Ϲ

Market intelligence for international student recruitment from Ϲ

Ϲ

7th Feb 2014

How will online school selection services affect education agents?

At Ϲ Monitor, we have written before about how educators can power their recruitment and programming strategies via the astute collection, management, and analysis of data on the behaviours and patterns of students. Today, we look at examples of online data sites and services available to students researching their education options, and we consider the question:

"How will the expanding field of online information and school selection resources affect the role played by education agents?"

Info, info, everywhere

The London Schools Atlas is a great place to start in our consideration of the data-enabled online tools now available to students and their families researching educational choices. The Atlas is an interactive online map that reveals:

  • The location of London primary and secondary schools (as well as their associated catchment areas);
  • Their current patterns of attendance;
  • Potential future demand for places in them.
london-school-atlas The London Schools Atlas

As one of its creators said in the following , the Atlas is designed to simplify the decision-making process for families; all the information comprised in the map is available in various other places but has not – until now – been contained in a single, easy-to-understand location and application. In other words, the London Schools Atlas compiles multiple data points and presents them in a single place to highly motivated parents. It is this function and value – compiling and simplifying complex processes or information – that many other student and parent-targeted apps and sites also aspire to. This compilation and simplification service is also, in many respects, a traditional function of the education agent or other trusted intermediaries in international education. Another compelling data project is the US-based website Possibility U, which is based on an algorithm that helps high school students discover colleges they might not even know exist. Possibility U:

“ … asks users to enter up to three colleges that they are interested in. It then spits out a list of 10 other, similar colleges to consider. A premium paid subscription allows students to compare an unlimited number of colleges and provides application deadlines and other advice.”
possibility-u-homepage The Possibility U homepage

Possibility U mimes the way students think (e.g., “I know this college, and I like what it has to offer, but I want to see if there are other, similar options that suit my goals and budget even better.”). Its algorithm was developed using data based on real human inputs on what matters to students when they choose a university, and this is what makes it so interesting. Then, there is – as we have reported previously, LinkedIn University Pages, launched last year. University Pages allows institutions to share more of their data – such as alumni success stories – to give students more robust information with which to consider them. With University Pages, students as young as 13 can:

  • Access campus news and activities, ask questions of the school, engage with current students and alumni;
  • Research the careers of graduates of various universities and see which have produced notable alumni;
  • Network post-graduation with classmates for professional purposes.

University Pages is a good example of the way data is helping institutions and students to connect more directly and organically. By sharing information on LinkedIn, students and institutions – theoretically at least – have a better chance of matching themselves to each other. And again, student-institutional matchmaking has traditionally been a strong selling point for agents.

So, where does this place the agent?

Many agents watch the emergence of such school selection products carefully. And for some, the question naturally arises as to whether the increasing range of student information resources online could change or reduce the role played by education agents. As it stands now, savvy agents are locating the best data tools, apps, and sites for their target markets and using them to help students to leverage, rather than be replaced, by data. (For example, agents could use the London Schools Atlas and Possibility U very much to their own advantage right now – employing these tools in their services to students and families.) But it is no doubt also true that some students will find the information and services they need online and that this may reduce or eliminate their need for additional support or services from an agent. Technology is a dramatic and often disruptive change agent in many industries, and one that requires a thoughtful and strategic response. The travel industry is a good example, and one with some parallels to international education, of a business that has been dramatically affected by technological change. It also provides some important lessons for responding and adapting to new challenges (and opportunities) in a rapidly changing marketplace.

Disintermediation in the travel industry

In the face of dramatic technological or other structural change, any industry can be at risk for "disintermediation," a process in which, according to O’Reilly Media:

“… a middle player poised between service or product providers and their consumers is weakened or removed from the value chain.”

In the case of the travel industry, for example, there are still travel agencies, but far fewer than before the creation and wide use of sites such as Travelocity and Expedia. Those that have survived have adapted and changed their services. In this Portland Herald article about travel agencies that remain – and thrive – one agency owner commented, “.” The article notes that some agencies are capitalising on the fact that because of the Internet,

“Potential customers are now much more informed about the costs and destinations they're interested in, which helps travel agents have higher closure rates and design better itineraries for their customers.”

Another owner has chosen the route of specialisation – focusing on certain target markets and the delivery of astute travel counselling. He says:

"We're consultants. You have to get to know your clients, spend time with them, figure out what they like, and then use your knowledge to make sure they have the best experience possible."

This owner adds that "[travel review and booking] sites aren't policed very rigorously" and uses his in-depth knowledge to add a level of security to customers buying holidays. The article also notes that successful travel agencies are there when customers need them – when something has gone awry with their flight or trip, for example. Another article, this time from Business Insider, notes simply that, “ to computers is the way forward.”

Smart agents can change and thrive

The Business Insider article contends that our knowledge economies are increasingly creating an upper tier of wealthy earners and consumers. In many markets, these consumers include internationally mobile students and their families. Consumers like these will be willing to pay a premium for personalised, extra services… the human touch and on-the-ground expertise that education agents can provide that online information services simply cannot. Education agents can add more comfort and security to a complex, high-stakes consumer decision-making process such as where to study abroad than data services alone can do. The trick, going forward, will be:

  • to assess demand for value-added services;
  • to provide them at the right price to the right markets;
  • to use the new data and information services out there to boost the quality of service to students and parents;
  • to innovate, embrace, and harness the power of technology in order to provide a valued, relevant service.

If you have a comment about your own experience as an agent and the increasing use of online information and data-driven services for students researching study abroad, we’d love to hear from you in the comments section below.

Most Recent

  • A common challenge: Strengthening student confidence in the ROI of study abroad Read More
  • New international student permit approvals for Canada fell below COVID levels in 2025 Read More
  • UK Home Office publishes updated visa sponsor guidance for “agents and third parties” Read More

Most Popular

  • Which countries will contribute the most to global student mobility in 2030? Read More
  • Research shows link between study abroad and poverty alleviation  Read More
  • Beyond the Big Four: How demand for study abroad is shifting to destinations in Asia and Europe Read More

Because you found this article interesting

New international student permit approvals for Canada fell below COVID levels in 2025 Canada approved only 75,372 new study permits in 2025. This represents a -64% drop year-over-year, and an -18%...
Read more
UK Home Office publishes updated visa sponsor guidance for “agents and third parties” The UK government has expanded its regulatory oversight for British institutions’ engagement with education agents. The existing structure...
Read more
Visa rejections climb in the US for international students from key markets including India A new report from Shorelight called Beyond the Interview: A Decade of Student Visa Denials
and What Comes Next,...
Read more
Supply and demand for international higher education increasingly aligned in Asia A new report from Studyportals and the British Council, “Asia, Latin America, and MENA in global education,” demonstrates...
Read more
Canadian immigration officials move to ease rules around student work permits Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (IRCC) has introduced a package of amendments to the current rules around student...
Read more
Australia: Student visa refusal rates reach record high amid weakening demand from China Australian universities have so far faced fewer challenges than English-language training (ELICOS) and vocational education providers in the...
Read more
What international students need to know about study and work visas in the United States The current political climate in the United State has spurred a flurry of proposals and rules affecting the...
Read more
Study finds strong agent interest in partnering with Japanese universities For many years, institutions in the Big Four (Australia, Canada, UK, and US) have partnered with educational agents...
Read more
What are you looking for?
Quick Links