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Understanding and predicting student Word of Mouth

Understanding and predicting student Word of Mouth
Understanding and predicting student Word of Mouth
Purpose
Potential students often learn about University offerings through peer communication, in particular, peer Word of Mouth (WOM). Without an ability to predict and influence such WOM, Higher Education managers cannot accommodate it in their marketing strategies. Using a two phase procedure we address this by proposing a method that can be used to predict what will be communicated by WOM. Using that method we then develop an understanding of what information is communicated by WOM.

Method
A qualitative phase identifies that potential students use two decision processes when selecting information to communicate about a university. A second choice-experiment phase models the information communicated by WOM as a consequence of one of those decision processes.

Findings
Results demonstrate that multiple decision processes are used by students when determining what to communicate by WOM, and that specific student groups communicate different information when assisting a peer to choose a university to attend.

Practical implications
The results highlight the ability of institutions to influence student WOM, and the procedure developed provides a practical tool for predicting WOM so that custom marketing messages can be developed to assist student choices of HE provider.
0883-0355
40-48
Greenacre, Luke
cfeb39ae-1318-46ff-86b4-c3382bed3231
Freeman, Lynne
40eff0eb-8fa6-4263-96ef-e840a293cb5a
Cong, Karen
4674f98f-8e22-49de-ae77-e891c254879a
Chapman, Thomas
14658224-947c-4bbc-95dd-328aabc869c1
Greenacre, Luke
cfeb39ae-1318-46ff-86b4-c3382bed3231
Freeman, Lynne
40eff0eb-8fa6-4263-96ef-e840a293cb5a
Cong, Karen
4674f98f-8e22-49de-ae77-e891c254879a
Chapman, Thomas
14658224-947c-4bbc-95dd-328aabc869c1

Greenacre, Luke, Freeman, Lynne, Cong, Karen and Chapman, Thomas (2014) Understanding and predicting student Word of Mouth. International Journal of Educational Research, 64, 40-48. (doi:10.1016/j.ijer.2013.10.006).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose
Potential students often learn about University offerings through peer communication, in particular, peer Word of Mouth (WOM). Without an ability to predict and influence such WOM, Higher Education managers cannot accommodate it in their marketing strategies. Using a two phase procedure we address this by proposing a method that can be used to predict what will be communicated by WOM. Using that method we then develop an understanding of what information is communicated by WOM.

Method
A qualitative phase identifies that potential students use two decision processes when selecting information to communicate about a university. A second choice-experiment phase models the information communicated by WOM as a consequence of one of those decision processes.

Findings
Results demonstrate that multiple decision processes are used by students when determining what to communicate by WOM, and that specific student groups communicate different information when assisting a peer to choose a university to attend.

Practical implications
The results highlight the ability of institutions to influence student WOM, and the procedure developed provides a practical tool for predicting WOM so that custom marketing messages can be developed to assist student choices of HE provider.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 30 October 2013
e-pub ahead of print date: 3 December 2013
Published date: 1 January 2014

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 471159
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/471159
ISSN: 0883-0355
PURE UUID: 8d0bb762-553e-4cad-86ba-858c7e1a4fcc

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 28 Oct 2022 16:37
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 21:42

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Contributors

Author: Luke Greenacre
Author: Lynne Freeman
Author: Karen Cong
Author: Thomas Chapman

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