How University Enrollment Teams Use Website Visitor Intelligence to Identify High-Intent Prospective Students

The higher education enrollment funnel is broken in a way that most admissions teams feel but rarely quantify.
Here's the math that should terrify every enrollment VP: the average university website gets tens of thousands of visitors per month during peak recruitment season. Of those, maybe 3โ5% fill out an inquiry form. The other 95% browse program pages, check tuition costs, read faculty bios, look at campus life content โ and leave without ever identifying themselves.
Your enrollment marketing budget drove them there. Your SEO, your digital ads, your college fair follow-ups, your email campaigns โ all of it worked. They showed up. And then they vanished into the anonymous traffic data, indistinguishable from a high school junior seriously evaluating your nursing program and a parent casually browsing during lunch.
The problem isn't traffic. It's identification.
Most universities are spending $1,500โ$4,000 per enrolled student in marketing costs. Yet they're making enrollment decisions โ where to allocate counselor time, which programs to promote, which geographic markets to invest in โ based on the tiny fraction of prospects who voluntarily raise their hand. The silent majority? Invisible.
One institution changed that. And the results reshaped how their entire enrollment team operates.

