Higher Ed Experts

#HigherEd Marketing Memos: Snapchat Custom Stories Make Student Takeovers a Snap by Lisa Miller

No snap judgment: why invest in Snapchat?

Some higher ed marketers are down on Snapchat.

It’s inconvenient – you can’t schedule stories ahead of time or post from your desktop. You have to set 23-hour alarms to capture what little user-engagement data Snapchat makes available before your story vanishes. You never really know exactly how many friends you have.

Competing platforms such as Instagram Stories and What’sApp are growing faster than Snapchat in terms of the number of active users worldwide. But Snapchat is still the most popular social media channel for teens. And when it comes to recruitment, that’s the audience I care about.

According to the 2018 Ruffalo Noel Levitz E-Expectations report – hot off the press a few weeks ago – 67-70% of high school juniors and seniors are using Snapchat every day. And boy are they using it!

A new study conducted by the Pew Research Center reports that 9 out of 10 teens go online on their smartphones multiple times a day. And Snapchat is a frequent destination. Conducted in March and April 2018, the study found that the top three social media platforms used by U.S. teens ages 13-17 are You Tube, Instagram and Snapchat. Among teens who use more than one platform, Snapchat is the channel of choice.

Your prospective students are on Snapchat, so you need to have a presence there.

By and for Students

More than any of our other social channels, which have a broader audience and purpose, the SUNY Oneonta Snapchat is by, and for, current and prospective students.

Last year, nearly half of our Snapchat stories were created by students.

Each summer, we find a few freshmen willing to document their move-in day and orientation experiences on our account. Throughout the year, we regularly host student takeovers highlighting popular campus and club activities, such as our Terpsichorean Dance Company show, our Halloween in the Halls trick-or-treating event, and OH-Fest, a free outdoor spring concert that has featured headliners ranging from Blues Traveler to Pitbull.

Whenever we hear of a club or class doing something fun, visual or interesting off campus, we try to recruit one of the participants to take over our account. For example, our Hooked on Tonics club snapped from a regional a cappella competition, our Model United Nations team snapped from New York City, and our Habitat for Humanity club members shared their experience building houses in Florida over spring break.

We also love user-generated content, and we’ve featured everything from cute dog photos to selfies of students at their summer internship sites.

To increase our student presence on Snapchat even more, we recruited a core group of student social media ambassadors for our OSnap! team last fall. We use these students as a “cool or not cool?” sounding board and brainstorming group for ideas; assign them events to cover; and feature them as talent in stories such as our “Seven Days of Finals” giveaway.

Handing over the reins to students is valuable for a couple of reasons:

Custom Story to the Rescue

Including Snapchat student takeovers in your content strategy poses challenges. Some schools have a dedicated device that they log in and give to students. We didn’t want to do that. It’s expensive, inconvenient and doesn’t allow for takeovers by students who are doing cool things off campus.

Sharing your account password with students and having them log in and out of your account is also not ideal because:

Snapchat’s Custom Story feature solves all these problems and more!

How to Use Snapchat Custom Story

To use Custom Story, your school first has to become mutual friends with your student Snapchatters. Then, follow these steps.

Step 1: Create a new story and choose Custom Story. Give it a name. Select the friends you want to be able to add to and view the story.

Step 2: Take a starting snap and send it to your new custom story. You’ll have to click on the small “Show More” type to reveal your custom story as an option.

Step 3: Now your student Snapchatter(s) can take and edit photos and videos while logged into their own Snapchat account, but send the snaps to your custom story. Only you and they will be able to see the custom story as it develops.

Step 4: Save the individual snaps from the custom story (or the whole story) to Memories. Tip: Turn on “Auto-Save to Memories.”

Step 5: When you are ready to share the story with all your Snapchat friends, go to Memories, select individual snaps (one at a time) or the whole story, and send them to “My Story.” Voila! You have just reposted the custom story on your school’s account.

From Creation to Curation

Besides the convenience of getting authentic student-produced content on your story – without ever having to share your password – Custom Story lets you be a curator. If your student Snapchatter makes a bad typo, forgets to set the snap duration to 10 seconds for a photo with a long caption, or doesn’t speak clearly in a video – you have veto power. No snap will be posted on your account until you say so.

So far, we’ve only used Custom Story for individual takeovers. The real fun will be using it to curate content from multiple students all posting at once! We’re excited to try this out on move-in day and orientation. Because, at least for me, the only thing more fun than seeing one student’s story is hearing from MANY different students!

Just another reason why, imho, Snapchat is still > Instagram Stories.

How about you? Have you used Custom Story? Share your experiences in the comments!

Meet the Author: Lisa Miller

Lisa Miller is the director of marketing at SUNY Oneonta, and a graduate of the Higher Ed Experts’ professional certificate program in Social Media Marketing for Higher Ed.