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Understanding the Education Org Chart: How the Best Advertising Agencies Win EDU Clients

by Colling Media - March 14, 2026


Why Most Education Advertising Agencies Fail Their Clients

Most advertising agencies that work with educational institutions make the same mistake: they talk to the marketing department and ignore everyone else. They optimize for the metrics the CMO cares about — impressions, clicks, CPL — and never connect those metrics to what the VP of Enrollment, Director of Admissions, or President actually needs.

The result is a common pattern: marketing reports look good, but enrollment results disappoint. The agency gets fired. A new agency is hired. The cycle repeats.

At Colling Media, we’ve broken this cycle by building a deep understanding of the education org chart — and designing advertising strategies that serve every stakeholder’s priorities, not just marketing’s.

The Education Org Chart: Who Cares About What

VP of Enrollment

The VP of Enrollment is typically the most important stakeholder in education advertising decisions. Their priorities:

  • Enrollment yield: What percentage of inquiries become enrolled students?
  • Class size by program: Are we hitting enrollment targets for each program?
  • Start rate: What percentage of enrolled students actually begin?
  • Geographic distribution: Are we reaching the right markets?
  • Seasonal enrollment patterns: Are we optimizing for each start date?

The VP of Enrollment thinks in terms of seats filled, not leads generated. An advertising strategy that generates 1,000 leads but only 20 enrollments is a failure in their eyes, regardless of how good the CPL looks.

CMO / VP of Marketing

The CMO’s priorities are broader:

  • Brand awareness and perception: Is the institution known and respected in target markets?
  • Lead volume: Are we generating enough inquiries to feed the admissions pipeline?
  • Channel mix: Are we reaching prospective students across all relevant touchpoints?
  • Cost efficiency: Are we getting the best possible CPL for the budget?
  • Competitive positioning: How do we compare to competing institutions?

Director of Admissions

The Director of Admissions is the voice of lead quality:

  • Lead quality: Are the leads we’re generating actually qualified for our programs?
  • Application rate: What percentage of leads start an application?
  • Admissions team capacity: Are we generating more leads than the team can handle?
  • Lead source quality: Which campaigns generate the best leads?

The Director of Admissions is often the most critical voice in the room — and the one most likely to push back on advertising strategies that generate volume without quality. Building a direct feedback loop between admissions outcomes and advertising optimization is essential for maintaining their trust.

CFO

The CFO’s priorities are financial:

  • CPE (cost per enrollment): What does it cost to generate an enrolled student?
  • Advertising ROI: What is the return on advertising investment relative to program revenue?
  • Budget efficiency: Are we spending the right amount in the right places?

President / Chancellor

The President thinks at the institutional level:

  • Long-term enrollment sustainability: Are we building a pipeline that supports institutional growth?
  • Brand reputation: Is our advertising consistent with our institutional values?
  • Competitive position: Are we growing relative to competitors?
  • Accreditation and compliance: Is our advertising compliant with regulatory requirements?

How Colling Media Aligns Strategy Across the Org Chart

The key to serving all these stakeholders is a shared measurement framework that connects each stakeholder’s metrics to a common outcome: enrolled students.

The Enrollment Funnel as Common Language

We use the enrollment funnel as the shared language across all stakeholders:

  • Impressions → Awareness (CMO’s domain)
  • Clicks → Inquiries → CPL (Marketing’s domain)
  • Inquiries → Applications → Lead quality (Admissions’ domain)
  • Applications → Enrollments → CPE (Enrollment’s domain)
  • Enrollments → Revenue → ROI (CFO’s domain)

When every stakeholder can see how their metrics connect to the next stage in the funnel, the conversation shifts from competing priorities to collaborative optimization.

Stakeholder-Specific Reporting

We build reporting dashboards tailored to each stakeholder’s priorities — so the VP of Enrollment sees enrollment yield by program and market, the CMO sees brand metrics and lead volume, and the CFO sees CPE and ROI. Everyone gets the data they need, in the format they need it.

The Long-Term Partnership Model

Understanding the education org chart is not a one-time exercise; it’s an ongoing commitment. Stakeholders change. Priorities shift. New programs launch. Markets evolve. The best education advertising agencies stay aligned with the org chart over time — which is why our longest client relationships span years, not months.

Our partnership with MTI and Delta Technical College — now in its tenth year — is built on this foundation. We know their org chart. We know their priorities. We know their programs. And we’ve built an advertising system that serves all of them, consistently, over time.

That’s what 325%+ enrollment growth over 9 years looks like from the inside.

Learn more about our education advertising approach and how we work with education institutions to align advertising strategy across the entire org chart.

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