A decision framework for deans, registrars, and enrollment VPs. Covers enrollment marketing, Gen Z targeting, international student acquisition, EdTech positioning, and OPE compliance.
Last updated: March 2026 · 12 min read
Enrollment marketing expertise, Gen Z fluency, and the ability to prove cost-per-enrolled-student, not just cost-per-inquiry.
“Higher ed marketing is a category where generalist agencies consistently underperform. The enrollment funnel has too many stages, the audience research patterns are too specific, and the compliance environment is too unforgiving. An agency that has never managed a yield campaign or dealt with FERPA has a 12-month learning curve your enrollment numbers can’t afford.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Enrollment marketing is not lead generation. It’s a multi-stage funnel with 6+ months of nurturing.
A B2B agency measures leads. A consumer agency measures sales. An enrollment marketing agency measures inquiries, completed applications, yield rate, and melt rate. If the agency you’re evaluating doesn’t use these terms fluently, they haven’t done this work before. Higher education marketers spend an average of $140 per inquiry and $2,849 per enrolled student (Search Influence, 2026). But the gap between those numbers is where most agencies fail. Generating inquiries is straightforward. Converting inquiries into enrolled students requires nurture sequences, campus visit campaigns, yield events, financial aid communication, and parent engagement. That’s a fundamentally different skill set than running ads. What to evaluate:Definition: Enrollment marketing is the discipline of moving prospective students through a defined funnel: awareness, inquiry, application, acceptance, deposit, and enrollment. Each stage requires different messaging, channels, and measurement.
TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram are not awareness channels for Gen Z. They’re research platforms.
International students represent 6% of U.S. enrollment but often contribute 15-25% of tuition revenue.
Online programs, bootcamps, and traditional campuses need different marketing approaches.
OPE, FTC, FERPA, and state authorization rules constrain what you can say and where.
Education marketing compliance is less publicized than HIPAA but equally consequential. The Department of Education’s misrepresentation rules prohibit institutions from making false or misleading claims about programs, outcomes, or costs. An agency that writes “95% of our graduates get hired within 6 months” without verified placement data is creating compliance risk. Key compliance areas the agency must understand:Definition: OPE (Office of Postsecondary Education) compliance in marketing refers to federal regulations governing how Title IV institutions can advertise, including rules on misrepresentation of outcomes, incentive compensation for enrollment, and gainful employment disclosures.
| Regulation | What It Covers | Marketing Impact |
|---|---|---|
| OPE Misrepresentation | False claims about programs, outcomes, costs, accreditation | All outcome claims must be verifiable and properly disclosed |
| FTC Endorsement Guidelines | Student testimonials, outcome claims, influencer disclosures | Student testimonials require disclosures; outcome claims need substantiation |
| FERPA | Student educational records and privacy | Student data from CRM cannot be used for remarketing without consent |
| State Authorization | Permission to operate and advertise in each state | Paid ads targeting students in states where you lack authorization = violation |
| Gainful Employment | Disclosure requirements for career-training programs | Landing pages for certificate/career programs need specific disclosures |
| Incentive Compensation | Ban on paying enrollment bonuses based on enrollment numbers | Agency compensation cannot be tied to enrollment volume for Title IV institutions |
Score each agency candidate on a 1-5 scale. Minimum passing score: 32/50.
| Criterion | Weight | What to Score | Score (1-5) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enrollment Funnel Expertise | 3x | Full-funnel reporting, CRM integration, seasonal strategy, program-level campaigns | ___ |
| Gen Z Channel Mastery | 2x | Short-form video, student ambassadors, social listening, paid social targeting | ___ |
| International Recruitment | 1.5x | Market-specific experience, agent management, multilingual capability | ___ |
| Program Type Experience | 1.5x | Traditional, online, continuing ed, certificate programs | ___ |
| Compliance Knowledge | 2x | OPE, FTC, FERPA, state authorization, incentive comp rules | ___ |
| Data & Attribution | 2x | Cost-per-enrolled-student tracking, multi-touch attribution, A/B testing rigor | ___ |
| Content & Creative | 1x | Program pages, virtual tour content, student testimonial management | ___ |
| References | 1x | Institutions of similar type and size, relationship longevity | ___ |
| SEO Capability | 1x | Program page optimization, local SEO, content strategy | ___ |
| Pricing Transparency | 0.5x | Clear fee structure, no incentive comp violations, contract flexibility | ___ |
A 10-section marketing plan framework with goals, audience segmentation, channel strategy, and KPI tracking. Adaptable for enrollment marketing. Get Template →
Plan your enrollment content around admission deadlines, campus events, and seasonal peaks with a structured editorial calendar. Get Template →
How to structure Google Ads campaigns for program-level targeting, application-focused bidding, and enrollment attribution. Read Guide →
Education-specialized agencies typically charge $10,000 to $30,000 per month for mid-size institutions. Community colleges and smaller schools may find options in the $5,000-$12,000 range. Large universities with multiple programs and international recruitment often spend $30,000-$80,000+ per month across agency fees and media spend.
The industry average is $2,849 per enrolled student for online and continuing education programs (Search Influence, 2026). Traditional undergraduate programs vary widely: $1,500-$4,000 for state universities, $3,000-$8,000+ for private institutions. Graduate and professional programs can range from $2,000 to $12,000 per enrolled student depending on program selectivity and competition.
Higher-ed-specialized agencies bring enrollment funnel expertise, CRM integration experience, and compliance knowledge that generalists lack. The trade-off is that specialists may be less innovative with emerging channels or creative approaches. Consider a specialist for enrollment marketing and a separate creative partner if you need brand-level campaign work.
The enrollment cliff is making agency accountability more important than ever. With fewer students available and higher competition, institutions need agencies that can prove cost-per-enrolled-student, not just generate inquiries. The cliff is also pushing institutions toward agencies with adult learner and online program expertise, since non-traditional students are a growing share of enrollment.
Paid media campaigns can generate inquiry volume within 30-60 days. But enrollment results take one full enrollment cycle to measure accurately, which is typically 6-12 months depending on your program types. Set intermediate KPIs (inquiry volume, application starts, campus visits) for the first 90 days, with full enrollment measurement at the 12-month mark.
We help educational institutions build measurable enrollment pipelines across organic, paid, and social channels. Let’s talk about your next enrollment cycle. Book a Strategy Call →