News

By Sarah Alice Keiser March 20, 2026
March 20, 2026 Franklin & Marshall College student Sekou Cherif ’26 was named the 2026 CUPRAP Student Catalyst Fellow, a recognition of exceptional promise by an undergraduate in writing, social media engagement, video and audio production, graphic design, journalism, and related fields. Cherif, a film and media arts major and economics minor, was praised for his creative portfolio, with particular attention received for short films he created in his F&M coursework and for Drama Club NYC, a nonprofit focused on improv programming for formerly incarcerated youth. He is the first F&M student to receive the award in the organization’s 46-year history. He was honored at CUPRAP’s annual conference, held in F&M’s home city of Lancaster, March 11-13. “ When I received [the fellowship], I thought it’d be a great opportunity to engage with professionals,” said Cherif, reflecting on the news he was selected as this year’s fellow and that he’d be attending the conference. “It came at a fitting time, as a senior looking at prospective careers. It’s a great position to be in, because now I have all these new connections from colleges and different marketing agencies.” Keep reading.
By Sarah Alice Keiser February 5, 2026
February 5, 2026 Higher ed marketing and communications often comes down to one deceptively hard job: getting people to “play nice in the sandbox.” In a recent CUPRAP webinar, leaders from Swarthmore College shared practical case studies on how their teams improved collaboration across Communications, Admissions, Advancement, and the Provost’s Office—while also rolling out a major institutional rebrand. Their message was refreshingly concrete: collaboration isn’t a vibe. It’s infrastructure. When you build the right systems, partners don’t have to “try harder” to work well together—the process pulls everyone into alignment. Here are the key takeaways—and how you can apply them at your institution. 1. Stop hoping for collaboration. Build a system that produces it. Swarthmore’s biggest wins didn’t come from better intentions or more meetings. They came from creating repeatable structures: Clear intake pathways (forms, single points of contact within their office and campus partners) Shared timelines and expectations Templates for partners to use without going rogue Cross-team roles designed specifically to bridge gaps Takeaway: If your work depends on collaboration, don’t leave it to personality. Design it into the workflow and job descriptions. 2. Faculty storytelling needs a pipeline, not a pile of emails. Swarthmore’s communications team identified a familiar challenge: important faculty achievements were sometimes missed—not due to lack of care, but because there wasn’t a reliable way to flag what mattered most. Emails arrived inconsistently, details were incomplete, and communicators couldn’t be experts in every discipline. What they changed They rebuilt faculty news promotion with two key moves: Faculty Spotlight (launched) A dedicated, magazine-style faculty feature experience on the website, built to showcase the breadth of scholarship and teaching. Faculty were selected in consultation with the Provost’s Office, and the content was created for repurposing across web, social, and alumni publications. Faculty Submission Form (in development at time of webinar) A structured submission process embedded in their CMS (Drupal), designed to replace scattered emails with consistent data capture. The goal: make it easy for faculty to submit news, make it easier for comms to triage impact, and increase the team’s ability to say “yes” to more coverage —even if some items aren’t full story-worthy. What made it work The Provost’s Office wasn’t just consulted—it was positioned as a co-owner and advocate, which is essential for adoption. Budgeting included freelance support for writing capacity. ITS support was required for a workable technical workflow. The team was realistic about the hidden bottleneck: scheduling and producing photography. Takeaway: The fix isn’t “ask faculty to email us.” The fix is a pipeline that captures the right info, flags impact, and supports different content formats. 3. Event branding isn’t decoration—it’s trust, clarity, and performance. For Advancement, Swarthmore focused on Alumni Weekend as a flagship rebrand opportunity—an event already filled with joy, emotion, and identity. Why that mattered: new visual systems can trigger skepticism, especially among loyal audiences. But a celebratory event provides a natural opportunity to introduce change in a way that feels welcoming. Why branding mattered (beyond aesthetics) Swarthmore highlighted practical benefits that resonate across institutions: Unified narrative: consistent design makes varied stories feel connected Trust & credibility: well-designed communications reduce skepticism and confusion in an era of scams/phishing Recognition: alumni can instantly identify official event messages in a crowded inbox/feed Stronger experience: a coherent brand environment elevates engagement and belonging Improved performance: better design and consistency correlated with improved email metrics and event attendance A smart language move In some environments, “branding” can be a loaded term. Swarthmore initially framed their approach as “institutional visual storytelling” to reduce resistance and keep stakeholders engaged. Process mattered as much as design They used rebranding as an opportunity to reset timelines and expectations: Email planning with an ideal multi-week runway for drafting, review, approvals, and final checks Print planning with longer lead times due to vendor dependencies Takeaway: Branding becomes easier to defend when you connect it to trust, recognition, and measurable performance—not just visuals. 4. If a relationship is strained, treat the relationship as the project. One of the most resonant moments of the webinar was a candid look at a previously strained relationship between Communications and Admissions. What they heard: From Admissions: “I waited until the last minute so you couldn’t tell me no.” From Comms: “Admissions is the problem child—good luck.” They named what many teams experience: when trust erodes, people work around each other. And that damages outcomes. What changed everything They didn’t just “collaborate more.” They changed the structure: Leadership from the very top (the Dean and VP of Communications) was committed to improving this relationship and understood its impact on the College’s bottom line A dedicated Admissions communications lead became the single intake point for all communications projects going through the Admissions Office Intake was built into Admissions’ system (Slate) and routed into Comms’ project workflow (Wrike) Teams were intentionally embedded: Comms attended Admissions weekly meetings and retreats Admissions comms lead participated in Comms retreats and professional development Monthly leadership touchpoints between both offices kept priorities aligned The empathy insight that mattered They surfaced a root cause: people in Admissions were asked to do communications work without it being in their job description or skill set. Naming that created space for empathy and justified the staffing change. The results they credited Stronger coordination through major disruptions (FAFSA delays, SCOTUS decision) Higher morale and smoother execution Recognition from senior leadership Admissions became a high-trust, high-priority partnership instead of a friction point Takeaway: When the partnership is broken, your next campaign won’t fix it. Your operating model will. 5. “Easy wins” that scale into culture change Swarthmore’s recommendations weren’t flashy—but they’re the kinds of moves that compound: Create partner-friendly templates (flyers, posters, email modules) Establish lead-time norms for video, web, and email requests Build a simplified style guide for non-designers Maintain regular leadership alignment Invest in rapport: informal connection builds the trust that makes hard feedback possible Takeaway: If you want fewer last-minute requests, you need more clarity, easier tools, and a process people can follow without friction. Final thought: Collaboration is built, not wished for. Swarthmore’s “sandbox strategies” weren’t about perfect harmony. They were about building roles, systems, and shared expectations that make collaboration the default. If your institution is navigating rebranding, partnership challenges, or capacity constraints, this webinar offered a powerful reminder: You don’t need everyone to agree. You need a process that helps everyone move. Want to implement one thing this month? Pick one: Build a structured intake form for a recurring content need Create a simplified style guide for partners Establish a standard lead time policy for major deliverables Formalize a single point of contact for a high-impact partner office Small infrastructure changes can create outsized results. Members can watch the recording of this CUPRAP webinar with Swarthmore by logging in.
December 3, 2025
Jamie Yates, Chief Communications and Marketing Officer, Gettysburg College Mike Baker, Deputy Chief Communications and Marketing Officer, Gettysburg College Staci Grimes, Director of Marketing and Digital Engagement, Gettysburg College Crises are nothing new to those of us working in higher education communications. A sensitive issue that reaches your constituents can test your messaging discipline and coordination. But when a campus incident goes viral—when it’s picked up, amplified, and distorted across social media—the challenge takes on an entirely different magnitude. As communicators and marketers, we’re entrusted with protecting and advancing our institution’s reputation. Yet, in the digital age, when misinformation spreads faster than official updates and emotional narratives eclipse the facts, it becomes all the more challenging to feel in control of a situation. The rise of social influencers—many of whom seek clicks over accuracy—has only added fuel to the fire, thrusting even small-campus incidents into national headlines and international newsfeeds. At Gettysburg College, we’ve experienced our share of issues management moments, navigating difficult stories while staying closely connected to our key audiences. But last fall, we faced something bigger—a campus issue that truly went viral. Not Gettysburg viral. More like “What’s Trending” viral. Suddenly, managing the message wasn’t just about... The post Beyond Crisis Comms 101: Navigating a Viral Moment appeared first on CUPRAP.
October 15, 2025
CUPRAP is thrilled to welcome Sarah Alice Keiser as our new Executive Director! With more than a decade of experience managing nonprofit programs and member-driven associations, Sarah brings a unique blend of strategic organization, relationship-building, and creativity to this role. To help members get to know her better, the CUPRAP Board of Directors sat down with Sarah Alice for a candid Q&A about her background, leadership approach, and vision for CUPRAP’s future. From community-building to conference planning, she shares what inspires her and how she plans to build on CUPRAP’s strong foundation of connection and collaboration. She’s passionate about strengthening professional communities and helping mission-driven organizations thrive. Get to know Sarah Alice below! Background and Experience You’ve spent over a decade managing nonprofit programs and member-driven associations. Which past experience do you think most prepared you for your new role with CUPRAP?All of my past experience has given me a unique perspective and skill set in association management, stakeholder engagement, and relationship building. I don’t think I can pinpoint one specific role — it’s really been the combination of all the interesting challenges I’ve faced, especially through the pivots required to survive during the pandemic, that have honed my skills.... The post Meet Sarah Alice Keiser, CUPRAP’s New Executive Director appeared first on CUPRAP.
September 5, 2025
CUPRAP board members come and go, but Betty Hanson, has been the face of the organization forever. Since 2011, she has served as CUPRAP’s executive director, playing a leading role in planning and executing the annual Spring Conference, among other duties. Betty sat down recently with former CUPRAP President Tom Durso to chat about her involvement with the organization, her fondest memories, and her advice for new members.  Note: This has been edited for space and clarity. TD: How did you get involved with CUPRAP in the first place?  BH: I had not been working in higher education. My first job was at Philadelphia Magazine, and then I worked at two advertising agencies. Something came up at Widener, and I got a job there in the marketing department. My boss was just looking through professional development and said, “Well, maybe you should go to this conference and see how it is.” I got the job at Widener in ’86, so I guess this was in ’87 that I went to the first conference. I enjoyed it and have been a member ever since. TD: And when did you get involved in your current role as an administrator? BH: I was... The post Celebrating Betty Hanson appeared first on CUPRAP.