Institutions Must Adapt to the Needs of Five Distinct Groups Within the Online Education Population

BOSTON, MA--(Marketwired - Jun 18, 2014) - A survey of more than 3,000 U.S. students and parents conducted by The Boston Consulting Group's Center for Consumer and Customer Insight has identified five distinct segments of the online education population. The report, The Five Faces of Online Education: What Students and Parents Want, is being released today and is the latest in BCG's Consumer Sentiment series. The survey shows that schools must vary their approaches in order to best reach the following five segments:

  • True Believers. These students take the majority or all of their classes online. This population will be familiar as the original group that online education grew to serve.

  • Online Rejecters. These students have tried online courses, but they have decided not to take more in the future because they see problems with the quality, outcomes, and reputation of online programs.

  • Experience Seekers. These students uniquely emphasize the experiential, social, and emotional benefits of education. To them, it does not matter greatly which form their education takes, so long as they achieve their goal of a degree for personal and social advancement.

  • Money Mavens. Members of this segment are primarily motivated by the financial outcomes of an education. They view an online education much more as a transaction than as an experience.

  • Open Minds. This segment will become True Believers if the experience of online learning meets their high standards and offers benefits beyond that of traditional classrooms.

"The needs of the current mix of students are different from those of the past, driven by broader generational, digital, and marketing trends," said Christine Barton, a partner and coauthor of the report. Consider, for example, the overall finding that students rank academic advising ahead of faculty and teaching quality for the improved online education experience of the future. "What worked for online education in the past won't work in the future, and what will work in the future, won't work the same way for all institutions," says Barton.

Despite the differences among the segments, the survey also shows that universal attitudes exist. More than 60 percent of respondents who have taken an online or blended course believe the following: online offerings can improve the quality of education; online courses and degrees are gaining in importance as a part of the criteria for choosing an educational institution; and the traditional classroom experience benefits from online instruction.

Students are combining the best of online, blended (a mix of online and in-person instruction), and traditional academic settings into a new learning experience. In fact, BCG's survey suggests that the proportion of students currently taking at least one blended course is more than 25 percent.