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Best Practices: MIT Messages. Marsha Sanders, Provost’s Office Mary Leen, MIT Museum Paul Denning, Sloan School Mary Haller, Arts at MIT. Effective Messages Presentation, May 5, 2003. Best Practices. MIT Leadership: Hal Abelson MIT Museum: Mary Leen Sloan School: Paul Denning
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Best Practices: MIT Messages Marsha Sanders, Provost’s Office Mary Leen, MIT Museum Paul Denning, Sloan School Mary Haller, Arts at MIT Effective Messages Presentation, May 5, 2003
Best Practices • MIT Leadership: Hal Abelson • MIT Museum: Mary Leen • Sloan School: Paul Denning • Arts at MIT: Mary Haller
MIT’s Five Key Messages • MIT makes a difference in the world • MIT is leading the scientific and technological revolution • MIT works together with others—across fields, institutions, and national boundaries—to shape the future • MIT is a meritocracy: egalitarian and accessible • MIT is redefining its residential university experience and building a new sense of community
MIT Leadership: Hal Abelson • “MIT is leading the scientific and technological revolution” • Professor Hal Abelson • Co-Chair of the Council on Educational Technology (CET), iCampus co-Director, EECS Professor, MacVicar Fellow
Best Practices: MIT Museum Mary Leen, Acting Director
The MIT Museum • The MIT Museum is unique among university museums in its focus on the activities and achievements of the parent institution, particularly in the fields of science and technology. • Positioning • The museum dedicated to science and technology and their impact on society • Introduction of hands-on, interactive experiences, and educational programs that foster learning by doing
The MIT Museum • The MIT Museum, working with MIT Facilities, recently completed a capital project to create a bold new entrance, façade and signage to be more visible and welcoming to the community.
The MIT Museum: Re-positioning • A three-year campaign to re-position the museum • Museum messages support two of MIT’s key messages: • MIT is leading the scientific and technological revolution • MIT is redefining its residential university experience and building a new sense of community
Ways we reinforce the messages • A mission statement that is related to MIT’s mission • Development of a long-range strategic plan involving the whole staff • A new graphic identity and redesign of the website: web.mit.edu/museum • Remaking the building and museum space to be a destination for the community • New ongoing exhibitions focusing on MIT innovation
MIT Museum: Mission Statement To document, interpret, and communicate to a diverse audience, the activities and achievements of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the worldwide impact of its innovation, particularly in the fields of science and technology; and to enhance the spirit of community inside the Institute through the promotion of dialog both at MIT and between the Institute and the wider world.
MIT Museum: New Graphic Identity • Consistent look-and-feel • All stationery, public relations, and marketing materials • Website: http://web.mit.edu/museum • Re-design of the building façade and construction of a new entrance
MIT Museum: New exhibits • Major ongoing exhibitions show how MIT leads the scientific and technological revolution, from the Institute’s founding to today Mind and Hand:The Making of MIT Scientists and EngineersRobots and Beyond:Exploring Artificial Intelligence at MIT
Best Practices: Sloan School Paul Denning, Communications Co-Director
Best Practices: the goals • MBA program wanted a strategic vision • Goal was to define a distinctive value proposition to engender strong brand identity • Ensure the vision drives operational decisions • Define powerful and consistent message for delivery to the outside world/applicants
Best Practices: the process • McKinsey & Co. retained to do analysis of Sloan’s place in the market – focus groups to determine public perception • 4 value propositions developed by faculty/staff • All were tested FOR EXCITEMENT, CREDIBILITY FOR SLOAN • CLEAR WINNER (AND FACULTY/STAFF FAVORITE): “The premier program for shaping innovative leaders who will create, redefine and build cutting edge products, markets and organizations”
Best Practices: the results • A new mission statement: The mission of the MIT Sloan School of Management is to develop principled, innovative leaders who improve the world and to generate ideas that advance management practice. • A marketing function was created to ensure consistent messages come out of the School • Messages will differentiate Sloan from its competitors
Best Practices: the differentiators • With Sloan’s vision defined, differentiators became clear: • Sloan specializes in teaching skills to innovate • Sloan offers cross-disciplinary learning opportunities that play to MIT’s strengths—engineering, technology, innovation • Sloan exposes students to cutting edge faculty research • Sloan’s Career Development Office will specialize in relationships with innovative companies
Best Practices: the materials Sloan Case Statement Cover The Chronicle of Higher Education: The New MBA
Best Practices: the materials Sloan Viewbook Page
Best Practices: Office of the Arts Mary Haller, Director
Arts at MIT: Positioning • Position the arts at MIT, not just the Office of the Arts • What’s special about the arts at MIT? • They are flourishing in an Institute focused on science and technology • The variety and excellence of MIT’s arts offerings • Innovative; emphasis on hands-on creativity and invention extends from sciences/engineering to the arts • The people that make up MIT’s arts community
Arts at MIT: Positioning continued • An indicator of the way that MIT has changed; contrast with image of the “old” MIT • An integral part of MIT’s curriculum and community • An appealing feature for prospective students, faculty, staff, and visitors
Arts at MIT: Audiences • Prospective students • MIT community: students, faculty, staff • MIT alumni • Boston/Cambridge Community • General public/press • Donors/donor prospects
Office of the Arts: Audience Needs • Prospective students • “Can I play my trumpet at MIT?” • MIT community/alumni • What arts programs/events does MIT offer? • Boston/Cambridge community • What arts programs/events does MIT offer? • “How do I get to Killian Hall?” • General public/press/donors • “Arts? At MIT???”
Office of the Arts: Purpose of Communications • Raise awareness • MIT is not only about science and engineering • High caliber of arts programs and events • Multi-talented, multi-dimensional people • Participate at all levels • Communicate value • MIT is more than a specialized technical school for attending students; the arts are valued here • MIT offers an exciting, interesting, rich environment in which to study, teach and work
Office of the Arts: Purpose of Communications continued • Value to the Cambridge/Boston community—most events are free and open to the public • Stimulate action • Apply to MIT • Enroll at MIT • Once you are here, participate in the arts; be part of this fascinating community • Attend MIT arts events • Give $$ to MIT’s arts programs
Office of the Arts: Messages • MIT students are “Renaissance kids”—talented and interested in science/technology as well as arts/humanities; creative • “I came to MIT for engineering and I found the arts” • “Don’t leave your trumpet at home…you can use it here.”
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