Faithfully Different: Why Mission-Driven Enrollment Strategies Are Winning
Keith Ramsdell of NACCAP shares why mission-driven enrollment strategies give Christian colleges a competitive edge in today’s higher ed landscape.
Enrollment
Higher ed marketing literacy is often the missing ingredient in successful institutional leadership.
As a president, cabinet member, or board member, you are likely feeling the weight of the “enrollment cliff” and the constant pressure to innovate with fewer resources.
It is common to feel overwhelmed by the technical jargon of digital marketing, leading many to delegate the entire strategy to others without a way to measure its true health.
This creates a “vicious cycle” where leaders are forced into blind delegation, resulting in wasted budgets and missed opportunities to connect with the right students.
However, there is a hopeful path forward that doesn’t require you to become a technical expert.
By gaining just enough literacy to ask the right questions, you can move from a place of uncertainty to a position of “Trust, but Verify.”
A: Higher ed marketing literacy is the baseline understanding of marketing principles, data, and digital strategy required for senior leaders to lead effectively. It does not require technical mastery of SEO algorithms or AI coding. Instead, it focuses on practical wisdom, allowing leaders to “trust, but verify” the strategies proposed by teams or external vendors.
When leaders feel they don’t know enough about a topic, they often step back entirely and hope for the best.
I often use the analogy of a general contractor building a house.
You don’t need to know how to solder a copper pipe or wire a circuit breaker yourself.
But if you walk through the framing and see a pipe leaking or a wire hanging dangerously low, you need to know enough to say, “That doesn’t look right.”
In the same way, delegating your marketing strategy without any personal literacy leaves your institution vulnerable.
According to research from the Content Marketing Institute, the most successful organizations are those where leadership understands the value and the basic “how” of their marketing engine.
Without this, you risk investing in “vanity spends”—like expensive billboards that make the board feel good but do nothing to reach the digital-native students of today.
“Management is doing things right; leadership is doing the right things.” — Peter Drucker
To do the “right things” in marketing, you must be literate enough to verify the “how.”

The goal is not mastery; the goal is phronesis, or practical wisdom.
This is the ability to take what you know about your mission and apply it to the complex world of modern marketing.
One of the first steps in this journey is assessing where your team stands today.
For example, our AI Marketing Readiness Checklist is a great tool for leaders to gauge if their team has the foundation needed for new technologies.
When you strengthen your literacy, you stop being a passive observer of reports and start being an active participant in strategy.
You begin to recognize the marketing trends in higher education not as threats, but as opportunities to differentiate your brand.
How do you begin to “Trust, but Verify” without spending hours in technical training?
Whenever a new tactic is proposed, ask the Who, What, When, Where, Why, and How.
If the “Why” doesn’t align with your mission-fit student profile, it’s okay to push back.
A report showing a 20% increase in website traffic is nice, but a literate leader asks, “How many of those visitors filled out an inquiry form?”
If you see a “red flag”—like a keyword costing $250 per click—don’t be afraid to ask to see the data that justifies that cost.
Practical wisdom means recognizing that just because you don’t use a certain social platform doesn’t mean your prospective students aren’t there.

Lead with Clarity and Confidence
You don’t have to navigate the complexities of higher education marketing alone.
But in this era of disruption, you can no longer afford to stay on the sidelines.
Gaining marketing literacy is an act of stewardship for your institution’s future.
It is the key to ensuring that every dollar spent is a dollar invested in the students you were called to serve.
My new book, Know What You Don’t Know: What Every Higher Ed Leader Needs to Understand About Marketing, was written to be your field guide in this process.
It provides the “bearings” you need to lead your team with confidence and clarity.
Take the first step toward leadership literacy by ordering your copy of Know What You Don’t Know today.
The essential marketing literacy guide every higher education leader needs! If you are a higher education leader seeking the clarity to evaluate strategy, challenge assumptions, and lead with confidence through disruption, “Know What You Don’t Know” is your guide.
So you can “trust, but verify” your marketing decisions, avoid costly mistakes, and lead your institution with the strategic clarity and courage needed to thrive in this new era.
Ready to lead with confidence?
Order now!
Images via Gemini
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