Introducing Higher Ed Experts

In addition to running her highly successful niche blog, College Web Editor, and staying busy as a real college web editor, Karine Joly has managed to find the time to launch another online venture, Higher Ed Experts. The new site combines the attributes of a social network with online professional development, and it looks promising.

Higher Ed Experts

Higher Ed Experts is designed to “provide professional development and social networking online opportunities to higher ed professionals working in Web, marketing, PR and admissions.” Karine lists a few of the benefits in her post about the new site. Best of all, registration is free, so why not sign up now and surf around the site a bit?

Disclosure: I’m a member of the advisory panel for Karine’s new venture.

UMR name change update

One reason for the light posting around here lately is because I’ve been busy working on a variety of projects pertaining to the upcoming name change of my employer, the University of Missouri-Rolla, to Missouri University of Science and Technology (Missouri S&T for short). The University of Missouri Board of Curators approved the name change last Friday. The new name goes into effect on Jan. 1, 2008.

There is much work to do between now and then. A lot of rebranding, a lot of communication to a lot of people, and still a lot of blogging at our Name Change Conversations blog. I’ve been busy there, too, working to transform that site from a forum for discussion about the name change proposal to a forum to inform interested parties about how we’re going to implement the new name, and all that entails.

As a forum for discussing the name change proposal, the blog drew comments mainly from opponents. Does that mean the blog was unsuccessful? I think it was a mixed bag. I believe it was a success in a few ways: 1.) it gave alumni and students an “official” forum through which they could share their views, complaints and occasional expressions of support; 2.) it caused alumni, students and others to — in the words of one commenter — “think more about my alma mater than I have in a long time:; and 3.) the conversations that occurred there also won a couple of people over to the rationale for the name change. I wish more of the alumni and students who supported the name change would have taken advantage of the opportunity to share their views. But I also realize that the most vocal critics of any change will be the ones most likely to take advantage of an opportunity to make their voice heard. That’s the beauty of the blogosphere. Or one of the beauties, anyway.

I’ll try not to bore you all with lengthy posts about the trials associated with a name change. But understand that this undertaking will consume a lot of my time, energy and thinking in the coming months.