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6 digital marketing strategies for student recruitment

Last Date Updated:
March 11, 2026
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13 minute read
Student recruitment is harder than it has ever been. The traditional college-age population peaked in 2025 and will decline for the next 15 years. Institutions that win will use six connected digital strategies: SEO and GEO for search visibility, video and social content, AI-powered personalization, paid retargeting, behavioral email, and first-party data infrastructure.
Digital marketing strategies for student recruitment
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Key takeaways (TL;DR)
The number of 18-year-old high school graduates peaked in 2025 and will fall 13 percent by 2041, making digital precision a competitive necessity, not a nice-to-have.
64 percent of Gen Z have used TikTok as a search engine, and 70 percent of prospective students use AI tools like ChatGPT to research colleges, so institutions must now optimize for both Google and generative AI.
Retargeted ads and AI-personalized email outperform generic campaigns by wide margins, and both are underused by most institutions today.

Colleges and universities are competing harder than ever for a shrinking pool of students. According to the Western Interstate Commission for Higher Education, the number of 18-year-old high school graduates peaked in 2025 at roughly 3.9 million and is projected to drop 13 percent by 2041. At the same time, how students discover, evaluate, and choose institutions has fundamentally shifted. Google is no longer the only starting point. TikTok, YouTube, and AI tools like ChatGPT are now part of the research process for a large and growing share of prospective students.

This article covers six digital marketing strategies that connect directly to enrollment outcomes. Each one addresses a real gap in how most institutions currently recruit. Whether you manage marketing for a four-year university, a community college, or an ed-tech company, these strategies give you a practical path to more qualified leads, stronger engagement, and better conversion.

The enrollment cliff timeline

1. Optimize for search engines and generative AI at the same time

Most institutions treat SEO as a checkbox, and very few have started preparing for AI-driven search. That is a serious problem. Nearly 70 percent of prospective students now use AI tools like ChatGPT to research colleges, and 37 percent use those tools specifically to evaluate institutions in their consideration set. If your program pages and admissions content are not structured for both traditional search and generative engine retrieval, you are invisible to a growing share of your audience before they ever reach your website.

Search behavior among prospective students has split into two distinct tracks. The first is traditional search on Google, where institutions compete for clicks using keywords and authoritative content. The second is generative search, where tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews synthesize answers from across the web and present them without requiring a click at all. Both tracks matter, and most institutions are only partially addressing one of them.

According to research cited by IFACTORY, 51 percent of universities still lack an established SEO plan. Proper generative engine optimization (GEO) implementation can increase a source's visibility in AI-generated responses by up to 40 percent. The window for early movers is open now.

How SEO and GEO differ, and why you need both

SEO focuses on ranking in traditional search results through keyword targeting, backlinks, and technical site health. GEO focuses on structuring content so AI systems select it when synthesizing answers. They share a foundation. High-quality, well-structured, authoritative content performs well in both environments.

SignalSEOGEO
GoalRank in Google resultsGet cited in AI-generated answers
Content formatKeyword-optimized pagesConversational, question-answering content
Trust signalsBacklinks and domain authorityCitations, structured data, clear sourcing
MeasurementOrganic traffic and rankingsAI visibility tracking, zero-click share

What to do with your program pages right now

  1. Audit every program page for thin content. Pages that only list requirements and credit hours will not rank or get cited. Add career outcomes, salary data, student stories, and FAQs.
  2. Write content in a conversational question-and-answer format. AI systems favor content that directly answers specific queries like "What can I do with a nursing degree from [institution]?"
  3. Add structured data markup using schema.org for courses, programs, and FAQs. This helps both Google and generative AI systems parse your content accurately.
  4. Build internal links between program pages, outcome guides, and blog content to signal content relationships to AI systems.
  5. Refresh content regularly. AI systems favor content that signals recency and accuracy.

The Encoura Digital Solutions team made it clear in their 2026 digital marketing trends report: voice queries and AI-generated summaries now influence student perception before a student ever reaches your website. Visibility alone is not enough. You need to be cited.

Where Gen Z actually starts their college search

2. Build a social and video strategy around how Gen Z actually searches

Gen Z does not start every search on Google. A 2024 Adobe survey found that 64 percent of Gen Z in the United States have used TikTok as a search engine, the highest rate of any generation. YouTube is used monthly by 92 percent of Gen Z. Your institution's social content is the first point of contact in the college search for a significant portion of prospective students.

The shift to social search changes what good content means for recruitment. Polished campus tours and promotional videos perform poorly compared to authentic, student-driven content. The 2024 Higher Education Marketing Report from LaneTerralever and Convince & Convert found that students want to hear from "students like me" and prefer user-generated content on YouTube, Instagram, and TikTok. Colleges on average underinvest in this format. That gap is an opportunity.

The content types that drive student action

  • Day-in-the-life videos shot by current students on their phones
  • Direct answer content on TikTok and YouTube addressing common questions: "What is the application process like?" or "How much does student housing cost?"
  • Before-and-after stories from alumni that connect the degree to a specific career outcome
  • Behind-the-scenes content from labs, studios, clinics, and workshops that shows academic life in action
  • Short video responses to questions prospective students actually ask, tagged with discoverable terms

Eighty-four percent of students say video content influences their college decisions. That number alone justifies shifting production resources away from polished brand videos toward high-volume, authentic short-form content.

Platform priorities for student recruitment

PlatformPrimary use caseContent formatWho it reaches best
TikTokDiscovery and searchShort-form video, Q&A18-22 year olds, early research stage
YouTubeResearch and comparisonLong-form and ShortsStudents doing deep program research
InstagramAwareness and cultureReels and Stories18-25 year olds, visual decision makers
LinkedInGraduate and professional programsArticles and videoWorking adults, international prospects

A common pitfall to avoid

Most institutions treat social as a broadcast channel and measure success by follower count. Social search means discoverability through content, not reach. Every video and post should be tagged, captioned, and structured around the specific questions your prospective students are typing into the TikTok or YouTube search bar. Treat each post as a search result, not an announcement.

3. Use AI to personalize the admissions experience and respond faster

Speed and relevance are the two biggest drivers of inquiry-to-application conversion. Prospective students who ask a question and wait 24 to 48 hours for a response often move on. AI-powered chatbots and personalization tools handle routine questions around the clock, surface the right program content based on a student's behavior, and trigger personalized follow-up at the moments that matter most in the decision process.

The admissions funnel has a response time problem. Institutions use CRM systems and email campaigns, but most communication is batch-based and slow. AI tools change the economics of one-to-one engagement at scale. According to data cited in the 2025 student recruitment playbook by StudentSpeak, institutions using AI-driven dynamic email copy have seen open rate improvements of 51 to 56 percent compared to standard batch campaigns. AI chatbots can resolve around 80 percent of tier-one admissions questions, freeing counselors to focus on the complex conversations that actually move students to enroll.

"When we audit a client's admissions funnel, the first thing we check is response time. Most institutions are losing students in the gap between first contact and follow-up. That gap is fixable, and fixing it is usually the fastest path to better conversion."

Brittany Charles, SVP, Client Services

Where AI fits in the enrollment funnel

  1. Top of funnel awareness. AI-generated content recommendations serve prospective students the program information most relevant to their stated interests or browsing behavior.
  2. Inquiry stage. Chatbots on your website and social channels respond instantly to questions about deadlines, requirements, and financial aid. Paradox's Olivia platform is one example built specifically for higher education admissions.
  3. Application stage. Behavioral triggers in your CRM fire personalized email or SMS nudges when a student starts an application but does not finish it, or when they visit a specific program page multiple times.
  4. Pre-enrollment. Predictive lead scoring helps admissions staff identify which accepted students are most likely to enroll, so outreach effort concentrates where yield is highest.

Implementation notes

AI personalization requires clean data to work. Before deploying chatbots or behavioral triggers, make sure your CRM or SIS captures and syncs behavioral data from your website, email campaigns, and event registrations. Slate by Technolutions is the most widely used admissions CRM. HubSpot and Salesforce Education Cloud are common at institutions managing broader marketing pipelines. Whichever platform you use, the goal is the same: connect behavior to messaging so every touchpoint feels relevant.

One compliance note worth flagging: any use of AI in student communication should align with FERPA requirements. Be transparent with prospective students about how their data is used. Institutions that communicate clearly about data practices build trust faster.

4. Run paid advertising campaigns that target intent, not just demographics

Paid digital advertising works in student recruitment when it is built around intent signals rather than broad demographic targeting. Search ads capture students actively looking for programs. Retargeting ads re-engage students who visited your website but did not convert. According to RNL's 2025 Marketing and Recruitment Practices report, retargeted ads rank in the top three most effective strategies for private institutions and community colleges. That is primary research across 114 institutions.

Most institutions run paid ads. Few run them with enough structure to generate a measurable cost per lead. The difference is in how campaigns are built. A search campaign targeting "MBA programs online" with a generic landing page will underperform against a campaign that uses intent-layered targeting, program-specific landing pages, and a retargeting sequence built for the 60- to 90-day decision cycle of a typical prospective student.

Paid channel priorities by enrollment goal

GoalBest channelWhy
Brand awareness in new marketsYouTube pre-roll, Meta awarenessHigh reach, cost-effective impression volume
High-intent program leadsGoogle SearchCaptures active search behavior
Graduate and professional programsLinkedIn Sponsored ContentReaches working professionals by job title and industry
Re-engaging warm leadsMeta and Google retargetingShows relevant ads to people who have already expressed interest
International student recruitmentLinkedIn, Meta with geo targetingDemographic and language targeting across markets

How to structure a retargeting funnel for enrollment

  1. Install tracking across your website using GA4 and the Meta Pixel. Tag key pages: program overviews, application start, financial aid, and virtual tour.
  2. Create audience segments based on behavior. Students who viewed a program page are different from students who started an application and stopped.
  3. Build separate creative for each segment. A student who visited your nursing program page three times should see an ad about clinical placement rates and graduate employment, not a generic brand message.
  4. Set frequency caps so students see your ads often enough to stay top of mind but not so often that they become intrusive.
  5. Measure cost per lead and cost per application start, not just cost per click. Those are the numbers that connect paid media to enrollment outcomes.

5. Build email sequences that match the pace of a student's decision

The average college decision takes months, often starting in sophomore year of high school and running through multiple application cycles. A single email blast does not support that journey. Behavioral email sequences, triggered by what a student does rather than a fixed calendar, keep your institution visible and relevant through a long, nonlinear decision process. Institutions that send dynamic, personalized email have seen open rates 51 to 56 percent higher than those using standard batch campaigns.

Email remains one of the most effective channels in student recruitment. Most institutions just execute it poorly. The same content goes to everyone on the inquiry list at the same time. Students who visited your computer science page get the same email as students who visited your school of education. That approach produces mediocre engagement and trains prospective students to ignore your messages.

A behavioral email framework for enrollment

Map email content to the stage the student is in, based on their actual behavior.

  • Awareness stage. A student fills out a request-for-information form. They receive a welcome sequence that introduces the institution's mission, program strengths, and a clear next step.
  • Consideration stage. A student visits a specific program page twice. They receive a follow-up email featuring that program's career outcomes, tuition, and a link to schedule a call with an advisor.
  • Application stage. A student starts an application but does not finish. They receive a direct, short email acknowledging where they left off and offering help to complete it.
  • Decision stage. An accepted student has not confirmed enrollment. They receive messages that address the specific concerns most common at this stage: financial aid clarity, housing, and what orientation looks like.

What most teams get wrong with email

Most teams build one long nurture sequence and send it to everyone. A student who is six months from applying needs different content than a student who was just accepted. Sequence length, message frequency, and content type should all adapt based on behavior, not enrollment date. If your CRM does not support behavioral triggering, that infrastructure gap is worth solving before the next admissions cycle.

6. Build first-party data infrastructure before you need it

Every strategy in this article depends on data. Without clean, connected data from your website, CRM, email platform, and ad accounts, you cannot personalize, retarget, or measure what is working. With third-party cookies largely deprecated and privacy expectations rising, the institutions that build first-party data infrastructure now will have a durable competitive advantage over those that wait.

First-party data is information you collect directly from students through your own channels. Website behavior tracked with GA4, email engagement, form submissions, chatbot conversations, event registrations, and application activity are all first-party signals. This data lets you understand where students drop off, which programs generate the most interest, and which messages drive applications. It also lets you build retargeting audiences that do not rely on third-party cookie tracking.

The shift to first-party data is not optional. Google's phased removal of third-party cookies and tightening platform data policies mean that institutions relying on bought data lists and broad demographic targeting will see their paid media performance decline over time. The 2024 Encoura action plan flagged first-party data as a critical infrastructure investment for enrollment marketing for exactly this reason.

"The institutions that will recruit well in 2027 are building their data infrastructure today. The ones waiting for a better CRM or a bigger budget will spend years catching up."

Derick Do, Co-Founder & Chief Product Officer

Five components of a strong first-party data stack

  1. GA4 with event-based tracking. Set up micro-conversions for program page visits, application starts, virtual tour completions, and form fills. These signals reveal intent at every stage.
  2. A CRM that connects to your website and email platform. Slate, HubSpot, or Salesforce Education Cloud should receive behavioral data in real time so your sequences and scoring models stay current.
  3. A first-party ad audience strategy. Upload CRM contact lists to Google and Meta to build custom audiences and lookalike segments without relying on third-party data.
  4. A structured data layer on your website. Schema markup helps both search engines and AI systems read your content accurately, which supports both SEO and GEO at the same time.
  5. Clear data governance and FERPA compliance documentation. Define what data you collect, how long you retain it, and how it is used in marketing. This is both a legal requirement and a trust signal to prospective students.

The compounding effect of integrated data

When all six strategies run on the same data foundation, the results compound. A student who finds your institution through a TikTok video gets retargeted with a paid ad after visiting your website, enters a behavioral email sequence based on the program they viewed, and eventually connects with an AI chatbot that answers their specific question and routes them to an admissions advisor. Each step is connected, tracked, and improvable. Without the data infrastructure, those steps are disconnected and you lose students at every gap.

Kent L. Willis, Senior Vice President for Enrollment and Student Engagement at Stephen F. Austin State University, described the dynamic well in comments to the Association of Governing Boards: "The demographic cliff is a real national concern, but with targeted strategies, sustainable growth is achievable." The institutions that grow in the years ahead will be the ones with the most precise, connected, and data-driven recruitment operations.

The six-strategy student recruitment funnel

How to turn these six strategies into an integrated recruitment system

These strategies work individually, but they compound when connected. GEO and SEO bring students to your content. Social and video content builds trust and drives initial interest. AI personalization and chatbots respond fast and route students to the right next step. Paid advertising and retargeting stay visible through the decision cycle. Email sequences nurture interest across months. First-party data connects everything and makes it measurable.

The enrollment cliff that Nathan Grawe, economist at Carleton College and author of "Demographics and the Demand for Higher Education," has been tracking for years is now here. Laura Bloomberg, President of Cleveland State University, put the challenge clearly: "It's not a matter of simply doing more with less. We're talking about a much smaller overall footprint." The institutions that adapt their digital infrastructure now will compete effectively for the students who remain. The ones that rely on legacy tactics will feel the decline most acutely.

At Launchcodex, we build student recruitment systems that connect SEO, GEO, AI automation, paid media, and data infrastructure into a single funnel tied to enrollment outcomes. If you want to understand where your current strategy has gaps, start by auditing your program pages for GEO readiness and your GA4 setup for behavioral event tracking. Those two actions will reveal more about your recruitment performance than any channel-level report.

FAQ

What is the enrollment cliff and why does it matter for marketing?

The enrollment cliff refers to the projected decline in traditional college-age students beginning in 2025, caused by falling birth rates during and after the 2008 recession. WICHE projects a 13 percent drop in 18-year-old high school graduates by 2041. This means fewer students entering the pipeline and more competition among institutions for each one. Every year you delay building a stronger digital recruitment system, you compete against institutions that started earlier.

What is GEO and how is it different from SEO?

SEO targets traditional search results on Google and Bing. GEO structures content specifically so AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews surface and cite it when students ask questions. Both share a foundation in quality content, but GEO prioritizes conversational formatting, structured data, and clear sourcing. In 2025, you need both.

How do retargeted ads work for student recruitment?

Retargeted ads show paid placements specifically to people who have already visited your website or engaged with your content. If a prospective student visits your nursing program page but does not fill out an inquiry form, a retargeted ad on Meta or Google keeps your institution visible while they continue their research. The 2025 RNL report found retargeted ads in the top three most effective strategies for private institutions and community colleges, based on primary survey data from 114 schools.

Which CRM is best for managing enrollment marketing?

The answer depends on institution size and complexity. Slate by Technolutions is the most widely used CRM designed specifically for college admissions. HubSpot is a strong option for institutions that want marketing automation and CRM in one platform. Salesforce Education Cloud suits larger institutions with complex multi-program or multi-campus needs. The most important factor is not the platform itself but whether it connects cleanly to your website tracking, email platform, and paid media accounts.

How quickly can AI chatbots be deployed for admissions?

A basic AI chatbot trained on your program FAQs, admissions requirements, and deadline information can be deployed in a matter of weeks using platforms like Paradox, whose Olivia product is built specifically for higher education. More sophisticated implementations that connect to your CRM for personalized follow-up and lead scoring take longer and require data integration work. Start with high-volume tier-one questions. That alone frees significant admissions staff time and improves response speed for prospective students.

Is TikTok worth investing in for student recruitment?

Yes, for institutions targeting traditional-age undergraduates. A 2024 Adobe survey found 64 percent of Gen Z in the United States have used TikTok as a search engine. Organic content that answers real student questions, filmed by actual students, costs very little to produce and can generate significant discovery volume. Paid TikTok placements work well for awareness campaigns. The key is treating TikTok as a discovery and search channel, not an entertainment platform.

Launchcodex author image - Brittany Charles (1)
— About the author
Brittany Charles
- SVP, Client Services
Brittany leads client delivery and account strategy. She ensures every engagement is organized, clear, and tied to business results. Her approach blends structure, communication, and accountability.
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