Sunday, December 7, 2008

What Career Are You? Part 1

Content can make all the difference




Davenport University works with a vendor that supplies "recruitment solutions" for higher ed admissions, one of these being a "your-school-here" mini DVD to be handed out at college fairs, etc. that are guaranteed to practically flood your website with leads.

Our first DVD, created last year, was five screens of copy and artwork we supplied to the vendor (plus art for the sleeve). It consisted of:

  • Repurposed video and a few photos (deadlines and budget didn't allow us to shoot anything new)
  • Copy with links to "Apply," "Visit" and, most important to a lead form, hosted by the vendor, that we could pull lead data from
We set up dedicated urls for tracking and waited for leads to pour in. None of it mattered in the end, however, because not many of the DVDs got into the field (long story). And from those few thousand that did, we tracked oh, fewer than 20 (yes, 20) 30 visits to any of our pages, including the vendor's lead form. What went wrong? Take your pick:
  • A complicated snafu prevented the DVDs from getting into the hands of prospective students
  • The basic vendor template is boring and to craft anything better would mean a significant upcharge
  • DVDs are just so 1999

If you chose all the above you'd be correct. But we felt like a big problem was also a lack of compelling content.

So this time (we're in year two of a three-year contract) we decided to go beyond the vendor template and create something more. Yes, we still did the five screens of photos, copy and video snips. But we added a twist - something that users of all ages eat up on the interwebs - a link to an interactive quiz hosted off the DVD on the davenport.edu domain.

Introducing What Career Are You?


Go ahead and admit it. You've filled out at least one online quiz in your life. Whether to find a soulmate or the right diet for your body type, we've all done it. If you have a Facebook page, you know how popular quizzes are. And if any of your FB friends are in the same demographic as prospective students, you've seen how these things can spread.

Since DU is a career-oriented university, we thought it would be cool to deliver a quiz that gave prospects an idea of which DU programs might lead to careers they'd be interested in.



A few years back, Admissions had created a paper-based questionnaire loosely based on a Meyers-Briggs type of test that matched personality traits to career choices. So we had the basic structure of our quiz; it just fell to the web team to turn it into something interactive, which they did, using Drupal. Add in fun graphics and a little Flash from designer Josh, and voila! A fun - even useful - quiz.

The "Nexters" quiz, as we call it internally, offers a peek into personality traits and shows the kinds of DU programs that might match particular personality types. The program results are delivered - in exchange for a name and email address - in a sort of tag cloud, with the strongest matches in bigger, bolder type. Of course the results are "just for fun," but they do show the array of DU's programs, along with making some suggestions about what a prospect might be interested in studying.






Next - Part Two: How are we doing?



(If you take the quiz, please type Test after your first and last name so we don't contact you!)

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