AI Archives - Bee Digital Education Marketing Agency | Marketing Services for Education & EdTech companies Wed, 06 Dec 2023 10:08:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://beedigital.marketing/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-Bee-Digital-icon-1-32x32.png AI Archives - Bee Digital 32 32 11 Marketing trends in 2021 https://beedigital.marketing/guest-blog-11-marketing-trends-in-2021/ https://beedigital.marketing/guest-blog-11-marketing-trends-in-2021/#comments Mon, 18 Jan 2021 11:10:34 +0000 https://beedigital.marketing/?p=4638 From availability to an awareness of your changing customer. Here are 11 edtech marketing trends for 2021...

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It’s difficult to predict the future, so please regard this article as a reflection of what may happen and probably should happen in the area of marketing in the coming year.
Do a search on the internet and you will discover that there are many, many articles on this theme, most of which agree with each other only in one or two areas.
The eleven trends suggested here are based partly from that research, but also on the edtech trends identified in Reflections on Technology in Schools in the time of Covid Part 1 and Reflections on Technology in Schools in the time of Covid: Part 2, and the education market.

1. Availability

Now that all of us have been involved in online education, virtual events, and meeting with friends on Zoom, the availability of technology when and where we need it has become more important than ever.

This has been highlighted by revelations that the much-trumpeted laptops for digitally disadvantaged pupils scheme have resulted in fewer devices than promised being delivered, and devices being delivered that were not entirely fit for purpose.

As a general point, then, we have all become more digitally savvy – do you know anybody who has not used Zoom? – and our expectations have been raised.

From a marketing point of view, I think companies would be wise to consider their availability for customers and potential customers. More and more company websites have a live chat option or a chatbot.

They also furnish the visitor with the opportunity to email the company, with a response promised in the next two or three days, but there are those of us for whom that sounds like a lifetime.

In short, we’ve become savvier, more demanding, more used to technology and people being available, and more used to interactivity.

2. Greater use of VR and AR

According to The Times, sales of virtual reality goggles have risen by 350% since the outbreak of the pandemic, in order to escape the reality of staring at four walls day in and day out.

In other words, one beneficial side effect of coronavirus is that the barriers to entry to the world of VR have been lowered. It is no longer the province of geeks and gamers.

How long will it be, then, before we start to see more and more advertisements that cannot be fully appreciated without first donning some VR goggles or a VR headset? 

3. Direct appeal to parents

The increased sales in VR headsets and goggles have occurred in the consumer market.

Given that, and given the fact that so many youngsters are now having to be educated while at home, it would make sense for edtech companies to target parents directly.

Arguably, the need for inexpensive but powerful devices has never been greater, nor vast swathes of the population more receptive.

4. More use of AI

I’ve noticed a growing number of services that automate or semi-automate online research, and then either draft an article based on that research and identification of keywords, or provide a list of main points the article ought to cover.

Using AI in this context means, potentially, that more research can be done in less time.

5. More use of AI in both research and crafting content

This is one of the trends suggested in an article on digital marketing in 2021. According to the article:

“67% of marketing leaders already leverage marketing automation tools. Though marketing automation software has existed for years, developers regularly release new digital capabilities. In 2021, this technology will further evolve, allowing marketers to better convert leads, generate personalized content, and track results.”

6. More use of social media

According to search engine watch, the use of social media has “surged” in recent months, so savvy businesses should devote more time and resources into social media marketing.

Large edtech companies do this already of course, but the article is aimed mainly at smaller businesses.

7. Use of ultra-niche keywords

The same article also advises (small) businesses to target ultra-niche keywords in their marketing.

This means acting on the suggestion made in 10 Tips for launching your 2021  strategy, to find out who your typical customers are and the challenges they face.

In other words, general marketing has to give way, to some extent, to much more highly focused marketing.

8. Free content

There is so much free stuff out there that companies will almost certainly need to make more use of high-quality free content, in order to compete.

The quality of some of these freebies is difficult to overstate. For example, some companies (not in mainstream education) have been offering free virtual tours and talks as a lead magnet for their paid-for services.

The free tours are of the same length and high quality as the paid-for ones.

It means that anyone pondering whether or not to buy a tour doesn’t have to go by the reviews and hope for the best. They can literally try before they buy.

9. Reflection of, and accommodation of, the trends of edtech usage in schools 

The trends in edtech use in schools covered in the “technology in the time of Covid” articles mentioned earlier suggest that marketing to schools in 2021 should take into account the greater use of flipped learning (which might indicate a demand for short videos, for example), accessibility of technology, and seamless integration with a school’s MIS (because nobody now has the time or inclination to have to re-enter data or export it and import it from one application to another).

10. Flexibility as requirements change

I should think a good selling point for a company itself, regardless of its actual product, is flexibility.

Given that we don’t know from one day to the next whether all, some or none of the kids are going to be in school, or learning from home, or whatever, companies will need to offer a high degree of flexibility in what they offer and how they offer it. 

11. Awareness of the changing consumer

Just as we mentioned as a general point at the start of this article, it’s probably the case that even the most technophobic and tech-sceptic teacher has become more confident with technology, more reliant upon it and, crucially, savvier about what it can help teachers and pupils to achieve.

This increased savviness is bound to make potential customers more demanding. Edtech companies who ignore that likelihood in their approach to marketing will do at their peril.

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Reflections on Technology in Schools in the time of Covid: Part 2 https://beedigital.marketing/reflections-on-technology-in-schools-in-the-time-of-covid-part-2/ https://beedigital.marketing/reflections-on-technology-in-schools-in-the-time-of-covid-part-2/#comments Mon, 14 Dec 2020 08:06:29 +0000 https://beedigital.marketing/?p=4362 In Reflections on Technology in Schools in the time of Covid Part 1, we looked at how some technology has become or might become, a feature of school education as a result of our Covid experience. But what might we expect in the longer term?

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In Reflections on Technology in Schools in the time of Covid Part 1, we looked at how some technology has become or might become, a feature of school education as a result of our (post)Covid experience.

But what might we expect in the longer term?

Unfortunately, “expect” is perhaps too strong or too optimistic a term to use.

New technologies have to have time to prove themselves before schools en masse will be willing to adopt them.

There are also financial constraints and, above all, the day-to-day pressures.

What headteacher, after all, is going to fret about how blockchain might be implemented while half the students have had to be sent home to isolate and an Ofsted inspection is around the corner.

Nevertheless, a bit of “blue sky thinking” is often enjoyable, and sometimes even useful.

Artificial Intelligence (AI)

In principle, this would be a life-saver in schools.

Just in terms of the amount of new data being generated in schools because of recording new kinds of attendance (see the previous article), having a piece of code working on the data and not merely reporting but predicting likely student outcomes would enable schools to be even more proactive.

There are many potential benefits of AI in schools, and some potential pitfalls, but perhaps this is largely academic at the moment.

Why? Because by and large, the technology is not really there yet in my opinion.

At least, it doesn’t seem to be robust enough to trust it to make predictions that could affect how you provide schooling to some of your students.

Besides, there are issues of bias and legality too. It’s no longer news to assert that many computer algorithms, far from avoiding human biases, have embedded them.

As if that wasn’t bad enough, much of the time when AI comes to a conclusion, it doesn’t know how it did so.

That means, it cannot be challenged in any meaningful way.

Imagine AI telling Student A that she doesn’t have the aptitude for university, and then the school and her university choices acting on this “Computer says ‘no’” advice. 

One of the stipulations of the GDPR is that people have the right to question decisions made automatically by an algorithm.

Add to that requirement the fact that companies regard their AI code as a closely-guarded secret, and you can see why it will be some time before AI is a major part of the education landscape.

Chatbots

Chatbots, or automated assistants, are beginning to find their way into education, especially HE.

A well-designed chatbot in schools could be a godsend in these times.

If some of a school’s admin staff are having to self-isolate, a chatbot could answer many of parents’ queries and concerns.

Chatbots could also assist in students’ learning. For example, they could chat with a student to determine how well he has understood a concept, and record a grade accordingly.

Or a chatbot could ascertain a student’s needs, and then suggest online resources she would benefit from consulting.

All-in-all, the potential for chatbots in education seems to me to be more realisable, or realisable sooner, than that of more general AI.

Blockchain

The potential for the education of this technology is huge.

It’s largely associated with cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin, but it has far wider implications.

Without delving into the technicalities, blockchain enables a great deal of information to be stored in a decentralised fashion such that if one part gets compromised, the information is still intact.

These “nodes” are linked, and conditions can be applied. For example, students’ achievements can be recorded and stored in a blockchain, with accreditation (perhaps in the form of badges) being given when certain conditions are satisfied.

If a student changes schools, the record of what they have already studied, and how it differs from what the new school offers, can be very easily ascertained.

One of the problems facing teachers who wish to make some money from the resources they develop in their own time and at their own expense is piracy.

With blockchain, it will be relatively easy to guard against that.

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