During KCC’s course registration period, students can put their name on a waitlist if a class is full, in hopes of a spot opening up. But Jenni Kotowksi, Director of Admissions, has noticed that students who sign up for the waitlist often don’t need to have done so—because there’s at least one other section of that course with open seats!
“Students don’t always scroll down the class schedule. So the first section on the list will have a six-person waiting list and the second section will have 24 spaces still open,” Kotowski says.
Kotowski and her team were eager to let students know about these open seats, especially because the phenomenon often involves required courses. If students don’t take the course that semester, they’ll fall beyond the path to on-time graduation.
Kotowski’s team tried calling and emailing students but that was rarely successful; students missed the emails or mistook incoming calls for spam.
Then, in Spring 2022, Kotowski tried text messaging powered by Modern Campus Message. Her message was simple: she thanked students for adding their names to the waitlist and presented the good news of spots open in another section, directing learners right to the registration page via hyperlink.
The results were immediate; on Kotowski’s first attempt, several students switched sections within minutes. So, Kotowski has kept at it and, over three semesters, 65 percent of waitlisted students have registered for an open section within 24 hours of receiving a single text message.
Through a state-funded program, several hundred KCC students are eligible for $500 tuition grants each semester. All each student needs to do is fill out a short form.
Yet, in the past, emails about the scholarships often went unread, and KCC left money on the table as eligible students never claimed the grants.
Message has changed all that. For the past several semesters, financial aid staff have scheduled a text message to eligible students. The first time, one hundred students submitted the form within an hour!
As with any college or university, KCC staff know that their emails and calls to students often get ignored—lost in cluttered inboxes or overlooked during a busy day.
Yet, texts are virtually always read. Worldwide, 98% of text messages are opened. At KCC, only one of the 550 students who received texts about the $500 grant, from Spring 2022 to Spring 2023, has opted out.
Kotowski also appreciates that she can see the full history of texts any student has received from the college. No spreadsheet is necessary; Message tracks every message, instantly and automatically.
Kotowksi has heard and experienced many instances in which Message saved the day. One anecdote she says exemplifies how much texting resonates with modern students involved KCC’s selective admission Physical Therapy Assistant program.