The Rising Veto Power of the Checkbook: An Empirical Investigation of Parents’ Impacts on Their Children’s University Enrollment
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Date
2022-04
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Type
Article
Publisher
IGI Global Publishing
Series Info
International Journal of Customer Relationship Marketing and Management;Volume 13 • Issue 1
Scientific Journal Rankings
Abstract
This study drew on different streams in the literature to theorize a power shift in favor of parents in the
post-COVID-19 era. The authors investigated the impact of parents’ campus site visits on university
enrollment decisions by empirically testing a model that draws on concepts from service marketing
and sociology and links university enrollment to parents’ evaluative and intentional constructs. Data
were obtained from 339 parents of final-year high school students immediately after their campus
site visits and analyzed using structural equation modelling. The results indicate that antecedents of
parent university satisfaction include human encounters, university reputation, and physical setting.
Satisfaction was found to drive intention to advocate to children and brand preference. These two
outcomes affected enrollment. The results offer important theoretical contributions to the field of
higher education marketing and present managerial implications for university administrators in their
quest to augment student recruitment processes.
Description
Keywords
Campus Site Visits, COVID-19, Higher Education Marketing, Parents’ Satisfaction, Parents, Power, Student Enrollment, University Brand Preference, University Parent Encounters