Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Posts Tagged ‘St. Kate’s’

My post yoga day

This morning I wrote about my need for yoga and my tendency to not go if I get too busy. Today I practiced and it paid dividends. I came home to write a pop quiz for my MKTG 2350 students and devise a new assignment for them involving Vine and blogging.

It’s the 2nd week of class–many of my students are new to blogging or at least new to WordPress. They’ve posted videos, hyperlinked text, cataloged, tagged, and written posts; but none of this is really facile yet. Hence their extra credit assignment outlined below.

We wrote the assignment description collaboratively in class on our private class blog and posted it with an embedded Tweet of one of my Vine videos. Then we pitched it to our University MarComm department. Check back next Thursday on Twitter and Vine for the #M2350 hashtag.

What do you think? Does this sound educational and interesting?

Extra Credit (5 points)

Two Options:

1) You have an Apple Mobile Device

iPhone or iPad or iPod Touch (probably newer, such as a 4 or 5)

Open a Vine account.
Shoot a Vine video about St. Kate’s
Post it to Vine — ideally also post to Twitter
Tag it #M2350 and @stkate

2) You don’t.

a) Write a very short (~100 words) blog post entitled Extra Credit: Vine etc.

What should you write about?  Vine News and/or post a someone else’s Vine to your blog. Tag it #M2350 and @stkate.

What chickens sound like when let out of their coop #joy vine.co/v/bvlEQFHz0EM

— Sara Kerr (@Saralitta) February 13, 2013

b) Collaborate with someone who has an Apple mobile device.

DUE:  Next Thursday, February 21st at Noon

Why?

• It’s relevant to all social media
• It’s great marketing for who? St. Kate’s, Vine, YOU!

• It’s great preparation for Shout Out St. Kate’s Day

• It helps establish student expertise in social media
• It’s fun!
• Extra Credit is Good!

• It showcases the new Sales and Social Media lab

Read Full Post »

Since potential students are discovering this blog, I thought I should post what we do in this class. It’s fun, it’s relevant, and it will help your marketing and sales career.

Course Description

“Integrated Marketing Communications (IMC)” continues the study of Marketing introduced in MKTG 2300 Principles of Marketing, by focusing on the Promotion element of the marketing mix. The model of IMC recognizes that brands benefit from an integration of all elements of the marketing mix, including advertising, personal selling, public relations, sales promotion, sponsorship, interactive marketing, and other marketing channels.

The course will provide the theoretical underpinnings of a set of concepts, approaches and tools in integrated marketing communications that students will apply not only in their work for the course, but also in their career endeavors. The course presents not only the strategies of traditional marketing programs, but also the growth and influence of new media, alternative methods and approaches, and the challenges and issues faced by marketers in the context of a changing marketing communications discipline.

Most importantly, however, this course is built on experiential education where by students work on real world projects for actual clients. These projects should not only give students good practice on how to approach an IMC campaign, but it will also help them understand how to successfully manage a project, how to develop a flourishing relationship with the client and all project stakeholders, and how to ‘sell’ themselves or their ideas. As a writing intensive course, students write individually and as a team a wide variety of marketing communication pieces.

Course Objectives

By the end of the course students should:

  1. Demonstrate a clear understanding of the basic concepts of integrated marketing communications (IMC), as well as to display knowledge of key marketing communications components.
  2. Understand how integrated marketing communications is used in various organizations (IMC) and in business as a whole domestically and internationally.
  3. Develop a basic integrated marketing communications (IMC) plan showing applicable target markets, use of the marketing communications mix, and an appropriate understanding of market research.
  4. Identify key marketing communications elements and show a level of understanding of these elements. These include
    1. the marketing communications process
    2. advertising and media buying
    3. public relations
    4. promotions and trade promotions
    5. interactive marketing
    6. direct or person-to-person marketing
    7. marketing communication evaluation and measurement
  5. Create, write, or utilize basic interactive marketing tactics including:
    1. social media, search engine marketing (SEM), search engine optimization (SEO), websites, blogs, podcasts, email campaigns, video sharing, online communities, and content publishing
  6. Show marketing problem solving skills through analysis and environmental scanning.
  7. Show improved practical oral and written communication skills demonstrating sound critical thinking.
  8. Posses a fundamental understanding of what it takes to work in marketing communications.

My favorite part of this course are the assignments. I have taught just about everything related to marketing. My students have written exceptional marketing plans, done fabulous research and analyzed every product under the sun. These are great tools for students to apply what they are learning and for me to assess whether they did or not. New marketing graduates rarely get to create a marketing plan at their first job unless they join a really small company, but it’s still important to know how to write one. In this class–more than any other I teach–I feel the assignments perfectly capture what my students need to know about communicating and marketing.

Blog – Keep a blog on WordPress.com. Write weekly (or more) about anything you find that has to do with promotional communications (and to a greater extent marketing).

Individual Assignments (200 points)

  • Look around your home or office, and find a favorite possession, or at least one you regard highly.  This could be anything from a piece of artwork, an electronic reader such as a Kindle, a book, a piece of jewelry, a book, a hat, a postcard, a food item…you name it.  However, this object must be transportable, as I want you to bring it to class. During class you’ll promote this object to your classmates—in essence persuading us to want to “own” this object.  Come to class prepared to verbally persuade us.  Also, think about other techniques (beyond verbal persuasion) that could be used to promote this object to others and briefly mention some of those techniques in your oral presentation.  Plan to spend about five minutes making your presentation. (25 points)
  • Segment your brand – Analyze your internet presence. What can people (friends, family, potential employers) find out about you on the web? Go to http://www.scottmonty.com/ and click on “Where to Find Me.” If you don’t have a LinkedIn account, make one.  Build your network (ask me, your classmates, etc. to join your network). Write a 1-page analysis of your personal internet presence and be prepared to talk about it in class. (25 points)
  • Design and write an ad for your favorite thing. Come to class prepared to informally present your ad. You may create the ad however you wish (drawing, using a computer, cutting and pasting images, or any combination). For 10 points of extra credit, write a radio ad for the same product. (50 points)
  • Based on our discussions and your readings, create a Social Media Plan for a favorite product of a trusted adult in your life, such as your mother, mentor, religious leader or manager.

Integrated Marketing Communication Plan – As a small group of 2 to 4 students, develop and write a one-year communications plan–based on a product or service of your choice.  Give an oral business presentation of your final project during the final class session. Each component of the plan, as noted in your syllabus is worth 15 points for a total of 150 points. The final 50 points is based on your oral presentation and your final written report.

Read Full Post »

I love St. Kate’s.

When I teach — almost always women only — I know we talk about subjects that some students would find uncomfortable if there were men in the room. Is that enough of a reason for single-gender education? No, so tune in to MPR on Thursday, March 31st at 9am, to find out more.

Here is some information about tomorrow’s show, from Julie Michner, the Media and Public Relations Manager at St. Catherine University.

MPR’s Midmorning show with Kerri Miller will discuss single gender education this week as part of a week-long dialogue on educational issues.

The pro and con discussion of single gender education will feature:

Janet Hyde, Ph.D.,

Hyde is a Professor of Psychology and Women’s Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.  Here’s a link to a study she co-authored that said there was no gender-based differences in math performance. Here’s her page at University of Wisconsin, Madison.

Leonard Sax, Ph.D.

Sax is the founder and executive director of the National Association for Single Sex Public Education. His first book, Why Gender Matters: what parents and teachers need to know about the emerging science of sex differences was published in hardcover by Doubleday (2005) and in an expanded softcover edition by Random House (2006). His second book, Boys Adrift: The five factors driving the growing epidemic of unmotivated boys, was published by Basic Books in 2007; an expanded softcover edition was published in January 2009. His third book, Girls on the Edge: the four factors driving the new crisis for girls, will be published by Basic Books in April 2010. More information about Dr. Sax is available on his personal web page.

Interesting to me, from any point of view (Marketing, Educational, or otherwise), is that no one from St. Kate’s will be on the show, given that we are the largest college for women in the United States.

Read Full Post »

Today’s INDI 2090 Promotional Communications class discussed how we could reach our “buyers” with news of our social media plan.

Again, this was a hypothetical discussion using our university as the tool to facilitate my students’ mastery of one of their text books, The New Rules of Marketing and PR. From a teaching and learning perspective, it’s much easier to apply a new idea to something you already know well. For my students and me, our common knowledge base is St. Catherine University.

But first, I should define what I mean by “buyer.” From a marketing point of view, a buyer is anyone whose problems are solved by your product or service. That problem, in our case, could be anything from just wanting to catch up with your alma mater (alumnae), checking in what’s happening on campus (current students, faculty, and staff), or trying to decide on which college to attend (potential students and their families).

When you try to solve a buyer’s problem, you need to speak like your buyer — use their language, their phrasing, their style. We ran into this last week in class when searching for St. Kate’s in various social media.

The problem is that most people — all of my students, in any case — refer to our school as “St. Kate’s.” Our official name is Saint Catherine University. Our former name is the College of St. Catherine. On June 1, 2009 the school changed names to better ‘reflect its comprehensive nature.’ It makes complete sense to me. However, being known by multiple names to multiple buyers means people seek information differently.

Last week we couldn’t find the Flickr stream because we searched for “St. Kate’s.” This week we had trouble finding the YouTube channel because it’s listed as “StCatherineU.” However, when we searched for St. Kate’s on YouTube, we found some great videos, although many had nothing to do with us. When we searched for “St. Catherine University” having learned with our Flickr error, we found some really interesting videos from random Katies and university departments.

Our favorite is a rap from the Nursing Department.

It’s funny. It’s real. It’s unprofessional. It’s about patient safety — another interest of mine. It’s the kind of media that would make someone want to be a nurse and study at St. Kate’s. But it’s nowhere on the official St. Kate’s website (that we could find).

Our discussion today began as a way to get people talking and seeing our (hypothetical) work from last week. How could we use news releases — frequently, with content all our buyers wanted, on our website, and distributed through a newswire service — to tell people what we were doing if our work didn’t naturally go viral?

Our first step was to focus our website for our buyers vs. by categories (athletics, student life, outreach, admissions etc.) Our buyers are probably interested in all those things, but maybe not every part of each category. What if, instead, we had a prominent section labeled “Potential Students?” But, oops that’s probably not the best wording, it’s what a marketing instructor would call current high schools students. We’d be better off asking them what they look for on a website. Or at the very least, we could scout around (secondary research) other college websites to see if they are buyer or category focused.

A site I really like is Duke University’s. It’s photography vs. text heavy. The main picture changes every 2 to 3 seconds. In the large blue box in the bottom right hand corner is the tagline “Watch the videos. Read the stories.” The topic featured in that blue box changes along with the main photo, from things like “Outrageous Ambitions” to “Research Changes Lives.” Click on one of those and you jump to a brief, professional slideshow narrated by a current student obviously passionate about their subject. It’s brilliant–the students tell and show you why they are there.

Another great example of reaching out to “potential students” is Macalester College’sLife at Mac” section of their website. Like Duke’s, it relies heavily on video and student voices. It’s very current as well, with photos of snowball fights from 3 days ago.

This week, my students will blog about marketing St. Kate’s. I can’t wait to see and hear what they have to say.

Read Full Post »

Taking a cue from one of my students, Miss Angeleen, I’m just going to make a list of what I’d like to be writing about…

Read Full Post »

An update to my post from yesterday.

St. Catherine University is on Flickr.com, we just couldn’t find it last night. Here is the link to see some Katies in Action. One of my favorite sets of photos is here,– when St. Catherine University President Andrea J. Lee, IHM, sent the opening convocation to the Minnesota State Fair, all decked out in St. Kate’s Purple.

To learn more about St. Kate’s, just go to their News Page. In the upper left corner, there is a link to “Photo Collections.” Yeah, it’s there. We couldn’t find it yesterday, but we only took about 10 minutes to search on the web for St. Kate’s. We were scanning multiple web pages, going to likely sources (Facebook.com, Twitter.com etc) and we didn’t find this. We completely missed the Photostream on  Flickr.com. I think we must have searched for “St. Kate’s” in “groups” on Flickr instead of the more accurate St. Catherine University. Our mistake.

The photos are awesome, but they need to be findable. They need to be obvious. It’s these kind of images that bring the campus to life. My students would and did say, they need to be where prospective students are looking. Parents might go to the news page, but high school students would probably go to Student Life or Admissions.

Read Full Post »

Today I challenged my INDI 2090 Promotional Communications students to apply the principles of their textbook, The New Rules of Marketing and PR to our school, St. Catherine University.

We began with the Mission of the University because all marketing must support an organization’s goal. We chose a section of the Catholic Identity:

From its social tradition, with its consistent commitment to the poor and outcast, we value and reach out to those marginalized by our society and churches, and in particular, we seek to promote women’s leadership.

This belief infuses the university from the vision statement to the curriculum. From an admissions perspective, St. Kate’s reaches out to first generation college students and under-served members of the population. As a class, we chose to focus on this segment of the university’s mission, or ‘objective’ in marketing terms.

I challenged my students to create a viral marketing rave. We analyzed the current efforts — a fairly generic Facebook page, a private Twitter account, a variety of blogs (not cross linked), but no Flickr stream.

This is what we came up with.

Give Flip Cameras to 100 students:  athletes, admission ambassadors, student leaders, international students, and first generation college students

Ask them to record videos about

  • Their experiences at St. Kate’s
  • Day to Day Life at St. Kate’s
  • Just show their college life
  • Favorite parts of the campus
  • Social Life at the university
  • Answer the question, “What about boys?”

“Boys” always come up during tour groups. Someone always asks. Shouldn’t the answer to this be somewhere easy to find? Again, my students thought videoblogs of “where the boys are” (at the other ACTC schools) and where students socialize (on campus, in the Highland Village neighborhood etc.) would be helpful. Prospective students, if not their families, want to know where to find them. And they also want to know what it means to be in a single gender academic environment:  less distracting, easy to roll out of bed and go to class, and able to speak their minds.

Since we were reaching out to prospective students, our videos should also be “in language” — the tongue spoken by families at home. They should reference what’s also important to parents, such as safety, support, small class sizes, affordability and academic excellence.

My students theoretically created some great content, now they want to spread the word. Students suggested a more interactive Facebook presence, a YouTube channel, a directory of St. Kate’s voices via a blog directory, and frequent Tweets. They want to hear from Sister Andrea J. Lee, the President of St. Catherine University in a blog about what it means to be Catholic today.

Speaking of blogs, many people should be writing them. They should be easy to find on the website. There should be blogs about The Reflective Woman and Global Search for Justice and blogs from popular faculty, student leaders, athletes, international students, and staff about their life and work at St. Kate’s.

There are many proud and passionate voices at St. Catherine and this was just the work of 8 students and their instructor, this afternoon. My evening section took on the same passage and went a completely different route. I’ll write about them, tomorrow.

Lastly, my students agreed, all of these tools need to be linked and integrated. We found some information in a lot of different places on the web. It would be hard for  prospective students, employers, or donors to get a true feel for St. Kate’s as it is currently marketed on the web.

For instance, Monday, November 15th is “a one-day online giving campaign.” Donations up to $50,000 will be matched on a 1:1 basis all day long. It’s on the homepage of the website and as a faculty member, I received an email inviting me to donate. But it’s not on Facebook. It’s not being Tweeted. A Google Blog Search didn’t find a single blog mentioning it.

This is news! This is Big! People need to donate. I am, aren’t you?

Read Full Post »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 1,055 other followers

%d bloggers like this: