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Frenemies on Facebook

December 22, 2008

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Send off the application.

Buy the T-shirt.

Join the Facebook group.

Such is the process -- not necessarily in that order -- for many college-bound high school seniors. So it’s perhaps no surprise that admissions officials and students alike felt betrayed when they learned dozens of Facebook groups devoted to the “Class of 2013” at various colleges appeared to have been created by non-students who were more interested in marketing than getting chummy with future classmates.

The viral marketing ploy was first exposed by Brad Ward, coordinator for electronic communication in Butler University’s admissions office, who wrote about some Facebook peculiarities on his blog, squaredpeg.com.

After a tip from another admissions official, Ward found that many of the “Class of 2013” groups were created by the same people, none of whom seemed to have a connection to the colleges for which they were creating groups. They did have connections to each other, however. Several of the creators were affiliated with College Prowler, a Pittsburgh-based company that publishes college guidebooks.

Calling the group creators “an inside ring with a common purpose,” Ward speculated on their intentions: “Think of the data collection,” he wrote. “The opportunities down the road to push affiliate links. The opportunity to appear to be an ‘Admin’ of Your School Class of 2013. The chance to message alumni down the road. The list of possibilities goes on and on and on.”

By mid-morning Friday, something of a disorganized revolution began, with admissions officials and students from all of the country outing the creators online and warning Facebook users about the deception. Before long, a Google Docs spreadsheet was posted on the blog, naming the names of all the creators.

Soon enough, there was action on Twitter, where interested parties were “tweeting” like crazy about apparent efforts by the creators to cover their tracks. In what was likely a move to avoid copyright infringement, official logos from colleges, including Pennsylvania State University, were removed from the 2013 pages, one person wrote on Twitter. Others noted that administrators were leaving the groups altogether.

And finally, in an act of online truth and reconciliation, a confession came. A person identifying himself as Luke Skurman, chief executive office of College Prowler, wrote on Ward’s blog that his company had “crossed the line” in its viral marketing efforts.

“Yes, College Prowler has been directly or indirectly involved with the creation of multiple Class of 2013 groups,” Skurman wrote.

“… From a big picture perspective, having a marketing strategy using social networking sites (like Facebook) is something that is necessary to be effective in our business. We do pride ourselves on being forward thinking and aggressive. In this instance, in its current form, we have crossed the line and to reiterate, we will be removing our administrator privileges from all of these 2013 groups immediately.”

The post gave a rationale for creating the groups, saying the purpose was to steer students toward Skurman’s Web site where they could find “a free guide about their new college.” Skurman did claim some ignorance, however, about the extent of the marketing project, saying he was unaware until Friday that College Prowler had teamed up with another company that used fake aliases to create groups.

In an e-mail to I nside Higher Ed, Skurman confirmed Monday that he had written the post on squaredpeg.com, and identified the other company that partnered with College Prowler as Match U.

“We no longer have any administrative access whatsoever and we have no involvement with any of those Class of 2013 groups any longer," Skurman said in a voicemail.

Friday's flap wasn't the first time College Prowler has taken heat for a marketing strategy. Higher education officials raised objections in 2006, when the guidebook publisher pressed colleges to advertise in the book, or risk being criticized inside of it.

Colleges May Change Approach to Facebook

The controversy over the 2013 groups highlights a relatively new and emerging tension for college admissions officials. Several who talked to Inside Higher Ed said their standard practice has been to let student groups emerge organically, fearing that creating an “official” group -- as many of the College Prowler groups were dubbed -- makes students feel that they’re being monitored by university officials. On the other hand, college leaders are concerned about Facebook pages that appear to be “official,” but are actually designed for the marketing purposes of a third party.

Jeannine Lalonde, assistant dean of admissions at the University of Virginia, said the College Prowler story prompted her to start an official group Friday morning, reversing her previous hands-off approach.

“Last night when I read the post, I completely changed my mind,” she said Friday. “I think we need to protect our brand and we need to protect our students.”

Despite concerns, some admissions officials couldn’t help but marvel at College Prowler’s strategy.

“There is brilliance in it, and quite frankly if they had taken it one step more they never would have been caught,” said Michelle Lynch Clevenger, director of recruitment at Winthrop University.

Clevenger, who was the first to alert Ward to something odd about the Facebook groups, said the marketers never would have been identified if they had waited to join as members instead of creating the groups as administrators. On the other hand, becoming administrators empowered the marketers to send out mass messages or delete postings, such as, ahem, “this site is a scam,” or something like that.

Anne Petersen, a former administrator in Penn State’s undergraduate admissions office, said she worried about how covert Facebook groups might influence prospective students. By posing as prospective students, a company could promote or besmirch a college, she said.

“When it comes to yield, that could be really important,” said Peterson, who directed electronic communications at Penn State. “That could sway some decisions about where students go.”

Petersen, who has taken a position at the University of Illinois at Chicago, said the potential for companies or individuals to manipulate social networking sites presents a lot of scary possibilities.

“It’s really kind of black helicopter [stuff],” she said. “You start to think about all of the conspiracy theories that can come out of this.”

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Comments on Frenemies on Facebook

  • Don't Fake It.
  • Posted by T on December 22, 2008 at 8:15am EST
  • The lesson here is don't try to fool your customer/potential students. Facebook offers a product called a "page" that allows businesses to create a presence on Facebook, send updates to "fans" and otherwise promote their business or product through social networking. My college has such a site. Any communications through the page appear to be sent from the institution, not an individual posing as a "friend." It's obvious on our page what the intent is. Leave the groups to students, start a page and promote your institution on Facebook the right way.

  • Privacy vs Protection
  • Posted by Mich Sineath on December 22, 2008 at 9:20am EST
  • I said this on Brad’s post: This is an issue of education, trust and credibility. Journalism schools have been teaching these skills forever. If anything, this is a fight for the relevance and stamina of journalism in the face of new media.

    In general, Facebook is an opt-in service. Users have complete control over their privacy. If a “fake” group is masquerading as an “official” group, then ask Facebook to take it down. But please leave it to school officials and Facebook employees to handle as necessary and on their own. The message will be clear and we won’t have a potential witch hunt on our hands as we do with the Watch List Brad has created in Google Docs.

    There is a debate about privacy still happening on Brad's blog in the comments section that relates to this. I trust schools will be vigilant in their fight to protect students, but also help educate them.

  • Don't join what you can't beat
  • Posted by Phronesis , Director, Institute of Professional Ethics at University of Northern Colorado on December 22, 2008 at 10:40am EST
  • Students need to learn how to check up on the credibility of all things posted on the Web. That so many are so easily duped by a fake official class site shows that institutions cannot protect them by producing their own real class sites -- there will always be another scam artist waiting in the wings. We should not waste our time and resources hiring more staff to monitor and control institutions' "official" facebook presences. Instead, we should do our jobs and educate students about how to make carefully reasoned judgments about what kinds of information to trust.

  • Be careful what you wish for
  • Posted by observer on December 22, 2008 at 11:20am EST
  • For some reason I'm having a hard time getting worked up about this. Sure these College Prowler folks were kind of sleazy, but this reads more like a case of non-academic control-freak university marketing types getting upset because somebody else beat them at their own game on the rough-and-tumble internet.

    But I do see some cause for encouragement in the pupular uprising against College Prowler. I find it encouraging because good things will happen when that same spirit is turned against sleazy practices within the university itself. "How come tuition went up while the university president gets paid $500K a year??" "How come the university president gets to live rent-free in a mansion when he gets paid $500K a year??" "How come I have to pay an athletic fee when the football coach is paid a million dollars a year??" "How come the marketing people have a fancy office in the administration building and my English professor shares an office in the basement??"

    Yes, the web does offer us some interesting possibilities for mass student action in the future.

  • This is nothing new...
  • Posted by Dan , Doctor at Whatsa Matta U on December 22, 2008 at 12:25pm EST
  • I taught about such stuff in Information and Communications Sciences back in 1986, and it was already being done undernet... no, not the 1992 group, but the original managers of arpanet in the '70s and by the first network savvy librarians (information scientists) at the national labs, that is, surreptitiously acquiring information on users to better provide and control information flow, and some used it for their own benefit.

  • An Internet Vendor's Dream or Nightmare
  • Posted by Ed Online Advertiser on December 22, 2008 at 1:05pm EST
  • This situation has been occurring for years by Online vendors, the recent years are rife for those with brains and no ethical responsibility to consumers (the leads and students) nor their clients (the schools). They have their own agenda, including this company, to make money off the schools. The schools pay a fee to be listed in their book, the more they distribute the more they can raise their fees and draw traffic to their website. There are hundreds of companies out there like this who also bid on schools trademark or key terms without permission in search engines as well as fall outside of schools branding and standards, meaning they use incorrect descriptions, logos, programs, etc. and this is very misleading to active and potential students trying to reach their school.
    Online advertising is a highly unregulated industry and advertisers such as these ruin it for the vendors who are ethical and truly protect their client’s brand. I hope there is more exposure of companies with these misleading and false advertising practices, humility is the ultimate punishment – especially online.

  • 6 degrees
  • Posted by Pamela on December 22, 2008 at 1:30pm EST
  • Kids create a Facebook account while they are in high school. Facebook scans the postings for references to name brands, movies, etc. How private is that?

    My children encouraged me to open a Facebook page. Now, I'm getting "friend" requests by people I don't know at reunion.com AND by kids on Facebook who are friends with my children. The potential for misuse is always there. Unfortunately, the kids are too innocent to realize it.

  • Honesty is the key
  • Posted by Brent on December 22, 2008 at 2:10pm EST
  • I work on social media programs for several companies and I always stress that honesty is the key. If you are a brand then be that brand, don't try to pretend you're someone else. One of our clients is marketing directly to college students and it would be an easy trap to fall into to try and create some "Fake" buzz with fake profiles, but it's wrong on a bunch of levels and the social media community is about as savvy as anyone can be they smell marketing bs a mile away and retaliate for being lied to. So far every major company that has been caught was outed in a major way by the community. So be honest, play it straight and don't try and take the easy way out.

  • Handy Spreadsheet
  • Posted by notsurprised on December 22, 2008 at 3:00pm EST
  • Facebook groups created and used for less-than-honorable purposes? Shocking.

    Great spreadsheet put together by the ad hoc working group. If I'm a company with questionable marketing practices, suddenly it has become exceptionally easy for me to find groups to join to market my wares. Remove it now? Already downloaded it.

    Being sarcastic, of course.

    Mich made an interesting point about this leaning toward being a witch hunt. If I were Butler, I'm not so sure I'd want this sort of attention drawn to my institution. If I were Mr. Ward, I'm not so sure I'd want my institution's attention drawn to me.

  • Posted by Another Perspective , Not So Fast on December 22, 2008 at 4:20pm EST
  • Is what College Prowler did illegal? We can analyze the ethical implications all we want, but if it's not illegal, then what we're really talking about is not protecting our students (from what, advertisements?), but rather protecting each university's brand and enrollment numbers.

    The only reason Luke Skurman of College Prowler publicly apologized is that he's trying to rescue College Prowler's brand in the environment that organizes his target market for him: the colleges and universities that communalize disparate people into target markets. Our older generation of marketing created these target markets. A new generation of marketing makes use of the markets created by other businesses like our own.

    Rather than complain when marketing strategies legally collect our personal data to cater advertisements to our specific interests, maybe we should figure out what our own intentions are when we cast this story with ominous language.

    What is our objective here? A conservative resistance to change? Are we trying to figure out how to plug up the gaps that reveal social movement and transformation?

    Is it a liberal opportunity to go with the flow, learn from our surroundings, and develop new strategies to improve our own recent efforts to emphasize the community of the classroom (through Blackboard, blogs, Twitter...), or of the university as a whole (text messages, arcades, tanning beds, spas, movie theaters)?

    Or is it an ethical opportunity that has not yet been worked out in terms of what it wants to prevent or achieve? We've talked about privacy rights, but we haven't talked about the why: why privacy rights? To protect agency? If so, then how does organized information inhibit that agency? And what's the difference between our business collecting and using that information, and other businesses collecting and using that information?

  • Facebook can impact Yield and Alumni Engagement
  • Posted by Michael Staton , CEO at Inigral, Inc on December 22, 2008 at 5:25pm EST
  • The thing I really liked here is that someone in higher ed admissions marketing acknowledged that social networks can impact yield, specifically with Facebook.

    The lesson to be learned here is that Universities need to realize that Facebook can hugely advance their strategic goals - especially yield and alumni engagement. The best way to do that is to dabble with facebook pages:
    http://www.inigral.com/conversations/
    or go the whole nine yards and get a private, managed facebook app:
    http://www.inigral.com/schools/

  • Posted by kgotthardt on December 23, 2008 at 9:40am EST
  • Sounds like the college is taking advantage of free advertising.

    There are many scams on the Internet and many scam schools. Students are always at risk for getting trapped, especially considering there are no consumer protection laws in place for students ripped off by unethical schools.

  • Being a part of the solution, moving forward
  • Posted by Luke Skurman , CEO at College Prowler on December 23, 2008 at 8:40pm EST
  • I just want to clear up a few things about the recent Facebook controversy surrounding my company, College Prowler, as I have seen a lot of misinformation being posted out there. The facts are this, we created about 125 Facebook groups with the intention of promoting free access to our college guidebook information. In so doing we were not upfront about our affiliation and our intentions to the members of the groups. As soon as I found out about these issues we took full responsibility for any wrongdoing and disassociated ourselves from the groups.

    We never sent any messages to the students and never posed as university officials. Our intention was to engage the students and promote a free college guide for incoming freshmen. Anything you read to the contrary is inaccurate information created in the internet community as the story gets told and retold.

    Since this controversy broke we have worked proactively to fix any harm done and educate the higher education community about social media and how it is being used to market to their students. We’ve started a discussion on Facebook (join our group to add your thoughts: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=41590893650).

    In short, we made some mistakes but are working toward being a part of the solution. If you have any further questions or concerns please contact me at luke@collegeprowler.com.

  • Posted by Elizabeth Kudner , Co-Founder at myUsearch on December 29, 2008 at 5:00pm EST
  • I think it's great that someone is looking out for the students and that College Prowler is willing to fix the problem. I wish this happened more often because I feel that what College Prowler did is so much less severe than many of the tactics used by other college-related lead generation/data mining vendors. It would be great if a similar conversation could be started about the deceiving practices of online search sites that lure students to their site in order to allegedly provide a list of colleges that meet the students' needs. These sites provide recommendations based on the school's willingness to pay, not on the students' needs and they sell the students' contact information to any school, credit card or student loan company willing to pay for it. I wrote a blog post to warn students about this a while ago if interested: http://myusearchblog.com/college-search-sites-web-surfers-beware

  • Posted by Tony Hart , 'Data Gathering' facebook groups on January 4, 2009 at 2:15pm EST
  • Check out regionalnetworks.net

    This lot attempted to do something similar earlier this year by creating a load of regional groups and claiming that facebook networks were being removed. Facebook members from places like Belgium were 'admin' of groups in Yorkshire, Scotland, Bristol etc etc in the UK...nowhere near the admin's place of living!

    It seemed that a load of UK users got wind of this though and got many groups removed