manage Registrations

  27. Guided Individual Study - Tracking

  28. Manage Courses

  29. Instructor: Travel & Overload Stipend

  30. Sample Report: Tuition & Fee Report

  31. Sample Reports: Campus Units

  32. Department Login Interface

  33. Department Interface

  34. Academic Outreach Web: Course Search

  35. Academic Outreach Web: Course Details

  36. Third-party Applications • Using third-party applications to enhance the quality of services • Elluminate - conferencing application with Service Center to reduce response time to the students. • Camtasia to develop web-based tutorials for staff training.

  37. For Help Desk: Elluminate

  38. Tutorials For Staff (Camtasia)

  39. What’s Next? • Develop performance metrics • Move towards developing a system to support Student Advocacy. Shaik (2005). Student Advocacy. Working paper, Office of Continuing Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.

  40. Selected References • Allen, I., Seaman, J. (2004). Entering the Mainstream: The Quality and Extent of Online Education in the United States, 2003 and 2004. Sloan-C Series Books on Online Education. • Freeland, J. (2003). The Ultimate CRM Handbook. NY: McGraw Hill. • Gray, P., & Byun, J. (March 2001). Customer Relationship Management. Center for research on information technology organizations, University of California, Irvine. • Grönroos, C. (2000). Service Management and Marketing. NY: John Wiley • Howell, S., Williams, P., and Lindsay, N. (Fall 2003). Thirty-two Trends Affecting Distance Education: An Informed Foundation for Strategic Planning. Online Journal of Distance Learning Administration, 4(3). • Jain, D., Singh, S. (2002). Customer Lifetime Value Research in Marketing. Journal of Interactive Marketing. 16(2). • Johnstone, S.M., Ewell, P., & Paulson, K. (2002) Student Learning as Academic Currency. ACE Center for Policy Analysis. • Lemon, C. (2004). Challenges in Marketing and Student Relationship Management in Higher Education. Retrieved March 3, 2005 from http://brandsequence.com/pdf/mktng_srm_high_ed.pdfShaik. N. (2003). Alternatives to WebCT and Blackboard Commercial CMS: Implementation of a Generic Course Management System. The International Journal of Knowledge, Culture and Change Management. Volume 3, Article MC03-0072-2003. • Shaik (2005). Student Advocacy. Working paper, Office of Continuing Education, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. • Shaik (2005). Service Center - A Student Relational Management Application. Paper accepted for presentation to the Eleventh Sloan-C International Conference on Asynchronous Learning Networks, November 2005, Florida, USA. • Sweeney Group (2000) What is CRM? http://www.sweeneygroup.com/crm.htmUrban, G. (Winter 2004). The Emerging Era of Customer Advocacy. MIT Sloan Management Review.

  41. Contact Information Naj Shaik Ph.D. Research Programmer University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign E-mail: najuiuc@hotmail.com URLhttp://www.continuinged.uiuc.edu/outreach/najShaik.cfm URL of the Presentation File: http://www.continuinged.uiuc.edu/outreach/ALN2005_NajShaik.pdf

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