Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the weirdest post on here right now. Says a lot about you guys. You’re focused on the wrong thing people
Odd take. Most people would agree that how prospective customers are treated very much matters in any industry.
You are a "prospective customer" after you have been accepted - and they will be very nice to you then, promise. Not sure why folks like you think anyone needs to win you over - also, free lunch lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Worst: Kenyon - DD checked in but they apparently didn’t check her in properly so we missed the tour (they call visitors by name for small group specialty tours so we just waited for her name to be called). We finally followed up and eventually got an absolutely awful 10 minute tour that they pretended was the tour we were supposed to be on. It was all very disorganized and the tour guide was confused about what tour she was supposed to be giving. It’s also the only school that didn’t send us a post-visit survey about our visit. So either they don’t care or, more likely, they never did manage to check her in despite her checking in repeatedly so they have no idea she was ever there. Which would be really annoying if she wanted to apply since they consider demonstrated interest.
For a $400K product, it definitely reflects poorly on the school when admissions is so disorganized. Most of the schools have been fine and interactions have gone as expected. We had particularly great experiences at Skidmore and Occidental.
Kenyon’s admissions office is a joke. We had a graduate with us from its all male days, who is a relative. When he left to use the visitor’s desk to use the bathroom they made fun of him for his questions. This reminds me to call them and rip them a new one. Bye bye Gambier. My cash will be spent elsewhere.
Anonymous wrote:Worst: Kenyon - DD checked in but they apparently didn’t check her in properly so we missed the tour (they call visitors by name for small group specialty tours so we just waited for her name to be called). We finally followed up and eventually got an absolutely awful 10 minute tour that they pretended was the tour we were supposed to be on. It was all very disorganized and the tour guide was confused about what tour she was supposed to be giving. It’s also the only school that didn’t send us a post-visit survey about our visit. So either they don’t care or, more likely, they never did manage to check her in despite her checking in repeatedly so they have no idea she was ever there. Which would be really annoying if she wanted to apply since they consider demonstrated interest.
For a $400K product, it definitely reflects poorly on the school when admissions is so disorganized. Most of the schools have been fine and interactions have gone as expected. We had particularly great experiences at Skidmore and Occidental.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the weirdest post on here right now. Says a lot about you guys. You’re focused on the wrong thing people
Odd take. Most people would agree that how prospective customers are treated very much matters in any industry.
How much of a range is there with this variable?
You sign up online for a tour. Your kid checks in at the desk. You listen to the presentation. You walk around the campus with a tour guide.
In terms of differences: Some schools give out a little swag. And apparently one provides a lunch ticket. In my experience, all have provided free parking, but maybe there are some with pay-to-park garages??
I’m genuinely curious. What exactly do you think these tiny “customer experience” differences on your day say about the relative value or experience of a four year college education at these schools?
Are you really this obtuse? Let’s try to make this easy. Mom and Larlo visit college A and are greeted by a cold receptionist and the AO seems snobby when Larlo asks a question. After the visit Larlo emails the territory AO and gets a curt response. Mom and Larlo visit college B and their experience is the opposite.
See how small interactions with staff members can shape feelings towards a college? If they want tuition dollars they can at least be friendly to people interested in giving them business. Even selective colleges care about yield and first impressions matter.
Gotcha.
My takeaway here is that different things matter to different people. Which makes sense. It’s all part of finding the right fit.
Personally, these types of “small interactions” with staff do not shape our family’s feelings about a college either way. A cold receptionist? Don’t care. An AO who seems snobby? We tend to give people the benefit of the doubt at busy events. Same with curt email responses. Regional reps are flooded, especially now that there’s all this advice telling kids to “reach out” to them to show DI.
But I do see how these things matter a lot to some people. My FIL, for example. He makes big assumptions about people based on small social interactions.
Thanks for explaining. You do you. 👍
I think it is reasonable for people to consider disinterested, inattentive responses from an admissions office prior to accepting admission as indicative of how their DC will be treated by the school after admission.
Of course, there are also other, possibly more important factors, but a kid will have to navigate the bureaucracy and a dismissive admissions office isn’t a good sign.