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Jarred and I are proud alumni of a small, prestigious liberal arts college in North Carolina named Davidson. As soon as we left, the college eliminated loans in financial aid packages, the men’s basketball team made a storybook run to the Elite Eight, and the notoriously underwhelming Spring concert suddenly became a venue for one of our favorite bands (though, to be fair, Ben Folds and Bob Dylan’s band both rocked).
For further proof that Davidson is improving by leaps and bounds without me and Jarred around, one need look no further than the college’s latest use of social media.
Davidson’s application for admission is notoriously extensive. In addition to the common application and long essay, prospective students must solicit teacher and peer recommendations, write essays on topics ranging from the college’s honor code to characteristics of Davidson that inspired the individual to apply, and provide a list of books they’ve read the past year. The admissions counselors I’ve known at Davidson have often commented that these application portfolios are often a source of inspiration, humor, wisdom beyond the applicants’ years, and tremendously interesting stories.
Now some of these nuggets of wisdom, humility, hilarity, and inspiration have found a home on (where else, for nugget-size wisdom?) Twitter. Here’s a sampling from @DCAdmission, a Twitter feed compiled by admissions counselors quoting quasi-anonymous applicants from around the country:
PS in FL: [My shoes] say, “Look out world, I’m here to bowl. And yeah, I wear a size 11.”
BJ in KY: The time has come for me to start to make my own way…to honor his dream and my own by going to college and getting my degree.
DO in MO: Davidson is a college that is not afraid of God.
AD in GA: My friends and family berate me for suggesting games of Risk and Diplomacy. I guess I just have a desire to conquer the world.
JZ in MD: I struggle with the term “achievement” as it denotes finality.
DKM in TX: With a bright smile, Stephen [Curry] leaned towards me and said with the utmost confidence, “Davidson is the place to be.”
This strikes me as a brilliant use of Twitter, a tool that many corporations–I’m looking at you, Skittles–and institutions have clumsily struggled to figure out. Why?
It may seem like I’m touting this effort a bit more than merited, given the fact that the experiment is young (65 updates since Jan. 13, ‘09) and seemingly done on a whim. But that’s part of what makes this such a compelling early case study: this ’stuff’ (Twitter, social media more broadly, etc.) doesn’t have to be rocket science. It needn’t require a strategic plan or months of deliberations to execute. It should start on a whim, and continue as long as it’s successful. Companies and organizations looking to harness Twitter would be well-served by adopting the attitude expressed in @DCAdmission’s first tweet:
We began asking permission to use certain student quotations about five min ago. Drum roll! This is going to be fun, we can already tell.
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