Home > Marketing & Media Services > Marketing/PR
Marketing tool kit
Photographic coverage for your event, program, professional use, etc.
Speechwriting tips
Plan your media event
Media coverage and placement
Prepare a brochure, exhibit, presentation, or annual report
Write effective news releases Marketing and branding—what are they, anyway?
Need to have photos taken? Get coverage of college events, programs, courses, faculty, staff, and students for use in a variety of publications, exhibits, presentations, as well as for news media or professional use.
To schedule the college’s photographer, Edwin Remsberg, contact him at remsberg@umd.edu or 301-405-9235 or contact Loc Hoang at lochoang@umd.edu or 301-405-2915.
USDA’s Communicator’s Guide, "Effective Speeches," has tips on:
We can help plan, organize, and facilitate press conferences, news media open houses, and other media events. Contact Marketing and Media Services director Loc Hoang at lochoang@umd.edu or 301-405-2915 or contact Pam Townsend at pbt@umd.edu or 301-405-4595.
We prepare news releases, alerts, and tip sheets to generate media coverage of the college's most newsworthy academic, outreach, and research programs and initiatives. Read our most recent news releases. Burrelle's Chesapeake Media Directory is our primary source of news media contacts. Names you and others provide supplement this list. Send us names, addresses, phone numbers, etc., of local reporters and editors you’ve worked with.
When to Contact Marketing & Media Relations
We promote or publicize the college’s programs, accomplishments, and activities of potential regional, statewide, or national interest. If you answer yes to at least two of the following questions, contact us for assistance:For help or more information, contact Marketing and Media Services director Loc Hoang at lochoang@umd.edu or 301-405-2915 or contact Pam Townsend at pbt@umd.edu or 301-405-4595.
We design and produce brochures, exhibits, presentations, and annual reports to promote the college, Extension, and research, from broad initiatives to specific programs. Contact Marketing and Media Services director Loc Hoang at lochoang@umd.edu or 301-405-2915 or contact Pam Townsend at pbt@umd.edu or 301-405-4595.
Marketing is NOT just advertising or selling, a common misconception, says Tom Hayes, a top higher-education marketing expert.
Marketing IS applied psychology. This means EVERYONE at the college is responsible for marketing (even physical plant people). For example, parents of a prospective student ask someone on campus for directions. That person represents the institution and leaves a positive or negative impression.
Good marketing requires that you deliver what students/clients are looking for. Which means market research is vital. Marketing begins and ends with research because you are not your customer. What are people looking for? What do they expect? Did they receive it? Are they satisfied?
You can monitor environments and influence intermediaries, such as parents, guidance counselors, and ministers. Know who your competitors are (What can you offer that they can’t? What is unique about what you offer?) Repeat your core message over and over again. Tailor your message to the group you’re talking to. Customer expectations are going up. Realize that your website is the no. 1 source for prospective student information and is second only to high school guidance counselors when it comes to influencing a prospective student’s decision about where to go to college.
Total program marketing includes everything you do from answering the telephone, to posting signs identifying your office, to planning interpretation events for key leaders, to holding the county recognition banquet. All of these—and more—can work for you in marketing your total program.
Another way to look at marketing is to think about it as strategic communication—that is, communication with a specific goal in mind. It differs from publicity, which is attracting media attention and reporting, public relations, which focuses on creating a feeling of good will towards an organization, and promotion, which is offering incentives to engage in the organization. When we market our program, we construct our message to produce a specific response in the people who receive it.
Credit: Elizabeth Gregory and Ellen Ritter. Texas A & M University, College Station, Texas.
In essence, marketing is delivering value to your customers or clients. Marketing means always focusing on your clients’ needs and desires. Educators and agents in the field instinctively know their job is to find a need and devise services and products to meet that need. Which is also part of the marketing process.
The next step is defining your target audience and figuring out how best to appeal to it. This can involve word of mouth, letters, emails, posters, flyers, brochures, radio spots, newspaper ads, etc. Using a marketing mix—a combination of marketing tools—increases the likelihood your audience will get your message.
That’s key, however, is that your message convey how what you have to offer is of value to your audience. Picture someone trying to persuade you to attend a meeting. You want to know what you’ll get out of the experience. In other words, “what’s in it for me?” Announcing that a program or seminar is taking place isn’t enough. Your program might be great and probably is, but how does your audience know that?
Last, you need to follow through on your promise and deliver the value.
So, marketing isn’t any one thing. It’s more like a process. And it starts and ends with delivering value to your audience.
What Tom Hayes, an expert in college marketing, has to say:
Your brand should be
Branding begins at home!
Brands:
Brand strength is developed by creatively delivering the brand promise. How?
Too often people believe a strong brand identity is only something that gets people to buy, refer others…These are all external.
Brand identity can help an organization understand its basic values and purpose.
You can’t achieve a vision that you don’t understand and don’t want to live with.
How it affects the employee
How it affects the public
How it makes the institution stronger
Internet
Publications
Speeches
For more information, contact Ginny Gerhart
Last updated: 04/2/2008