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Marketing and branding for Finnish education export to China CEREC Lecture Series. Seppo Hölttä Yuzhuo Cai Chinese Education Research & Exchange Centre University of Tampere. Branding, marketing and exporting. Branding < marketing < exporting
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Marketing and branding for Finnish education export to ChinaCEREC Lecture Series SeppoHölttä YuzhuoCai Chinese Education Research & Exchange Centre University of Tampere
Branding, marketing and exporting Branding < marketing < exporting Marketing is an essential step for Finnish education export Branding is a foundational piece in marketing communication
Main topics Strategies in marketing Challenges in marketing What is the Chinese market Key approaches/tactics to the Chinese market An example of Higher Education Group (HEG) Experiences from other countires
Strategic thinking in marketing & exporting education I • We need a systematic and long term commitment, while avoiding one-time deals • We need to develop packages of modules • We need to develop synergy between education export and industry export instead of each section operating alone • We need long term academic capacity building among Finnish HEIs and with top Chinese universities • We need to invest in the planning and development of the programmes • No failure allowed • Importance of Quality Assurance • We need a localisation approach rather than standardisation • Importance of partnership with Chinese universities
Strategic thinking in marketing & exporting education II • We need to first strategically build one overarching brand of “Finnish education”, not many brands of institutions and programmes • Even together we are a small player in the Chinese markets • Need to clarify the roles of Finnish actors (HEIs, companies, Ministries, Finpro/FLF) • We need to identify the main Chinese stakeholders and clarify how to operate with them • Chinese administration system • Chinese culture • Benefiting from the successful Finnish brand, individual educational providers can position their niche market and do marketing • Need for focused marketing materials and channels • Coordination needed
Objectives of a good branding Delivers the message clearly Confirms your credibility Connects your target prospects emotionally Motivates the buyer Concretes user loyalty
Toward branding understand the needs of your customers integrate your brand strategies at every point of public contact important to invest time in researching, defining, and building your brand
Challenges in marketing I • Not prepared • Do not even think about offering to China a programme which have been prepared for a Finnish student/audience • Lacking resources • Investment • Experiences • Experts • Not even realise that marketing is necessary and it requires resources • We need to understand that we are now living in a global market economy • Little commitment to capacity building • Importance of research and partnership with Chinese universities
Challenges in marketing II • Few concrete products to market • Risks with products which are not ready for the market place • Little knowledge about targeting market • Why just Shanghai and Beijing? • Importance to identify growing regions/cities and the natures of them • Too optimistic to the reality than it is • Due to the lack of knowledge and understanding • Lack of a brand
Chinese market and targeting groups • A huge market indeed • Chinese young students for degree studies abroad • Chinese officials and professionals for training abroad • Those particularly interested in Finnish education • But hard to catch the business • Australian acknowledgement: “the opportunities are there, but the entry costs will be high (Adams, 2007, p. 414). • Dutch observation: “Institutional cooperation (in China) is not established overnight …it requires a substantial amount of planning, exchange and commitment” (NESO, 2010, p. 37).
Chinese customers’ thinking • Hierarchical thinking • Admire prestige • Key influencing factors when choosing the destination for studying abroad • Reputation—Ranking • Employability development • Word of mouth • Important role of parents
Marketing approaches at the national level I • One Finnish brand • National coordination • National marketing agent • Identify the “selling” points or attractiveness of Finnish education • Identify key stakeholders and partners in China • Provide basic infrastructure for Finnish institutions’ marketing • Website/Social media • Agents • Network • Allocate some marketing budget for both national level and institutional level marketing
Marketing approaches at the national level II Provide incentives for cooperation between exporters Conduct or support research on understanding the target region Find the fit between Finnish objectives and Chinese needs in internationalisation of education Build a flagship of Finnish education export to China
Tactics in marketing to China for individual exporters • Understand the targeting regions and the needs in the market • Find your products and promote only your best ones • Start with the best products with international reputation • Rely on all possible partners • Alumni • Academic community • Consulting companies • Do marketing and exporting with others
Tactics in working with Chinese for individual exporters Be fast and concrete in negotiation Be prepared for disorganised and contingent scheduling Be patient, not in haste with the final deal Respect Chinese clients and partners Show your commitment
Solution to the disadvantaged ranking positions (Hed) • Partner with prominent Chinese partner institutions • Highlight the programmes with international reputation • Rely on Finnish industry’s reputation in China • Promote advantaged rankings related to higher education/education • PISA • Innovation • Competitiveness
Stories of Higher Education Group (HEG) First Erasmus Mundus programme (Marihe) with Chinese degree granting partner (Beijing Normal University) Two times of training for Chinese educational administrators contracted by Chinese MOE Projects with top Chinese universities Support from Chinese stakeholders, including MOE and Embassy
“Recipe” of success • Capacity building • Training expert • Academic cooperation • Research • Networking: Sino-Finland Forum in higher education • Investment + entrepreneurial skills • Financial investment (academic exchange + research) • Training of doctoral students • Time beyond work plan • Expecting long term return • Started targeting China in 2006 • Harvesting now but still in the early stage
Branding of HEG • by partnership with top university • Peking University • Beijing Normal University • Beijing University of Technology • by successful stories/ references • training programmes for Chinese MOE • Erasmus Mundus programme partnering with Beijing Normal • by creating CEREC as an interface of Finnish education (not only HEG) to China • the first Chinese education centre in Europe • appreciated by Chinese government and education institutions • a window for Chinese stakeholders to understand Finnish education • a gateway to Finnish education
What we can learn from our others? Germany as a case • Export activities and policies • The German University of Cairo , 2003 • Export Education in Practice, 2005 • “Strategy of the Federal Government for the Internationalization of Science and Research”, MOE 2008 • 9.4 billion euros in 2009 • Agency • DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service) • iMOVE at the Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training • Key instruments: • Financial support • Governmental service (training, seminars, coordination, market studies, information system, public database, etc.) • Capacity building (training potential talents, academic cooperation)
Financial support in Germany DAAD, 4 million project in 2009 Eligible applicants: universities planning to launch a collaborative arrangement, branch campus or off-shore institution in China The programmes undergo a thorough process from feasibility to business planning and funding To receive financial aid, the program has to have proof of success in Germany and show enough potential to achieve further innovation in cooperation with a Chinese university It is also advised for academic and administrative staff to be familiar with societal and educational aspects of the Chinese culture Initial funding is provided for a period of the first cycle of the program – usually 4 years – where the program has to show its self-sustaining character as projected by the business plan.
Challenges in Germany Ignorance of differences in society and culture Unrealistically high expectations of what to achieve within a set time frame Sending academic staff with insufficient China experience on a mission often result in conflicts and eventually fatigue on both sides Difficulties for academics to teach aboard when having overloaded regular schedule Project operated by individual professors fizzle out when the main driving individuals retire
CEREC’s role Provide knowledge and information Conduct research in the filed Build common image of Finnish education/ marketing interface Networking/coordination Provide business opportunities (connecting Chinese customers to Finnish providers) Facilitate business Consultant or advisor
Don’t export to China, if you don’t have your products yet you just want one-time business you are not ready for investing you don’t know Chinese society and culture or have someone with the knowledge to help
Concluding words Based commercial based training/education on academic cooperation and cultural programme Do not appear to be too commercial like when exporting education to China We need to build successful stories for marketing Doing business in China=hard work + patience