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A Head’s Guide to Using Digital Marketing to Increase Open Day Sign Ups

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A Head’s Guide to Using Digital Marketing to Increase Open Day Sign Ups

15%

growth identified in previously untapped catchment areas

What This Article Covers

Open days remain one of the most influential moments in a school’s admissions journey, yet they are often treated as standalone events rather than as part of a longer decision-making process for families. This article is written for Heads and senior leaders who want to take a more strategic view of how digital marketing supports open day sign ups, attendance quality and downstream enrolment.

Rather than focusing on surface-level promotion tactics, the guide explores how families research schools, how pupils influence decisions, and how digital touchpoints shape confidence long before an open day is booked. It brings together insight from admissions behaviour, pupil perspectives and data-led decision making to show what genuinely affects attendance today.

The aim is not to provide a checklist of quick wins. Instead, this article looks at how open days connect to wider leadership concerns such as enrolment stability, reputation, and long-term demand. It is designed to help Heads understand where digital marketing plays a meaningful role, where effort is often wasted, and how schools can approach open day visibility with greater clarity and intent.

Why Open Days Matter More Than Ever for Heads

For Heads, open days are no longer just an admissions activity. They are a visible expression of leadership, culture and confidence at a time when families are comparing schools more critically and earlier than ever before.

In many cases, families decide which open days to attend before they have formed a clear preference for a school. This means visibility, clarity and reassurance must happen well in advance. If a school is difficult to find online, unclear in its messaging, or inconsistent in how it presents itself, it may never make the shortlist, regardless of its strengths in person.

Open day performance also offers valuable strategic signals. Patterns in bookings and attendance can highlight shifting demand, pressure points by entry year, or changes in how families perceive value. For Heads, this makes open days a useful indicator of market position rather than simply an operational task to be delegated.

There is also a leadership risk in underestimating their importance. When open days underperform, the consequences often appear later through weaker pipelines, increased reliance on bursaries or reactive recruitment activity. Approaching open days as part of a planned digital admissions cycle helps reduce uncertainty and ensures the school’s story is being told clearly before families ever step on site.

How Families Decide Which Open Days to Attend

Families rarely decide to attend an open day on impulse. The decision is usually shaped over time through online research, comparison and conversation. Understanding this behaviour is essential for schools that want to increase open day sign ups rather than simply promote dates.

From a parent perspective, open days are about reassurance. Families want to feel confident that a school is worth their time before committing to a visit. They look for clear signals around values, outcomes, pastoral care and fit. If this information is difficult to find or feels generic, hesitation increases.

Pupils also play a more active role than many schools assume. Content written from a pupil perspective highlights that open days are as much about confidence and belonging as they are about facilities or results. A strong example is the BBC Newsround article on how pupils experience and approach secondary school open days, which shows how feelings, atmosphere and personal comfort influence decisions.

Digital touchpoints shape these perceptions. Families typically visit a school website multiple times, read reviews, watch videos and compare schools side by side before booking anything. They are not just looking for logistics. They are testing credibility.

This means schools are competing well before the open day itself. Those that communicate clearly, answer unspoken questions and reduce uncertainty early are more likely to secure attendance. For Heads, the implication is clear: increasing open day sign ups depends less on louder promotion and more on aligning digital presence with how families actually make decisions.

Where Schools Lose Open Day Sign Ups Early

Most schools do not lose open day sign ups because families lack interest. They lose them because the digital journey introduces friction before a parent ever reaches a booking form. It usually happens in small, avoidable moments that add up.

The first drop off point is discoverability. Open day details are often buried inside admissions pages, news posts, PDFs, or a generic events listing. Parents comparing several schools are scanning quickly, often on a phone, and they expect to find the date, start time, location, and booking route in seconds. If they cannot, they will click back to search results and try the next school. Even families who like what they see may delay, then forget.

The second issue is clarity. Many open day pages focus on logistics but do not answer the parent’s real question, which is whether the visit will help them make a decision. A strong page explains what they will experience, who they will meet, what they will see, and what they should do next. If this is vague, the event feels optional rather than essential.

Then there is conversion friction. Forms are too long, the call to action is inconsistent, confirmation is unclear, or the mobile layout is frustrating. Some schools also send paid traffic to a general admissions page rather than a dedicated booking experience, which increases drop off. Add slow page speed, missing trust signals, or a lack of relevant FAQs, and you have a journey that quietly leaks conversions.

Fixing these issues is exactly what makes Admissions Acceleration effective. It focuses on the points where families hesitate, then removes friction so interest becomes bookings rather than a stalled intention.

The Digital Channels That Increase Open Day Sign Ups

Families rarely decide to attend an open day after one interaction. They move through repeated touchpoints across search, social media, email, and the website itself. The channels that increase open day sign ups are the ones that match that behaviour, showing up at the right moments and making the next step feel simple.

Search is where intent is most visible. Parents use Google to compare schools, check credibility, and shortlist visits. Strong SEO helps your open day page appear when families search for admissions information and local options, while paid search captures high intent traffic when parents are actively looking for dates and booking links. The most effective approach aligns keyword targeting with page intent, so the landing experience immediately answers the query and makes booking effortless.

Paid social plays a different role. It builds familiarity and reinforces the decision over time. Parents might see a post, then visit the site later, then return again after discussing options at home. Well targeted campaigns allow schools to stay present in the right postcodes and age bands, with creative that focuses on what families care about: confidence in fit, a sense of belonging, and a clear view of what the day involves. Retargeting is particularly powerful, because it supports parents who have shown interest but were not ready to book on their first visit.

Email is often underused for open day performance. It is not just reminders. It is also about sequencing. A clear initial invitation, followed by practical guidance, then a short reassurance message close to the event, tends to lift attendance and reduce no shows. Schools also benefit from making confirmation emails useful, with calendar links, parking information, timings, and a simple contact route for questions.

None of these channels work well if the website experience is weak. The booking page needs to load quickly, work flawlessly on mobile, and communicate value. This is why the best results come from integrated delivery. Admissions Acceleration brings SEO, PPC, paid social, and conversion focused website updates together, with tracking that shows which channels are driving bookings and which messages are converting.

What Effective Open Day Marketing Looks Like in Practice

Effective open day marketing is not louder. It is clearer, earlier, and better aligned with how families decide. In practice, the strongest campaigns start with a dedicated open day page that is easy to find, easy to understand, and built to convert. It answers the practical questions quickly, then uses the rest of the page to build confidence: what families will see, who they will meet, what makes the school distinctive, and what they should do next.

Timing is part of execution. Schools that perform well do not wait until the last minute. They publish the page early, then build visibility steadily as the date approaches. Paid activity is weighted towards the weeks when parents are researching and comparing, not just the final few days. This also creates space for repeated exposure, which matters because most parents need more than one touchpoint before they commit time to a visit.

Campaign structure matters too. Search campaigns capture intent, paid social builds familiarity, and retargeting supports those who need a second nudge. The best messaging stays consistent across channels so families do not feel like they are seeing multiple versions of the school. They feel reassured by coherence.

Follow up is the final piece. Schools often focus on registrations but forget attendance. A simple pre event sequence, plus clear confirmation information, reduces drop off and improves show rates. After the event, schools that continue the journey with relevant next steps tend to convert more visitors into enquiries and applications.

This is the difference between isolated ads and a joined up approach. Admissions Acceleration supports schools by coordinating campaign delivery, page optimisation, and measurable tracking so open day marketing performs like a system, not a set of disconnected tasks.

Measuring Success Beyond Attendance Numbers

Open day attendance is an important indicator, but for senior leaders it is only the starting point. The real measure of success sits further down the admissions journey, and it is best understood through joined-up data rather than isolated figures.

At SLT level, the most useful metrics focus on movement and momentum. This includes the proportion of open day attendees who submit an enquiry, how many progress to registration, and how many convert into applications. Tracking time between stages matters too. Long gaps often indicate uncertainty or friction that can be addressed through clearer follow-up, stronger messaging, or better targeting earlier in the journey.

Website behaviour adds another layer of insight. Pages revisited after an open day, return visit frequency, and dwell time can all signal confidence building. When combined with campaign data, schools can see which channels attract families who not only attend, but continue engaging meaningfully. This is especially helpful when comparing senior school entry points, sixth form recruitment, or multiple campuses within a group.

Attendance quality matters as much as volume. Schools benefit from understanding where families are travelling from, which year groups show the strongest intent, and how attendance aligns with long-term yield. These insights support better forecasting, more confident budgeting, and clearer conversations at board level.

This is where structured reporting becomes essential. Tools such as the Admissions Dashboard bring campaign performance, enquiry flow, and conversion outcomes into one place, so leadership teams can spot early warning signs and opportunities while there is still time to act. Open days then become part of a measurable strategy rather than a one-off event.

Why Schools Trust Lykke to Support Admissions Growth

Schools trust Lykke because admissions growth is not driven by campaigns alone. It is driven by clarity, consistency, and confidence across the whole digital experience.

Our work starts with context. We take time to understand your school’s market position, competitive pressures, and leadership priorities before recommending activity. This means our support adapts whether the challenge is stabilising numbers, expanding reach, or improving conversion quality, rather than simply increasing volume.

We work across the full admissions lifecycle. Some schools need resilience in uncertain markets, which is where Digital Resilience strengthens visibility and performance even when demand fluctuates. Others are focused on attracting families closer to home through Regional Growth, or extending reach through National & International Reach. Increasingly, schools are also prioritising reassurance and advocacy, supported by Parent Confidence & Retention and Trust-Wide Visibility for groups and foundations.

What connects all of this is partnership. We work alongside admissions, marketing, and senior leadership teams, aligning digital activity with real-world processes and decision points. Our reporting is transparent, our recommendations are practical, and our focus stays on outcomes that matter.

If helpful, you can explore examples in our case studies, which show how this joined-up approach supports steady admissions growth over time.

Working with Lykke has improved how families find and engage with us. The uplift in enquiries and event attendance shows how much of a difference the right digital strategy can make

James Breeze, Director of Marketing and Admissions at QEH

By collaborating with Lykke on our digital approach, we have further optimised how families find and engage with us. The resultant increase in enquiries and event attendance demonstrates the efficacy of this partnership within our wider marketing plan.

James Leggett, Managing Director at MTM Consulting

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How Schools Can Use Content Marketing to Improve SEO

Home / Blog / Why Parent Surveys...

How Schools Can Use Content Marketing to Improve SEO

15%

growth identified in previously untapped catchment areas

What this blog is about and who it is for

This blog explores how schools can use content marketing to improve SEO in a way that feels natural, sustainable, and genuinely helpful for families. It is written for school leaders, admissions teams, and marketing staff who want their website to be easier to find in search results, without turning it into a collection of keyword-led pages that feel disconnected from the school’s values.

Rather than focusing on tactics alone, this article looks at how thoughtful, well-structured content supports both search performance and parent decision-making. It builds on the same principles outlined in How Lykke Education Uses AI in School Copywriting Without Losing Human Expertise, where clarity, sector understanding, and human judgement remain central. The aim is to show how content marketing can strengthen a school’s visibility while still reflecting its voice, culture, and commitment to clear communication.

Why schools need content marketing to support SEO today

For most families, a school’s website is no longer a final checkpoint before a visit. It is the starting point. Parents research earlier, search more widely, and spend time reading before they ever make contact. As a result, search visibility has become closely tied to how clearly a school communicates online.

This is where school content marketing plays a crucial role. Search engines increasingly prioritise websites that demonstrate relevance, depth, and usefulness over time. For schools, this means moving beyond a small number of static admissions pages and creating content that answers real questions parents are already asking, often long before they are ready to enquire.

Content that explains, reassures, and clarifies helps search engines understand what a school offers and who it is for. At the same time, it helps parents feel informed rather than overwhelmed. This alignment between visibility and reassurance is especially important in a landscape where families are comparing schools across multiple touchpoints, values, and priorities.

Schools that invest in content marketing are not simply trying to rank higher. They are building a clearer, more confident digital presence that supports decision-making at pace, without relying on urgency or pressure.

How content marketing improves SEO without chasing algorithms

One of the most common concerns schools have about SEO is the fear of having to write for algorithms rather than people. In reality, the strongest SEO outcomes usually come from doing the opposite. Content marketing improves search performance precisely because it focuses on clarity, relevance, and usefulness.

When schools create content that explains their approach, supports parents through the decision journey, and reflects real concerns surfaced through parent surveys, they naturally cover a wider range of meaningful search terms. This mirrors the way families actually search, often using reassurance-led language rather than technical admissions terminology.

Understanding how schools can use content marketing in this way helps remove the pressure to react to constant algorithm changes. Search engines reward signals such as time spent on a page, logical internal linking, and consistent themes across a website. Well-written content encourages parents to read, explore, and move between related pages, all of which support SEO without any need for manipulation.

This approach also creates long-term stability. Rather than chasing short-term gains, content marketing builds a foundation that supports visibility across admissions cycles. For many schools, this forms part of a wider strategy focused on steady, sustainable visibility, similar to the principles behind Digital Resilience for independent schools, where consistency and clarity matter more than volume or complexity.

Using content to support parents throughout the decision journey

Understanding how schools can use content marketing effectively means recognising that parents do not make decisions in a single moment. Most families move through a gradual process of awareness, comparison, reassurance, and confirmation. Content plays a different role at each stage.

Early on, parents look for broad signals. They want to understand a school’s values, ethos, and approach to education. Later, their searches become more specific, focusing on pastoral care, academic outcomes, transitions, and support. Content that reflects these shifting concerns helps parents feel guided rather than pushed.

This is where content marketing supports both SEO and admissions outcomes. By publishing material that mirrors real parental questions, schools naturally create a structure that search engines recognise as relevant and authoritative. At the same time, parents feel understood. Insight drawn from work such as parent surveys often highlights exactly where uncertainty builds and what reassurance is missing.

When content is aligned to the decision journey, it reduces friction. Parents can find answers at the right time, without needing to search elsewhere. This strengthens trust, supports longer engagement on the site, and creates a calmer path towards enquiry.

Consistency, clarity, and realistic expectations for school teams

One of the most common challenges schools face with content is capacity. Marketing and admissions teams are busy, and expectations around output can quickly become unrealistic. Effective school content marketing does not depend on frequent publishing. It depends on consistency and clarity.

A small number of well-maintained articles that remain relevant year after year will often outperform regular but rushed updates. Search engines value stability, and parents value content that feels considered rather than reactive. This makes it important to set achievable rhythms that fit term structures and internal resource.

Clarity also matters. Content should have a clear purpose, a defined audience, and a consistent tone. When teams understand why a piece exists and who it supports, content becomes easier to plan and maintain. This approach aligns closely with sustainable models such as Digital Resilience for independent schools, where steady progress matters more than volume.

How schools can tell if their content is helping SEO

Measuring the impact of content does not need to be complicated. While rankings are often the first metric schools look at, they are rarely the most useful on their own. More meaningful signals come from how people engage with the site.

Schools can look at whether content pages attract organic traffic, how long parents spend reading, and whether visitors move from articles to admissions or enquiry pages. These behaviours indicate that content is not only being found, but is also genuinely useful.

Over time, patterns begin to emerge. Certain topics consistently attract interest. Others support parents closer to enquiry. When viewed together, these insights help schools refine what they publish and why. Content that supports SEO should ultimately support understanding, confidence, and progression, not just visibility.

Why schools can trust Lykke Education’s approach

Trust matters deeply in education marketing. Schools are not simply promoting a service. They are communicating values, care, and credibility to families making significant decisions. That is why our approach is grounded in sector understanding, not generic marketing frameworks.

Lykke Education works closely with independent schools, academies, and trusts, combining digital expertise with a clear understanding of how parents research, compare, and decide. We do not separate SEO from communication. Instead, we treat visibility as an outcome of clarity, relevance, and consistency.

This thinking underpins our wider work across content, search, and sustainable digital strategy. Schools can see how these principles come together in practice through our focus on Digital Resilience for independent schools, where long-term stability, confidence, and trust sit at the centre of digital activity.

Content marketing as a long-term investment in visibility and trust

Content marketing works best when it is treated as an investment rather than a tactic. For schools, this means creating content that supports families over time, reflects real priorities, and evolves alongside admissions needs.

When done well, content marketing improves SEO by strengthening understanding, not by chasing algorithms. It helps schools be found earlier, builds confidence through clarity, and supports parents as they move towards decisions at their own pace. Over time, this creates a digital presence that feels dependable and reassuring.

Understanding how schools can use content marketing in this way allows visibility and trust to grow together. The result is not just improved search performance, but a website that genuinely supports families, strengthens admissions outcomes, and reflects the school’s values with confidence.

Working with Lykke has improved how families find and engage with us. The uplift in enquiries and event attendance shows how much of a difference the right digital strategy can make

James Breeze, Director of Marketing and Admissions at QEH

By collaborating with Lykke on our digital approach, we have further optimised how families find and engage with us. The resultant increase in enquiries and event attendance demonstrates the efficacy of this partnership within our wider marketing plan.

James Leggett, Managing Director at MTM Consulting

  • 10% growth potential in the school’s market share, focused on 3 main areas
    How Lykke Education Uses AI in School Copywriting Without Losing Human Expertise

    How Lykke Education Uses AI in School Copywriting Without Losing Human Expertise

    READ CASE SUDY ARTICLE
  • 10% growth potential in the school’s market share, focused on 3 main areas
    How to Build an Independent School Website That Engages and Converts

    How to Build an Independent School Website That Engages and Converts

    READ CASE SUDY ARTICLE
  • 10% growth potential in the school’s market share, focused on 3 main areas
    Why Paid Search is the Secret to Successful Open Day Sign-Ups for Independent Schools

    Why Paid Search is the Secret to Successful Open Day Sign-Ups for Independent Schools

    READ CASE SUDY ARTICLE

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