MBA Admissions: Strictly Business

Students Influence Business School Brands

July 22, 2011 RSS Feed Print
  • Comment (2)

What brand image comes to mind when you think of Harvard Business School? Is it the same image for the Haas School of Business at the University of California—Berkeley, or the University of Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business? Every elite management program has its own distinct brand, which has relatively little to do with rankings or test scores and everything to do with the school's culture and mindset.

[See U.S. News's rankings of Best Business Schools.]

Then along came social media, a seismic disturbance to the status quo. In today's über-networked world, business schools no longer have any ability to control their brand image in cyberspace.

The latest issue of Graduate Management News takes a look at this intersection of students, social media, school branding, and admissions. At the Graduate Management Admission Council's annual conference last month in Boston, panel moderator Rich D'Amato, GMAC's vice president of global communications, confirmed what business schools have long feared: The school is no longer the sole source of news, and the story is in the hands of students and faculty in ways it hasn't been before. To address that new reality, the conference hosted three distinct sessions related to using the latest social media tools.

A session titled "Lose Control, Get Attention: The Art of Getting Noticed in a Socially Networked News Cycle" covered the overlapping worlds of mainstream and social media, as well as the importance of authentic student voices in social media. D'Amato told admissions and other business school professionals that schools need to "engage the social media space directly, consistently, openly, and happily…otherwise, the school's story, news, and brand will wind up under someone else's control."

[See how business schools are trying to shatter the glass ceiling.]

Panelist Omar Wasaw, a Harvard Ph.D. candidate and internet pioneer, urged attendees to recast their thinking of the issue, saying: "It's not so much losing control—it's that your role is changing from facilitator to director…The trick is, how do you create the infrastructure and get out of the way?"

Tom Rose, a recent graduate of the MIT Sloan School of Management who spoke on the panel with classmate Miro Kazakoff, called student voices in social media "unmined gold" for business schools. Both said endorsements from MIT alumni found through social media were a major factor in their decisions to enroll. The duo started the irreverent video blog The M.B.A. Show while at Sloan, and as Kazakoff acknowledged, "Despite our silliness, we realize we are yoked to our school."

Whether the content comes from school-hosted student blogs, independent M.B.A. student bloggers, YouTube videos, Twitter, or on Facebook, business schools must accept that the fastest way to update their brand is to relinquish control of it. At last year's Social Integration Conference in New York, HBS's Chief Marketing and Communications Officer Brian Kenny noted that the benefits of using these platforms to promote faculty work and outreach to prospective students outweigh the occasional run-ins with inappropriate—or downright embarrassing—content.

[See 5 unique uses of Twitter in the classroom.]

Panelist Ken White, executive director of marketing communications at the University of Maryland Smith School of Business, thinks schools shouldn't worry too much about what students may say or do via social media channels. Business students have made a considerable investment in order to benefit from a certain school brand and culture. They recognize that their personal brands and the school's brand are intertwined—and the stronger the school's brand, the stronger their own, White said.

Making that connection between the school's and the students' brands is vital, because the truth is, the school is its customers (i.e., the students). The top M.B.A. programs wouldn't be positioned as they are if not for the graduates who have gone on to do great things. As Wasaw noted at the conference, current students have a stake in the quality of future students. Therefore, they do own and should influence the brand.

Tags:
business school,
Harvard University,
MIT,
GMAT,
college admissions

Reader Comments Read all comments (2)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

All business / MBA education is going online video now…see sites like http://www.clickok.org ; sure, Harvard and the top Business Schools benefit from brand, network etc, but if you’re not going to one of those then these are good alternatives.

James of IN 4:20PM August 01, 2011

SIS encourages students to dabble in a variety of activities that leads to all-round development and a more healthy and open attitude. The focus is on grooming the students as responsible global citizens, while retaining the Indian ethos. SIS has unique Day Boarding and Weekly Boarding facility for students.

sonyaseo1987 8:03AM July 26, 2011

MBA Admissions: Strictly Business

Stacy Blackman launched her MBA admissions consulting company in 2001 and has since helped thousands of clients gain admission to the most selective business schools in the world, many with merit scholarships. Blackman is the author of The MBA Application Roadmap: The Essential Guide to Getting Into a Top Business School, and has published a series of online guides which contain in depth guidance on the admissions process at top schools. Blackman has degrees from both the Wharton School of Business and the Kellogg Graduate School of Management. Got a question? E-mail her at strictlybusiness@usnews.com.

advertisement

Grad School Search

The GRE® Tests: Get the Facts

Find a GRE® test center location near you at takethegre.com.

How many test locations are there around the world?

A. 275

B. 463

C. about 700

D. approx. 550

Submit
Answer: C. about 700

There are about 700 test locations in 160 countries. Find a location near you.

Knowledge Centers

Looking at grad schools? Find out what you need to know.

advertisement