THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Digital and Social Media Marketing at FLC

By Becca Day

Author: Bodine, James/Thursday, February 22, 2018/Categories: Home, Campus

Rate this article:
No rating

The digital marketing landscape frequently changes, and Fort Lewis College’s marketing program has attempted to keep up with the industry.

 

FLC offers its students two courses within its marketing program, Digital Marketing and Social Media Marketing, Tomasz Miaskiewicz, assistant professor of Marketing, said.

 

“The fact that we already have two classes is already better than many other schools in the state,” Miaskiewicz said. “I think it can be a great source of competitive advantage for Fort Lewis.”

 

History of Marketing

 

In the early 1900s marketing was a production-oriented field, Miaskiewicz said.

 

There was a scarcity of products, and companies were focused on producing as much product as possible at the lowest cost, he said.

 

Over time, companies began producing an abundance of goods, which led to sales-oriented marketing, he said.

 

The goal of marketing then was to sell more products than the competition did, Miaskiewicz said.

 

“Now, marketing takes on what's called the marketing-orientation, which basically says that, ultimately, good marketing is marketing where we meet customers needs,” he said.

 

Marketing aims to build relationships with customers to bring them back repeatedly, Miaskiewicz said.

 

Digital marketing skills are practical for all students, he said.

 

In today's world, the skills taught in Digital Marketing can be used by everyone, Miaskiewicz said.

 

Digital Marketing

 

Digital marketing is any form of marketing that uses technology, Miaskiewicz said.

 

Miaskiewicz was the first professor to teach Digital Marketing, he started in Fall 2016 when he became a professor at FLC, he said.

 

Digital Marketing covers topics such as search engine optimization, website development, email marketing, social media marketing and online advertising, he said.

 

The course is designed to introduce students to the digital marketing field, he said.

 

The main project students work on is a website project, Miaskiewicz said.

 

“I like to just call it the website project, although it's even more than that,” he said.

 

Students build a public website based on any idea, provided it is appropriate, using the website builder Squarespace, he said.

 

“It’s one of the best classes I’ve ever taken,” Dante Washington, senior marketing major, said.

 

Washington’s group remade the Gardenswartz Sporting Goods’ website, he said.

 

Because he was a sales clerk at Gardenswartz, Washington noticed that the Gardenswartz website was out of date and needed to be redone. He decided to work on it for his digital marketing class, he said.

 

After the website is built, students optimize it for search engines, he said.

 

Search engine optimization makes it easier for people to find a specific website when they do online searches, he said.

 

Students also use Google Analytics to look at how successful their website is, Miaskiewicz said.

 

Google Analytics allows website designers to analyze how many people visit their website and how they interact with the website, Washington said.

 

After students build the website, they begin to focus on the content of their website and how it creates value for their customers, Miaskiewicz said.

 

Washington’s group posted new content two to three times a week and tweeted about it two to three times a day, he said.

 

Students also develop online advertising campaigns for their website. However, the advertisements do not run because they require a budget, Miaskiewicz said.  

 

Washington began by building the Gardenswartz website only for the Sporting Goods store where he works but added the Outdoors shop to the website after Gardenswartz asked him to, he said.

 

Washington now runs Gardenswartz marketing in addition to being a sales clerk, he said.

 

Social Media Marketing

 

The other class students can take that involves digital marketing is Social Media Marketing.

 

Lindsay Nyquist, director of digital communications and adjunct faculty of the School of Business Administration, teaches the Social Media Marketing course.

 

Nyquist has been teaching Social Media Marketing for six years, she said.

 

Social Media Marketing builds off of Digital Marketing and goes deeper into the social media aspect, Miaskiewicz said.

 

In this class, students get practical experience building social media campaigns for real companies, Nyquist said.

 

Nyquist works with businesses in Durango that want to rebuild their online processes, and she connects them with the students in her class, she said.

 

Students can walk out of this class with a job or an internship, Nyquist said.

 

Some of the companies that have worked with students in the class in the past are Mountain Motion Media, Ska Brewing and Durango Motor Company, Nyquist said.

 

Students become representatives of the company and need to be professional in all aspects, Nyquist said.

 

Future of Digital Marketing at FLC

 

Miaskiewicz is working on creating an advanced digital marketing course for students to provide them with more experience, he said.

 

“Nothing’s official yet but we’re trying to go beyond these two classes,” Miaskiewicz said.

 

“If we even go beyond the two we can really offer general marketing training while allowing our students to specialize in digital marketing,” Miaskiewicz said.

 
Print

Number of views (1031)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

Tradition TakΣover: Kappa Sigma pushes for recognition at FLC

By Will Charles Indy Staff Writer

Liam Elliot, interest group leader and sophomore at Fort Lewis College, is wanting to start a fraternity and be a part of a Kappa Sigma Chapter.

  Liam Elliot, interest group leader and sophomore at Fort Lewis College, is wanting to start a fraternity and be a part of a Kappa Sigma Chapter. Kappa Sigma Durango will begin at Interest Group level, which is when students can come to meetings and see what the chapter is all about, Booth said. Elliot’s goal is for the group to be able to colonize, a term fraternities use...

College, Quarantined

By Morgan Reed Indy Staff Writer

Can you remember being put into time-out as a child? My first week here, at Fort Lewis College, took me back to that nostalgic and harrowing feeling. 

Can you remember being put into time-out as a child? My first week here, at Fort Lewis College, took me back to that nostalgic and harrowing feeling.  I was figuring out  life on my own, far away from anyone familiar. Two days into this journey my roommate came into our place and shook things up a little more. I was in the kitchen when she answered the dreaded call alerting her of...

In a hotel down by the river: COVID-19 requires new housing accommodations at Fort Lewis College

By Barbara Edwards Indy Staff Writer and Steven Marquez

This school year has been unlike any other due to the coronavirus pandemic. One change Fort Lewis College made was housing students at the Durango Downtown Inn, in order to combat the spread of the virus.

This school year has been unlike any other due to the coronavirus pandemic. One change Fort Lewis College made was housing students at the Durango Downtown Inn, in order to combat the spread of the virus. “We felt very strongly that we wanted to provide a housing option to everyone who applied and requested housing,” James Estelle, the assistant director for the office of...

Up In Smoke: Colorado on Fire

By Jackson Zinsmeyer Indy Staff Writer

On July 31, 18 miles north of Grand Junction, Colorado, lightning struck starting what would become Colorado’s largest wildfire at 139,000 acres burnt.

On July 31, 18 miles north of Grand Junction, Colorado, lightning struck starting what would become Colorado’s largest wildfire at 139,000 acres burnt. According to the Incident Information System, Inciweb, the fire is 95% contained as of Sept. 11. Despite being nearly four hours away from Durango, this fire, as well as the many other fires in Colorado such as the Cameron Peak and...

Fall Sports Without a Season

By Will Charles Indy Staff Writer

Almost all of the fall sports at Fort Lewis College have been put on hold for the 2020 season due to the circumstances surrounding COVID-19.

Almost all of the fall sports at Fort Lewis College have been put on hold for the 2020 season due to the circumstances surrounding COVID-19. Golf and cross-country are the only two sports competing in regular season meets and tournaments for the fall season. Both are considered as low-threat sports by the NCAA. Coaches are focused on making sure that athletes stay academically strong and...

First1617181921232425Last