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Word of mouth is
a powerful marketer. It helps people decide what video to rent on a
Friday night or what restaurant to visit for lunch. The concept also
is behind an innovative program at Calvin College.
Calvin's "Admissions
Ambassadors" program is built around a team of three Calvin students
who visit West Michigan high schools each year in the month of October
to meet students and answer questions about Calvin.
This year the team
is Brooke Miller, Rohit Kapuria and Stephanie Vizdos (left to right
in the picture above).
Each Ambassador
is assigned some 50 local high schools; each also attends a half dozen
or so college fairs as Calvin's representative. The Ambassadors do all
of the planning and scheduling of their visits.
"With some of these
schools, hardly any (college recruiters)even come in," says Calvin's
Rosemary Etter, the founder and director of the Admissions Ambassadors
program. "It's very nice for them to have someone actually sit down
and say hi."
Ambassadors - who
spend the month of September training and preparing for their visits
-- talk with both counselors and students while visiting the high schools.
Because of the closeness in age, students often feel more comfortable
talking with Ambassadors than with traditional admissions counselors.
The Ambassadors
also make sure Calvin admissions materials at high schools are stocked
and organized. Many Ambassadors, though not all, are CAS or Business-Marketing
majors and receive internship credit for the program. Through training
sessions and on-the-job experience, Ambassadors learn how to manage
time, make efficient travel schedules and do a lot of quick thinking.
Ambassadors get a rush out of making on-the-spot decisions and successfully
executing their plans. Many love the job so much that they stay on in
the Admission's department after the Ambassador program ends in November.
"It's a great opportunity
to learn about public relations and marketing," says Miller, a graduate
of Westerville North High School in Westerville, Ohio, who joins Vizdos,
a graduate of Port Huron North High School, and Kapuria, who hails from
Jos, Nigeria, as fall 2000 Ambassadors.
The experience
seems to pay off. Greg Clark, the very first Admissions Ambassador back
in 1995, is now successfully employed by a division of Herman Miller.
--written by
media relations writer Abe Huyser-Honig (class of 2004)
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