Transcript Slide 1

Branding 101: Finding your Niche
Dr. Margaret (Peg) McManus
Dr.David Chapman
Dr. Paul H. Benson
“13 Reasons Colleges are in this
Mess1,”
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Many colleges and universities in financial
trouble
Reasons include #9
“Failed to Find a Niche”
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“Small private colleges that have failed to differentiate
themselves will face increasing obstacles as the student
population shrinks.”
Colleges should define their market position, within the
college’s mission
1 March 13, 20009, Vol LV, Number 27,
http://chronicle.com/weekly/v55/i27/27100101.htm
Panelists:
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Peg McManus, La Salle University
David Chapman, Samford University
Mary Healy, Springfield College
Paul Benson, University of Dayton
Branding at La Salle University
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Overview
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Branding Process
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Issues
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Best Practices
La Salle University
Philadelphia, PA
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7,331 students, 300 full-time faculty
Urban, comprehensive, Master’s II
De La Salle Christian Brothers University
http://www.lasalle2.org/
The La Salle Brand
“is the culmination of more than 300 years of
spiritual and intellectual enlightenment, the
true La Salle brand experience is lived and
breathed every day…”
La Salle University Brand Book
Branding Process
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Strategic Plan (2001)
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Goal: Communicate our distinct identity
(“branding”)
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Research: What is our identity?
Brand Research
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Dehne Report (2002)
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Key messages and language from stakeholders
Integrated Marketing Themes
(2003)
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Marketing Task Force
(2002-05)
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15 members from various constituencies
Integrated Marketing Task Force
(2006-08)
Planning Advisory Board
(2008 – present)
Marketing Themes
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Themes
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Connection to the City of Philadelphia and the
region
Connection of theory to practice
Education for the greater good, that is,
Service to the poor
Positioning Statement (2003)
La Salle University is a dynamic educational community shaped by
traditional Catholic and Lasallian values: a deep respect for each
individual, a belief that intellectual and spiritual development go hand
in hand, a passion for creative teaching and learning, and a conviction
that education should be useful—for personal growth, professional
advancement and service to others.
The University’s environment fosters students’ involvement in their own
education, both inside and outside the classroom; supports and
challenges them; engages and empowers them, all with the goal of
providing a transforming experience, one that will ensure their lifelong
association with La Salle.
Graphic Identity (2006)
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Branding book
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All messages about the University should be
consistent
Core values provide a framework for students to
live rewarding lives
Visual identity is one aspect of the brand
Brand Guidelines
University Logo
University Logo and Tag
Line
Coat of Arms
Athletics Logo
“Ideation” sessions (2008)
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Consulting firm engaged
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Discussion of “our promise” and “reasons to
believe”
Brand Leadership Team (2009)
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Faculty and administrators
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Monthly meetings with consultant
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Consultants also meets with individuals and
groups
Strategic Plan (2009)
The Will to Excel
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Managing enrollment
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“Improve communications between Enrollment Services and the
campus community by increasing the level of engagement among
University constituents in the University-wide branding initative
and integrated marketing communication efforts”
Integrating mission
Revised Positioning Statement
(2008)
La Salle University is a dynamic educational community shaped by
Catholic and Lasallian values: a deep respect for each individual, a
belief that intellectual and spiritual development go hand in hand, a
passion for creative teaching and learning, and a conviction that
education should be useful—for personal growth, professional
advancement and service to others.
The University’s environment fosters students’ involvement in their own
education, both inside and outside the classroom; supports and
challenges them; engages and empowers them, all with the goal of
providing a transforming experience, one that will ensure their lifelong
association with La Salle.
La Salle University
Brand
Promise
La Salle University is inspired by St. John Baptist de La Salle, the
patron saint of teachers, and is shaped by Lasallian and Catholic
values. The La Salle University experience prepares students for a
lifetime of personal development, service, and success.
Reasons to
Believe
Excellence in
Teaching and
Learning
Personal
Attention
Sense of
Community
Global
Perspective
Proof Points
Examples at
University, School, Department or Individual levels
Tagline
Never stop exploring
BrandED Consultants Group, 2009
Issues
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Additional, unnecessary work
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Resistance to change
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Overemphasis of brand
Best Practices
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Build on a culture you already have
Reach out to wider circles
Incorporate the brand/mission into every
speech
Live the brand continually
Deliver the brand to the constituents
About Samford University
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Founded in 1841 (one of the 100 oldest
schools in the nation)
About Samford University
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Name change in 1965 (from Howard College
to Samford University)
Relatively small enrollment (4600 students),
but 8 schools (Arts and Sciences, Business,
Education, Arts, Law, Pharmacy, Nursing,
Divinity)
Frequent confusion with Stanford and
Stamford
Rounding Up the Strays
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Proliferation of brands on campus
Failure to tie brands to university
Lack of clarity about university image
History of autonomy in the professional
schools
Antagonism between Office of
Communications and other units at the
university
You Make Me Feel Brand New
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Developed in the Office of Communications
Focus on the traditional belltower logo
Met with opposition from some deans
Met with derision by some faculty
Old style
New style
Battle of the Brands
We did get a sneak peek at the new logos,
which I refer to in my email below, but that
was the extent of it. None of the details of the
policy (like the color pallet which is the subject
of my email below) were discussed. Yet, UR
continues to leverage the approval of UC, which
is simply inaccurate. Second, our school had a
representative on the branding committee who
has confided in me that that committee was
left out of many of the details that are now
tripping us up, yet the folks (specifically A and
B) continue to propagate the notion that all had
signed off on the new policy.
We’ve Been Dis-Branded!
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Existing logos academic insignias or logos that
will continue *:
Ida V. Moffett School of Nursing
McWhorter School of Pharmacy
Orlean Bullard Beeson School of Education and
Professional Studies
Beeson Divinity School
Bulldog (official athletics logo)
Samford athletics wordmark
Existing logos/insignias/wordmarks that may
continue or be redesigned within new identity
guidelines:
Resource Center for Pastoral Excellence
Student Government Association
Children’s Learning Center
WVSU-FM
University Ministries
Samford Outdoor Summer Adventure
Public Safety Office
Community Banking School
Alabama Governor’s School
Student involvement logos that exist with varying
uses of the old belltower logo and/or Samford
University wordmark but were not designed by
office of communication
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Logos/insignias/wordmarks to be eliminated or
redesigned within new identity guidelines:
Beeson Scholars
University Fellows
DeVotie Legacy Society
Samford Auxiliary
Career Development Center
Davis Lectures
Office of International Studies
Evening Degree Program
Exercise Science and Sports Medicine
Vulcan Materials Center
HEAL (Healthcare, Ethics and Law Institute)
Oak Mountain Interpretive Center
Residence Life
Student Health Services
The Global Center
Samford Wireless
LEAD Scholars
Christian Women’s Leadership Center
Interlocking SU
Being Completely Under-Branded
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School brands v University brands
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Color distinctions
Schools with approved academic insignia (nursing, pharmacy, divinity, education) as of 1/1/09 may
use those insignia only in conjunction with the official belltower logo for the university or their
school. The insignia cannot be larger than the official belltower logo.
Academic units and other program areas may, from time to time, develop logos for use in specific
situations. These logos must identify the program as related to Samford University and must be used
in conjunction with the official university logo. These should not be used singularly to identify
Samford University. Requests for such logos must be reviewed and approved in advance with the
office of communication. (Office of Communications)
One Brand Thing After Another
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Compromises were acceptable
Faculty unconcerned
University is better served
Branding at the University of Dayton
UD: Fundamental characteristics
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Founded in 1850 by the Society of Mary (Marianists)
Largest private university in Ohio:
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6800 undergraduates (95% residential)
3200 graduate students
Top-ten Catholic research university ($96.5M in FY09)
Mission-based emphasis on service and leadership
through community-building
“Large-small” character
Five academic units: Arts and Sciences, Business,
Education and Allied Professions, Engineering, Law
UD mission
The University of Dayton is a comprehensive
Catholic university, a diverse community
committed, in the Marianist tradition, to educating
the whole person and to link learning and
scholarship with leadership and service.
History and purposes of the initiative
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Embedded in planning processes: Vision of Excellence /
Strategic Plan / Campus Master Plan (2005-07)
Appointment of new VPs in Enrollment Management and in
Advancement (2006-07)
Three primary motivations for the branding initiative:
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To build more robust, national applicant pool
To continue to raise academic profile and increase diversity
To focus communications strategy for $360M campaign
Deeper cultural context
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Transition to first lay president (2002); faster pace of
decision making, greater national aspirations
Humble, egalitarian, inclusive ethos of the Marianists
Decentralized, relational campus culture; history of
departmental autonomy in communications
Conservative fiscal management
Some products of the branding
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Once-Quiet U. of Dayton Pushes a Bold Brand
“The Roman Catholic college has a splashy new
campaign to update its image and reach more students –
and it’s working.” [Chronicle, Sept. 12, 2008]
UD Undergraduate Admissions web site
Results
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30% increase in applications from 2007 to 2008
20-25% annual increases in campus visits in both 2008
and 2009
Substantial increases in proportion of out-of-state
applications
30% annual increase in diverse student populations
“Dad, I never knew that you worked at such a cool
university.”
Seven questions for a branding initiative
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Is the initiative grounded in and guided by
academically meaningful values and strategic
institutional goals?
Will the creators of the branding campaign take time
to understand the university’s values, mission, and
culture, and then convey that identity with integrity?
How will inherent tensions between the language of
marketing and the guiding values of the liberal arts
and sciences be addressed?
Seven questions for a branding initiative
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To what extent does the institutional culture require
significant faculty involvement in decisions about
university communications?
Are the objectives and scope of the branding initiative
well defined?
Can the consultants be trusted to execute the
initiative with high quality? Will they respond to
campus input?
Are the financial costs of the initiative acceptable,
given competing priorities?
Questions?
Peg McManus
Associate Dean, School of Arts and Sciences
La Salle University
[email protected]
215-951-1042
David Chapman
Dean, Howard College of Arts and Sciences
Samford University
[email protected]
Paul H. Benson
Dean,College of Arts and Sciences
University of Dayton
[email protected]