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1. Marketing and Markets

2. Schools Market
3. To whom are schools marketing ?
4. Market segmentation

5.  What are schools marketing ?

6. Misconception about marketing

7. The process of marketing

8. Product

9. Price- People and Promotion

10. Creating strategic intend
11. The Importance of the Client
12. Never Letting the client Down
13. The School Provides a Service
14. Management of high Quality...
15. Developing a Client
16. Creating a pro active Staff
17. Linking Marketing to Strategy
18. The Nature of Marketing
19. The Planning Process
20. Marketing in schools

21. Marketing in further education

22. Personnel, organization...

24.References

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רבים מאיתנו כבולים בדפוסי פעולה שאינם אפקטיביים עוד עבורנו. מאמן אישי מקצועי יודע ללמד אותך להשתחרר מהרגלים לא מועילים, ובאמצעות אימון אישי ממקוד לעשות היטב את מה שעדיין איננו יודעים לעשות. נקודת המוצא של תהליך האימון האישי היא יוזמה לפעולה אישית. למאמנים אישיים יש אחריות על תגובותינו לאירועים המתרחשים בחיינו, כאשר התגובה לסיטואציה היא יכולת נרכשת. בתהליך קואצ'ינג, במקרה של אימון עסקי יש מצבים בהם הניסיון...

 
 

מטרתן של אומנויות לחימה היא לפתח את הגוף והנפש כאחד,לשפר את הכושר הגופני,להגביר את יכולת השליטה הנפשית והגופנית, לפתח את כושר הריכוז והביטחון העצמי... קראטה מלמד ערכים וכבוד כלפי הזולת ומפתח יכולות הגנה עצמית וכישורים נוספים בכל תחומי החיים...
 


 

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כל בעל אתר רוצה להיות ראשון בגוגל אבל רק באמצעות קידום אתרים ניתן להגיע למטרה...

Management
and
Marketing

of Schools

                                                                         21 Century Education and School

 

About
 

Marketing and Markets
Marketing is too often thought of as a single event or as a series of techniques and approaches. This causes those responsible for marketing to engage (mistakenly) in reactive responses without a clear framework for action. To avoid this it is important to take a wider perspective on marketing within the context of a view of the school's development...More
 

Why should schools market themselves?
The need to market a school centers around both the communication of the education offered and the attraction and retention of pupils. Schools often believe that virtue brings its own reward but to be effective, as we move into twenty-first century, it is not enough simply to be a good school. What is also important is that the school is perceived as being a good one. The quote could be rewritten as: Virtue does not bring its own reward, but virtue with a good marketing strategy may! Whatever the positive attributes of a school, they will not, of themselves, ensure continued success and survival unless the wider community knows about, understands and, above all, values them...More

 

To whom are schools marketing?
If marketing schools centers on a concept of effective communication, then it is vital to have a clear view of the target audience. A simplistic view would be to look only at the immediate recipients of the school's work the parent and child, especially when one considers the implications of formula funding and open enrolment.
..More


What are schools marketing?
The discussion, which follows, is not just about the various values and attainments, which a school puts across; it takes a different view, examining the significance of both overt and covert performance indicators. Many schools fail these are significant factors, especially at secondary level, but the reputation of a school is made up of a series of complex and inter-related factors. Wearing school uniform, which parents associate with good discipline, and the amount of homework, which they associate with academic standards, can be very significant. The reputation of many schools may be enhanced by the overt reality of good staff relationships and high academic standards. However, this reputation can be undone by the behavior of pupils in the local town at lunchtime or when traveling on school buses and the pupils smoking outside the school gates. These determinants of the perceptions which parents have of the school are often more important than the reality of what is actually going on in the delivery of effective education...More
 
Misconception about marketing
There are various misconceptions about marketing in the educational world:
Marketing is merely about promoting
Very often schools see marketing as designing a new school prospectus or a new sign.
These promotional activities are, in fact, only part of the process of marketing. What is more important is that schools realize that the staff, and all those involved whit the school, should understand the nature and scope of marketing as a concept. One of the central concerns of marketing is quality. The marketing of schools involves finding out what the clients want and need and then designing a product and service that provides a quality education to meet those wants and needs...More

 


The process of marketing
Marketing is too often thought of as a single event or as a series of techniques and approaches. Marketing should not be considered as an individual event but as a process that is part of an overall management strategy. Brent Davies and Linda Ellison (1997, p. 18) consider that there are three main phases to this marketing process, each with its own subsections.
One of the potential failures of marketing in schools is to start at implementation rather than to follow the cyclical process as outlined above and another is to fail to realize the significance of the inter-relationships between each of the phases...More

 

The Importance of the Client
Before, was discussed client identification in education, examining the pupil/parent relationship and the concept of the wider community as a client of the school. The way that clients have been perceived by schools to date may be considerably different from the way that a commercial or industrial company would regard a client. While in the business world the idea of being client orientated or of 'putting the customer first' is commonplace, such an attitude can seem somewhat out of place in education. The culture of schools has traditionally centered on their being the source of knowledge and their transmitting this knowledge to a captive audience. The result has been a product-orientation where knowledge and skills have predominated. However, much can be learned from commerce and industry. Raising these issues and applying some of the business concepts can provide a useful stimulus to the educational debate concerning the ways in which we think about clients...More


Linking Marketing to Strategy
The growth of institutional autonomy with its associated responsibility for planning has been an international phenomenon within education over the last decade. The delegation of management responsibility has been but one element in the creation of quasi markets (Barlett and Le Grand, 1993) by governments is per suit of a range of political goals. This has been a shift in the nature of accountability in schools and colleges. The traditional emphasis on professional accountability (accountability to the profession of teaching and its self-established values and aims) has been replaced by both increasing political accountability and market accountability. Schools and colleges have been caught in the middle of an ideological struggle within right-wing administrations between, on the one hand, libertarian ideologies emphasizing the concepts of choice and individualism, the reduction of government 'control' and the removal of the perceived protectionism of professionalism in state services and, on the other hand, conservative ideologies emphasizing strong central control...More
 

Marketing in further education
Marketing has become a major preoccupation of FE institutions in the period since incorporation (post 1992). Strategic planning is a key requirement within the funding formula, and this is expected to reflect a college's response to the market. In large colleges a substantial marketing function has been developed with specialist marketing teams, while in smaller colleges the inclusion of marketing within wider remits of middle and senior managers in more common. Research into marketing in FE has examined both organizational and functional aspects of practice (Smith et al., 1995; Foskett and Hesketh, 1996; Pieda, 1996), and number of patterns can be identified...More

 

Creating a pro active Staff

This remains one of the major challenges in schools. Teachers are by definition concerned primarily with teaching children. While there has always been an accountability dimension to schools in that there has always been a need to communicate what they are doing and the quality of the process, this has been given increased importance by two factors:

*         The establishment of framework to judge school performance in terms of the national curriculum and standardized assessment; and

*         The operation of pupil number-led formula funding linked to open enrolment.

As was mentioned before, to a certain extent educationalists have let others dictate the educational agenda because of their own reticence. How can leaders and managers in schools develop characteristics in staff to make them more pro-active in articulating the school's vision, values and achievements? Crego and Schifrin in their book, Customer Centred Reengineering (1995, p78) list what they call the 'Seven Cs' as a way of effecting the reengineering type of change that would be necessary in schools to create a more pro-active staff...More
 

Marketing in schools

The extent of research on marketing in schools reflects a preoccupation with demand-side issues, and in particular with parental choice (e.g. Carroll and Walford, 1997). However, the research of Foskett (1995), Gewirtz et al. (1995), James and Phillips (1995) and Glatter et al. (1996) identifies the relatively undeveloped stategization of secondary schools in relation to the market. They have identified the following:

*         A highly variable interpretation of 'marketing', with a strong 'product-   centered' philosophy as teachers and managers 'struggle to    reconceptualise an alien concept' (Foskett, 1996, p.39).

*         An ad hoc approach to marketing, with an emphasis on project     marketing rather than strategic marketing.

*         A perception of marketing as a crisis management approach to short-term recruitment changes, using 'superficial and short-term solution to problems even when in the long term such strategies may be socially and educationally unhelpful' (Gewirtz, et al., 1995, p. 157).

*         The absence of any coherent form of marketing research.

*         A slow cultural shift towards accepting (pragmatically, but not    necessarily philosophically) the role of the market...More

 



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