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Promoting Erasmus Mundus towards European Students: Activate, Communicate, Engage

Promoting Erasmus Mundus towards European Students: Activate, Communicate, Engage. AGENDA. Goals and objectives Background and key information Activities and Outputs Student & Staff Survey EM-ACE Promotional toolkit. SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES Information Training Promotion

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Promoting Erasmus Mundus towards European Students: Activate, Communicate, Engage

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  1. Promoting Erasmus Mundus towards European Students:Activate, Communicate, Engage

  2. AGENDA • Goals and objectives • Background and key information • Activities and Outputs • Student & Staff Survey • EM-ACE Promotional toolkit

  3. SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES • Information • Training • Promotion • TARGET GROUPS • Students • HEI staff • Otherpromoters GOALS AND OBJECTIVES To enhance the visibility, awareness and attractiveness of the EM programme across Europe, with the final goal to raise both the quantity and quality of applications received from European candidates 3

  4. BACKGROUND AND KEY INFORMATION (1) • Why promoting Erasmus Mundus towards European students? • Key priority for the European Commission (Europe2020 strategy) • EM Lacks visibility in Europe • Over the years, the international visibility of the EM programme has progressively grown. When it comes to Europe, however, the scenario changes significantly. • Scholarship quotas (cat B) never filled to date • Low number of application received (in 2010, 4194 Cat B application received vs 33837 Cat A applications) • Quality of application below Cat A average • Preliminary needs assessment (EC, EACEA, EMA 2011) • Identification of factors hindering European students' participation • Preparation of marketing strategy

  5. BACKGROUND TO THE PROJECT (2) • Full Partners • Associate Partners • Institute of International Education (USA); NARIC-Italia / EM NS Italy (IT); Santander Group (BE); Erasmus Student Network (ESN); Portuguese EM NS (PT) • Duration: 36 months (September 2012 – August 2015) • Budget: € 247.183,00

  6. ACTIVITIES AND OUTPUTS • Needs analysis on EM awareness and promotion (including surveys)+ international benchmarking (USA – Australia) • EM Promotion Strategy for EU students  Short&long-term (EfA? YES Europe?) • EM Promotional Took-kit (online + print material) • EM Marketing review tool (self-assessment) • Promotional events (students) • Training events (staff & promoters) • Dissemination

  7. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (1) • General Objectives • Collect and analyse data on the visibility and awareness of EM at European level, the reasons why European students do not participate in EM, which of these reasons are most important, and what mechanisms are appropriate to overcome those barriers • Targets • (a) Students (European EM students and alumni; Erasmus students; other students who have the potential to be EM scholars) • (b) HEI staff directly involved in the EM programme (EM coordinators, IRO, etc.) • Methodology • Preparation of surveys (1 for students, 1 for staff) • Testing of surveys at partner universities (Sapienza, Ghent) and UNICA student conference • Dissemination of surveys through EMA, Erasmus Student Network (ESN), UNICA network, partner universities, CampusFrance overseas offices, IT and PT NS

  8. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (2) • Student survey findings • 2300 responses, 81% completion • 75% aware of EM but 75% didn’t choose the accurate description of it out of 4 options • Website/social media is main marketing tool • Brand distinctiveness: EC quality imprimatur • Incentive – more career, than travel • Why not apply?: • 1) ‘too expensive’ 21% • 2) ‘I don’t know anything about it’ – 18% • 3) ‘I am unsure of qualification I will get’ 7%

  9. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (3) • Student comments • “Great human experience but little opportunities to put diploma into good use for employment out of university/research sector.” • “Only heard of it today - never ever been talked about. So any form of promotion would help!” • “Improve clarity, accessibility and availability of study abroad's requirements and opportunities (more centralized?). I find universities' homepages are often confusing and 'hard to find right information” • “Motivate the MUNDUS alumni (positive experience and personal touch) and they would do the PR work for you.”

  10. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (4) • Staff survey findings • 270 completions, 47% academics • Nearly third staff not bothered about more EU (28%) students applying to EM • Unwillingness to lose own students • Internationals main target of marketing effort • Barriers to more EU students: • 1) Lack of promotion • 2) lack of financial support • 3) unwillingness of unis to lose own students • 4) academic recognition and timing

  11. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (6) • Staff comments • “…many European students have zero knowledge about EM and it is often confused with the regular Erasmus exchange (non-degree mobility).” • “The small number of scholarships offered to EU students has a chilling effect on the application rate; if there were more scholarships for EU Students there would be a higher number of applications.” • “We were very late in the process to market outside our schools to the general public, plus no budget to do so” • “I would prefer to have different names for EMA1 and EMA2 as it has constantly caused confusion in the past, especially when having EMA2 mobilities in EMA1 fostered master programmes. Having one name (Erasmus for all) for all programmes will cause even more confusion. The programme structures are not similar, the objectives are not the same, the contact persons differ.”

  12. COMPARING STAFF IMPRESSIONS OF WHY EUs DON’T APPLY Staff reasons • Student reasons 1) Lack of promotion – BRAND/reputation 2) lack of financial support - COST 3) unwillingness of unis to lose own students 4) academic recognition and timing – RECOGNITION/CAREER ADVANTAGE 1) ‘too expensive’ 21% - COST 2) ‘I don’t know anything about it’ – 18% - BRAND/reputation 3) ‘I am unsure of qualification I will get’ 7%- RECOGNITION/CAREER ADVANTAGE

  13. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (7) • Summary Conclusions (1) • Good product, poor marketing • Confusing and bureaucratic brand names • Unequal EM incentives for non-EUs (scholarship and going abroad for jobs) • Lack of incentives for unis to target own • No compelling EM website or listed programmes

  14. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (7) • Summary Conclusions (2) • Strong need for promotion and brand awareness of EM • EM-ACE project cannot solve main problem with EU applications (financial allocations) but can help raising brand awareness • Internet as most important information source • Need to untangle EM and Erasmus • Desire for more support from EMA • Strong interest in the promotional tools to be created by EM-ACE • Full needs analysis and marketing strategy soon available on www.em-ace.eu

  15. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (7) • Key recommendations (target: HEI) • Enhance the prestige of EM through events and marketing efforts, involving EMA • Enhance the narratives about career advancement (case studies of EMalumni) • Create a consistent EM visual identity that communicates the brand in an attractive and unified way ( EC) • Encouraged HEI to have marketing strategies and trained marketing staff for EM in addition to other markets.

  16. STUDENT AND STAFF SURVEY (7) • Key recommendations (target: HEI) • Target students in their 2nd and 3rd year as well as after completeing their Bachelor degree for EM, but focus on the 3rdug year if money is limited. • ALUMNI: Target Erasmus students for EM continuation. • Intensify the use of the university websites as well as social networking sites • Improve universities’ EM websites/pages and ensure the EMprogrammes have a professional digital strategy • Full needs analysis and marketing strategy soon available on www.em-ace.eu

  17. EM-ACE PROMOTIONAL TOOLKIT PRINT MATERIAL MULTIMEDIA WEB EM Marketing review tool (WP 3) – online self-assessment tool PowerPoint presentation templates to be used during student talks; Promotional video on EM experience in Europe; . EM-ACE portal / One-stop-centrefor EU students: www.em-ace.eu Web material (student-friendly content for websites that HEI and EM NS across Europe can use and adapt); Social networks and Apps Marketing materials  focus on EU students Training materials for sessions at HEI aimed at IROs, including case studies. Guidelines on how to prepare a successful EM application

  18. DISCUSSION • The EM scheme – its value • What do you think of the EM scheme as a uni? • How aware are students of the scheme? • Do you proactively recruit your own students to EM or just external students? What are barriers to application? • Do you have a corporate/academic strategy as a uni for EM? • How do you measure the success of EM (if at all?)? Are you planning to do more or less in future? • Do it yourself! • Get across the idea of Erasmus Mundus in 140 characters that can be tweeted to all your students.

  19. DISCUSSION • Current marketing and promotionalstrategies • How do you promote EM at this uni? Who promotes it? (if at all). • Do you have a separate EM marketing strategy? (can we see it). Discuss budget, staff, resource etc. • How could marketing be improved, particularly to attract EU students? What do you as HEIneed to do to improve EMmarketing? • Do you use EM centrally produced materials (which ones)? How effective are they? Is the website good? How could these materials be improved? Does the name EM work? • Do it yourself! • Play your ACE: What would you select as the best marketing indictors?

  20. DISCUSSION • EM-ACEpromotionaltoolking: anysuggestion? • We are planning to create marketing advice for EM officers, with some best practice guidelines and benchmarking allowing universities to compare their marketing with other universities in Europe. • Do it yourself! • What if anything should be in those guidelines, do you think?

  21. PLAY YOUR ACE! E-MAIL info@em-ace.eu WEB www.em-ace.eu THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!

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