Think for a minute about the industry your association serves. How do job seekers in that industry gain the skills they will need to qualify for a promotion or a new job? In some industries, it’s a formal degree program or nothing, but in others, the requirements are more flexible. As a result, associations have stepped in to offer a variety of certification and credentialing programs that help maintain professional standards and identify qualified prospective employees, including microcredentialing programs.
The National Education Association defines microcredentialing as “a short, competency-based recognition” and offers more than 175 of its own microcredentials for educators. Generally, microcredentialings programs offer single courses or a series of “stackable” courses that teach specific new skills in short bursts, sometimes as short as 15 minutes. Students can take one or all of the courses at their own pace, in their own time.
If staying competitive in the job market requires workers to upskill constantly (and evidence indicates that it does), associations find themselves uniquely positioned to cater to the needs of their members.
Younger members want skills training on their timeline with access on demand. They want the information they need to master a new project, qualify for a new job, or compete for a promotion, and they want it quickly. They want to access it from their favorite device, especially their phones. They want training from a trusted source. And they don’t want to spend a fortune on it.
Associations want to promote high industry standards, and they want to serve both the needs of their members and the essence of their missions. Microcredentialing programs are sticky. By that, I mean microcredentialing programs keep members engaged with the association throughout their training, even if it’s in short bursts. That engagement gives the association multiple chances to demonstrate its value prop while building ongoing relationships with students. Those relationships can produce loyal members, excellent advertising for the program, and higher membership recruitment and retention rates.
Whether you're embarking on a journey to launch your association's first microcredentialing program or seeking to refine your current strategies, you’ll need to attract as many students as you can. To do that, you’ll need some great marketing strategies.
To start, remember all the lessons you learned in Marketing 101:
· Define a clear value prop and include it in your outreach.
· Segment your audience based on their needs and experience levels.
· Tailor your messages to the audience segment.
· Personalize your messages whenever you can.
Leverage existing association marketing channels to reach your member base. You’ve already spent the time and effort to develop audiences for your newsletters, websites, and social media platforms. If the audiences overlap with the audience for your microcredentialing program, don’t hesitate to use the channel.
Successful marketing is a combination of understanding your audience, delivering value, and maintaining effective communication throughout the journey.