fbpx
Market intelligence for international student recruitment from ICEF
18th Jun 2019

Emotion-based branding strategy connects feelings to actions

Let’s say you have a fantastic wordmark. Expertly designed marketing collateral. Website navigation that’s intuitive and clever. Your brand is in good shape then, right? 

Not necessarily, according to brand strategist Richard Gillingwater, who was a featured speaker at the 2018 EAIE annual conference in Geneva. Mr Gillingwater contends that if a school brand doesn’t trigger emotion, students and other stakeholders will not act in a way that benefits the school. They won’t be interested in it and they won’t engage with the school’s programmes and services. By contrast, a school that can inspire real feeling among students will be able to create an active, dynamic, exciting bond that can be leveraged in different ways and over time.

We feel, therefore we act

Mr Gillingwater’s presentation centred on a concept known as “emotional branding,” which is based on the belief that consumers feel more than think about brands. When a school inspires strong, positive feeling among students, it is often because it has demonstrated that it understands their needs and reflects and even amplifies their personality, style, and identity. Emotional branding is a powerful lever for purchasing and loyalty over time.To stimulate a desired feeling among students, institutions must discover the answers to three questions:
  1. What are the needs of our students? Ask current students for help in pinpointing these. Needs might include: “I need to make friends while studying abroad,” “I need this programme to lead to a job I want,” “I need to be able to speak English proficiently for my career.”
  2. What emotions do we want to inspire at every brand touchpoint? Maybe it’s excitement. Curiosity. A sense of being part of something cool and important. Whatever the emotion, the brand should strongly evoke it.
  3. When we look at our marketing and the way we interact with our student and stakeholder communities, are we reflecting their needs and is there a tangible feeling that this outreach produces? Or are we merely producing information, with nothing really wrong about it but nothing wonderful, either? If so, it will all feel flat and limited in its ability to generate action.
With those answers in hand, consider how the needs of students and the desired emotion can be demonstrated through storytelling, dialogue, and imagery across all business touchpoints, for example:
  • The website
  • Social media channels
  • Virtual tours and video
  • Student fairs
  • Admissions staff
  • Welcome centres
  • Orientation week
  • Newsletters
As Mr Gillingwater says, ensuring that the same brand story is told at every opportunity makes it more likely that the brand will define itself and resonate among students at every step of the enrolment funnel.

Students want experiences, not services

Emotional branding at its best evokes an experience and a sense of community – rather than a specific product or service. It uses storytelling rather than simply description, and it asks for collaboration and conversation with students. Student testimonials, videos, expertly managed social media channels, and personalised emails are some of the ways schools can activate emotion.Mr Gilligwater spoke about his work with the prestigious British boys school, Radley College, to illustrate his point. He noted that Radley executives were pleased with the concept of “True Greatness Is Within” to evoke the school brand, but that in and of itself, that slogan was not enough. Mr Gillingwater showed the audience a powerful video that brought the idea to life, infusing the concept with emotion, and one that positioned Radley as a nucleus and starting point for boys who would go on to be powerful and engaged citizens able to make a real impact on the world. This story would then inspire all marketing and communications, allowing the school to reach out to various stakeholder and student groups with the same emotional core concept.

Five ways to think about emotional branding

Mr Gillingwater summarised his presentation with five points schools can use as an anchor in their emotional branding strategies:
  • It’s not what you say, it’s how you make people feel;
  • Tune into your own emotions and assess the strength of your emotion when you look over your marketing and communications – if you don’t feel anything, chances are your students won’t either;
  • Build experiences in collaboration with communities;
  • Define how you want to make people feel;
  • Find ways to activate these feelings and be on the lookout for what may be disconnecting students from this experience.
Finally, Mr Gillingwater noted, look for ways to go one step further with students to make sure they really feel special. That extra effort might just be what differentiates you from the competition and provokes the actions that most benefit your brand.For additional background, please see:

Most Recent

  • Test Read More
  • International education has a data problem. It’s time to do something about it Read More
  • Criticism mounts as Australian Senate committee hears it is “wrong to go ahead” with ESOS amendments bill as is Read More

Most Popular

  • Recent policy changes slowing student interest in the UK, Canada, and Australia Read More
  • Germany confirms increase in proof-of-funds requirements for student visa applicants Read More
  • New Zealand expands work rights for accompanying dependants of foreign students Read More

Because you found this article interesting

International education has a data problem. It’s time to do something about it Editor’s note: The following piece draws heavily on commentary and insights from industry leaders speaking at the ICEF...
Read more
In a time of shifting student demand, a speedy response to enquiries is a must Prospective international students are easily frustrated when they receive sub-par responses to the questions they send to schools...
Read more
University websites: How can we make them better for international student recruitment? The following is a guest post by Guus Goorts, and is excerpted with permission from his forthcoming book,...
Read more
How diverse is the international student population in leading study abroad destinations? The last time we looked in on the distribution of nationalities in four top study destinations, we reported...
Read more
Recent policy changes slowing student interest in the UK, Canada, and Australia Studyportals has shared new research on LinkedIn showing that many prospective international students are setting their sights on...
Read more
New Zealand aims to double value of education exports by 2027 Education New Zealand (ENZ) announced this week that the country has set an ambitious goal to grow its...
Read more
Germany confirms increase in proof-of-funds requirements for student visa applicants The German government has confirmed a modest increase in proof-of-funds requirements for the 2024/25 academic year. Since 1...
Read more
New Zealand expands work rights for accompanying dependants of foreign students Immigration New Zealand has expanded the eligibility for work visas for partners of some foreign students in the...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links