Skip to main content

Why Convenience Boosts Student Campus Life

In an earlier column, I predicted that convenience will rule higher ed; today, inconvenience has overtaken it.

Raised on quick responses from smartphones, social media, instant messaging and immediate-access entertainment sites, today’s students live in an on-demand world.

Just try calling your college’s general number to see what happens. Good luck! Your first encounter may be: “No one is here right now to take your call, but if you leave your name and number someone will get back to you shortly”—a sign of dysfunctional inconvenience caused by school bureaucracy, with each unit’s requirements coming first, before student convenience. A fairly common occurrence at many of the nation’s colleges and universities.

On the opposite end of the inconvenience spectrum are companies who have honed their customer service through thousands of interactions to create enterprise level support. Some weeks ago, I had trouble figuring out how to open an account at a nearby company, so I went online and clicked the firm’s number I found on its homepage. “I’d like to open an account,” I said, explaining to a recorded message what I had in mind. Soon afterward, I was on my way with the information I needed.

My call to this company did not go to a telephone receptionist working for, say, human resources or information technology, but to a voice-activated program representing all the company’s departments—a customer-centric service equipped to respond to any question. That’s why my query was handled quickly, accurately and conveniently—unlike the type of support you may find at a college call center.

“Higher education has not yet figured it out,” Peggy McCready, Associate Vice President for IT Services and Support at Northwestern University, recently told me. “Service and support at universities are not up to the level of personalization we’ve grown accustomed to at the drugstore, where your prescription is refilled automatically and you’re reminded when you haven't picked it up.” One reason for this is that colleges and universities are often radically decentralized, making the standard of service different across campus departments and sectors.

“Siloed university units are dinosaurs that are fast becoming extinct,” predicts Ryan Craig in Forbes. “By getting rid of organizational silos and focusing on how to best serve students—from applicants’ first interactions through decades as alumni—students and universities win.”

Students are often baffled by the dizzying academic options confronting them in the school catalog, puzzled as to what program or course to choose. But figuring out how to navigate non-academic departments and services can be equally bewildering.

That’s why nearly two years ago, Arizona State University launched a mobile app, an online one-stop-shop, helping students maneuver on-campus services and decisively providing robust student engagement. I logged on and was dazzled by how simple and easy it was to locate nearly everything students might need.

With just one click, students can access the school's academic calendar, library or any one of dozens of other sites. Students can view campus maps showing bus routes, stops and schedules, as well as shuttle services. They can even click on entertainment options available right on the app. Troubled students can even call ASU’s Counseling Services to speak directly to a counselor—without an appointment. Convenience and compassion on a mobile phone.

Many colleges, aware of the changing needs of the student population today, are installing collaborative maker spaces, student-run print shops, convenience stores, and in a science-fiction departure at UC Berkeley, robot-run food delivery to busy students.

A food delivering KiwiBot at UC Berkeley. (Photo Credit: Sydney Johnson)
...colleges that recognize that convenience also has a heart, showing kindness and respect for students, may partly stall an expected enrollment slide this fall.

Raised on quick responses from smartphones, social media, instant messaging and immediate-access entertainment sites, today’s students live in an on-demand world. Click on anything and get it immediately. It’s a world in which no one needs to wait in line anymore, or even go somewhere to shop. A world in which Amazon will send you any product you're looking for from the largest virtual mall ever imagined.

The doorman in my apartment building no longer sits amiably at his station, pleasantly greeting residents and visitors; he’s now a shipping clerk, barricaded by giant stacks of pale brown cardboard boxes, many printed with a long black curve of a smile. With the massive amount of deliveries being made, every day is Christmas in my building.

When they return to campus, to pick-up their packages, students at many schools can hop over to a spot where the college has installed Intelligent Lockers, found in some school cafeterias, dorms or at student centers. These lockers are safe, contactless and accessible 24/7—an especially helpful convenience for busy students and professors. Recipients are automatically notified when packages are ready and gaining access is as easy as punching in a code or scanning a phone.

A lobby with a bank of Intelligent Lockers (Photo credit: Pitney Bowes)

Some think convenience is just another mean-spirited scam to get consumers to spend money faster on foolish things, but colleges that recognize that convenience also has a heart, showing kindness and respect for students, may partly stall an expected enrollment slide this fall.

Noted Columbia University legal scholar, Tim Wu, has called convenience, "the most underestimated and least understood force in the world today” and “perhaps the most powerful force shaping our individual lives and our economies.”


To learn more about self-service pickup and how it can help deliver on-demand student services visit Pitney Bowes and download The New Parcel Management eBook: Higher Ed Edition


Robert Ubell is vice dean emeritus of online learning at NYU’s Tandon School of Engineering. A collection of his essays on virtual education, Going Online, is published by Routledge. He can be reached at bobubell@gmail.com.



Udimi - Buy Solo Ads from EdSurge Articles https://ift.tt/2YHR5cu
via IFTTT

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

9 VCs in Madrid and Barcelona discuss the COVID-19 era and look to the future

Spain’s startup ecosystem has two main hubs: Madrid and Barcelona. Most observers place Barcelona first and Madrid second, but the gap appears to close every year. Barcelona has benefitted from attracting expats in search of sun, beach and lifestyle who tend to produce more internationally minded startups. Madrid’s startups have predominantly been Spain or Latin America-focused, but have become increasingly international in nature. Although not part of this survey, we expect Valencia to join next year, as city authorities have been going all-out to attract entrepreneurs and investors. The overall Spanish ecosystem is generally less mature than those in the U.K., France, Sweden and Germany, but it has been improving at a fast clip. More recently, entrepreneurs in Spain have moved away from emulating success in pursuit of innovative technologies. Following the financial crisis, the Spanish government supported the creation of startups with the launch of FOND-ICO GLOBAL, a €1.5 billi

How to Stay Creative and Keep SEO in Mind

Information Technology Blog - - How to Stay Creative and Keep SEO in Mind - Information Technology Blog Search engine optimization (SEO) refers to customizing your website’s content to ensure that web browsers give your website a high SEO score. The sites with the highest SEO scores are featured on the search engine’s first page of search results for relevant searches.  71%  of the click-throughs happen with articles listed on the first page of results on the search engine. This means that if your website’s article is the second (or third, or fourth page), it’s less likely the search user will even see your article. You want your article to be ranking as close to the top of the first page of results as possible. In order to have a good SEO score your site’s content needs to feature keywords and relevant phrases. It must be optimized for easy navigation between pages. It also needs to be referenced via external links that drive traffic to your site. Incorporating all of these elem

Everything we know about HHS Protect, a secretive government project with Peter Thiel's Palantir that helps brief Trump's coronavirus task force

A secretive project at the US Department of Health and Human Services is working with technology companies to collect and analyze data related to the novel coronavirus .  Dubbed "HHS Protect," the effort tracks information from around the country about coronavirus case numbers, hospital capacity, and even supply chain issues.  HHS uses Palantir Technologies , a data firm cofounded by Peter Thiel, to distill that information for the White House coronavirus task force. Visit Business Insider's homepage for more stories . A secretive project at the US Department of Health and Human Services is working with technology companies to collect and analyze data related to the novel coronavirus.  Dubbed "HHS Protect," the effort includes roughly 2.5 billion pieces of data from healthcare providers, government officials, and labs around the country about coronavirus case numbers, hospital capacity, and even supply chain issues.  The goal is learn about the progress