We’ve talked about it for months, but the need for these conversations hasn’t subsided: the Great Resignation is still going. According to sources within the Higher Education industry, professional staff turnover will continue to affect campuses, and by extension enrollment management teams, for yet another year.
It’s not just the staff resignations that are the problem, though: it’s also hiring qualified new staff. According to a survey conducted by The Chronicle of Higher Education and Huron Consulting Group in July 2022, college officials described their applicant pools for open positions as “shallow and weak,” with 78 percent reporting they have received fewer applications for open positions in the past year, and 82 percent pointing out there were “fewer applications from qualified candidates.” The prospects ahead are gloomy, but we might have a solution that you and your team can implement right away.
It’s time to turn to alternative applicant pools. Thankfully, any campus has one of those readily available: the current students.
We know this sounds a bit like putting a bandage on a leaking dam, but hear us out. With academia frequently in the news as faculty and staff seek greener pastures elsewhere, potential young professionals who might be considering entering the industry are left wondering if it is worth the effort.
In the past, becoming a higher education professional was a work of passion and purpose. Now, in a barely post-pandemic world changed for the long run, we need to go back to the basics. We could bring the conversations of passion and purpose back into hiring practices in a meaningful way by starting recruiting at home.
Getting the chance to represent your alma mater is an honor, and one that students take to heart. Case in point: pretty much any enrollment management professional out there. The vast majority of us started our careers as admissions tour guides, ambassadors, or callers, and we never stopped. Higher education has a way of training its own workforce and it’s time to remember that.
If you do not currently have a student ambassador program, read on. We are talking about more than simply hiring current students to give tours or take visiting families to lunch. A true ambassador or internship program can help alleviate pressure for your counseling and records staff right now while simultaneously investing in your staffing future. Empower your current students by training and treating them like professional employees, and upon graduation they will be far more likely to consider a career in Higher Ed because they will already have one.
Whether you have a program you would like to build on, or are starting from scratch, here are some useful tips:
In times of transition, starting something new while simply trying to stay float is tricky. A student ambassador program, however, could prove to be both a short-term and a long-term solution to many problems. When built with a robust curriculum, your student internship or ambassador program can prove to be a self-sustaining pipeline for new admissions counselors. While the turnover in our industry has often resembled a revolving door, in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic it feels like someone has taken the door off its hinges altogether.
The professional staff shortage is deepening. As one participant in the Chronicle survey put it, “You can’t just put an advertisement out and hope that people will respond to it.” An internship program can provide an immediate increase to your team’s bandwidth, while at the same time help you start building for the future in a proactive instead of reactive way. In a year where everyone is looking for a win, this could be a win-win.