US$19.2 billion.
If you take the annual budgets of 142 countries including Cuba, Jordan and Lithuania and add them up, they won't amount to US$19.2 billion.
Yet in the year 2000, that sum was Harvard University's endowment. If you're thinking,'Wow! That's amazing!' there's another wow coming up.
In 1999, Harvard's endowment was US$14.4 billion. In one amazing year, Harvard University's wealth jumped nearly a third. What's fascinating is that the $4.8 billion dollar increase alone is larger than the total endowments reported last year by some of the nation's other top universities, including the Massachusetts Institute of Technology ($4.3 billion), Columbia University ($3.6 billion), and Dartmouth College ($1.7 billion).
So what's Harvard University doing that you aren't?
Mmm…Good question. And one worth answering. Because Harvard's structure and marketing system can teach us one heck of a lot.
Let's get into the classroom, shall we? And while I'm at it, I'll take a real business example, so you can make the leap into understanding without too much difficulty.
Business Case Study: An Imaginary Web Hosting Company called WebGhostum.
Harvard Lesson No. 1: Teach your clients well…
Huh? What kind of marketing strategy is that? The best kind, my friend. How much time do you spend on the education of your clients?
Lookeee at what Harvard is doing. They're not just educating their clients, but they're actually making the clients pay for the education. The smarter the clients become, the more they earn. The more they earn, the more they credit Harvard University.
So yeah, you've got a sales system in place…
But have you got an education program for your clients? Nope? Why not? Couldn't you have a training program where your clients would pay to learn what you know? Wouldn't that make your clients oh so smart and consequently richer?
Harvard puts the highest emphasis on the art of teaching. New professors take rigorous teacher training. Each teacher has several mentors that inculcate different aspects of the Harvard system.
If you've got a sales force, how about training them to be teachers? If you're a small business, how about making your website or your brochure an education system? How about having a training course just for your clients?
Here's what WebGhostum should do
Customers have no idea why one web host should charge $15 per month while the other charges $75 for the same space and bandwidth. So in the true spirit of education, here's what WebGhostum could do:
1) They could have a web page or a booklet outline the dangers of choosing the wrong web host. There are dozens of very important factors that need to be explained to potential online businesses. Business owners are often oblivious to the facts. The webpage or booklet would be a vital tool in educating them about the stable door, BEFORE the horse bolts.
2) The Web host could have a 2 hour training session which they charge for, on how to choose the right host. Plus they could add on an expert who talks about how to create a website that not only draws huge amounts of traffic, but also converts customers into paying clients.
3) They could educate their sales force by getting them to attend these training sessions and reading the webpage/booklet. The salesperson then becomes an educator instead of a pushy salesman/saleswoman.
Which brings us to Lesson No. 2. The art of playing hard to get.
Harvard Lesson No. 2: Just say No
In 1997, there were 880 seats for Harvard Business School. Nearly 7,500 students applied.
Harvard says no to over 90%. Partially, it's because of Harvard's limited capacity, but if you notice carefully Harvard hasn't quite increased the size of its classroom either.
Harvard does a superb job of saying NO. Incredibly the more they say NO, the more the customer psychology kicks in. The desire to get into Harvard grows stronger than ever.
So how do you say NO to your clients?
Do what Harvard does. They set up a carrot and stick criterion.
You have to qualify before you will be considered. Once they set up this criteria, Harvard sits in its little castle and pull up the drawbridge.
And darn it, you as a student want to get past that moat and get into the castle more than ever before. You so want to get that carrot, that you're tripping over yourself to get in.
Harvard's NO extends to other areas too…
Harvard created customised courses for companies. But Harvard laid down rules as well. The Business School won't take on a company if there are no participation and commitment from the CEO. If the criteria aren't met, no matter how lucrative, the business school says NO.
So here's what the Web Host could do:
1) They could list the huge benefits a person would get if they joined the web host. Alongside the benefits, the web host should also list the qualifying criterion.
2) To qualify for these benefits the client would have to fill in a form and submit it to the web hosting company. The web host would then evaluate the form and the space would only be given once the evaluation met the criteria.
That's the equivalent of Just Saying No. It's a whole lot better than saying yes to every customer that knocks on your door. And contrary to common sense, Harvard has proven that you get far more customers when you say NO. A systematic and strategic system will allow you to say no and still grow your profits exponentially.
If you don't believe in NO, look at the figures
Harvard accepts only 15 clients at a time in it's specialised Customised Courses. In 1997 alone, Customised Courses accounted for US$50 million.
And Harvard doesn't quite stop there.
Lesson No. 3: Are you a publisher yet?
“Since we can't bring everyone to campus, we extend the brand to the places where people work or to their homes,” says Linda Doyle, CEO of Harvard Business School Publishing.
Good point Linda.
So how do you get customers who won't come to your campus all excited? Harvard does it with Harvard Business Review, Harvard Business online and dozens of publications, interactive and digital media.
In fact Robert Clark, Harvard's current dean says there is evidence that the Harvard Business Review and the electronic media tends to increase a student's desire to attend live sessions at the campus.
Do you take your brand to your customer?
Do you have a newsletter that stops talking about how wonderful you are, and actually gives the customer vital information? Do you create products or information packets that the customer can purchase on an ongoing basis? Are you creating the customer's desire to buy into your product?
The chances are you're not. You're so busy trying to sell your core product or service, that you've completely, totally forgotten that ancillary products could get the customer more involved in your company than ever before.
Harvard can't get everyone to its hallowed halls, but it's got to make sure that the student doesn't wander across to another university. So while the student is waiting, Harvard gives them loads of product to experience and learn from.
How the Web Host could bring the brand to the customer
Web hosting is a dry subject. It's like warehousing. There isn't a lot to know once you've done the education of the benefits. However, there are lots of ancillary fields that are vital to making sure that the customer stays with the web host.
If the customer hosts with a web host and they don't make money online or find the hosting to be an expense, they'll never explore the potential of their website. Which means they'll never move up the ladder into higher bandwidth, more space web hosting. This is profit down the drain for the web host. The best way to circumvent this loss, is to take the campus to the customer.
Start a publishing arm
If you don't have your own content, go out there and find a partner whose content is complimentary to yours. The web host could find marketing, design, copywriting, search engine positioning and measurement tracking companies.
All of them could be contributors to a newsletter or booklet. If time and budget permit, you could even print your own ‘Harvard Business Review.' Think about it. The smarter your client gets, the more she'll thank you for it.
Become a publisher. Find ways to get across to your client and become a publisher of sorts.
Because as Dean Robert Clark says: “The challenge is to be able to expand the range of Harvard without diluting the brand. But the risk on the other side, the risk of sitting still and doing nothing, is just as great.”
So get off your you-know-what and emulate the simple success of Harvard University.
After all, you can't argue with US$19.2 billion!
Recommended Product: It's all very fine to attract customers, but how do you attract the customers you want? In the Brain Audit – Sean teaches 7 steps on how to form killer communication pieces that makes people buy from you. The Brain Audit is a simple psychological system that everyone can use in their communication to increase their profits.”
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Evan says
I’m a blogger so most of my marketing is educating my (potential) clients.
What I wonder about Harvard is that they have a reputation built up over centuries. There reputation (whether deserved or not) is why people want to get in. I’m not sure that this transfers to a person or business just starting out.
Sean D'Souza says
It does. We (and others) were able to do it in a few years online.
Evan says
Don’t you hate it when people confuse ‘there’ and ‘their’? I know I do.
I think in some ways I have a solid reputation as the go-to guy on authenticity. Though not at the level I would need (I think my readership needs to multiply by 100 times).
One of the dilemmas is finding the way to not lose the authenticity while doing the multiplying. Being known for authenticity means not using some of the dodgier sales practises which (as their practitioners point out) do work. I don’t mean to suggest that you advocate using them.
I’ve been putting out what I think is very good content for years. I’m just not sure about how to build readership really and make sales. Partly I’m just focusing on getting more newsletter sign ups. And I don’t really know what topic to do for a product – not sure what the key pain for my readers is/would be.
Which all comes down to: how? Harvard probably didn’t build their reputation deliberately. They just did their thing in a market where their offer was reasonable rare – starting a uni now is quite different to when Harvard started.
I appreciate your response. Evan.