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major US universities found that various non-academic aspects, for instance athletics, contributed
greatly to their reputations.
However, marketing and advertising has to be done with caution and questioning.
Advertising is an insidious and implicit attack on our ability to develop as a human being and more
difficult to isolate and defend against education consumerism (Lippke, 1989). If marketing
practices involve consumerism, as Hunt (2007) suggest, an exercise of ethical practical judgment
is required. It requires the development of enduring relationships between stakeholders to the
judgmental decision (Gibbs, 2006)
Ethical marketing throughout an institution requires professional ethics, institutional
ethical policy statements that include values and principles and ethical culture of collegiality and
fairness (Gibbs & Murphy, 2006).
Marketing and Advertising Higher Education, Trends and Competition
A combination of factors over the past forty years has contributed to colleges and
universities to start a race o marketing efforts. Since early 1970’s Congress could not continue to
support research and growth in higher education as it has done in the 1950’s and 1960’s (Bok,
2
003; Zemsky, Wegner, and Massy, 2005). As a result, among the economic downturn, rapid
inflation and raised unemployment, the number of student started to decline.
Colleges and universities had to retool their strategies and a new kind of higher education
began to emerge. Competition from for-profit organizations started up; in an effort to reduce cost
and be more efficient, online platforms were used by successful models such as University of
Phoenix, American InterContinental University and DeVry University. Traditional colleges and
universities had to adapt and respond or risk losing students. They had to overcome the adverse
environment with new techniques and strategies in a form of marketing and advertising. The
strategic marketing plan started to be considered a critical component of the organizations
academic mission (Hesel, 2004; Keller, 1983). Good marketing knows the product, it understands
the price structure, and it understands how to appeal to consumers based on what is for sale (Kotler,
1
999). Good marketing is well researched, highly coordinated, and professionally delivered
(McCarthy, 1960). The competition for students is real and so too must be the response. Resources
in higher education are always scarce; tight budgets and increased scrutiny require that every dollar
be spent wisely and with the greatest chance for maximized returns (Anctil, 2008).
Direct Mail
With the exception of some elites institutions, most colleges and universities are battling
for enrollment. As a result, marketing and advertisement have become key aspects of institutional
strategy. A study on today’s American colleges and universities reveals that most presidents and
their advertising personnel choose direct mailing as the single most effective medium for student
recruitment (Burdesnki & Shanklin, 1987).
It was shown that direct mail is used for recruitment strategy as its most essential use, but
also for fund raising, marketing continuing education programs and keeping alumni informed.
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