âą Readers offended by profanity may want to skip this article.
Why the fuck should you choose Oberlin?
Turns out, there are plenty of reasons.
âBecause our bathroom fucking graffiti is intellectual and creative as shit.â
âBecause we have the best fucking safer sex education out there, and that means we can have awesome fucking sex.â
âBecause when America didnât think black people and women were people, Oberlin thought they should probably fucking go to college.â
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âBecause theyâre not afraid of words like âfuck.ââ
These are just four of the nearly 2,500 reasons Oberlin College students and alumni have posted on the alumni-created website, ? Since its creation only two weeks ago, the site has exploded, with students, faculty, staff and alumni buzzing about their love for the irreverent but on-point website.
âIt is a very Oberlin creation, and part of why Obies love it so much is itâs got some of that rebellious Oberlin spirit,â said Harris Lapiroff, co-creator and 2010 graduate of Oberlin.
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Lapiroff and the siteâs other creator, Maâayan Plaut, also a 2010 graduate, say they built the site out of love for their alma mater. They both now work for Oberlin, Plaut as a social media coordinator and Lapiroff as a web developer. Although they say that the site is unofficial, they did mention the idea to their bosses beforehand, and their fun side project has now gone viral, with 1,500 submissions in the first 24 hours and 15,000 unique visitors to the site in the past week and a half alone. They seeded the site with just 30 taglines.
Ben Jones, vice-president for communications at Oberlin, said the college has not endorsed and will not be endorsing the website, and is not considering it linked to the college. That being said, if you can look past the bad language, it is a âwonderful communal love letter to Oberlinâ, he said.
âUsing the F-word makes it edgy,â said Jones, an Oberlin alumnus. âIf they had made a site âWhy I should choose Oberlinâ, it would have gotten 10 submissions. People respond to things that are edgy and unusual. And that amount of school pride is pretty cool.â
Jones also said that if Oberlin officially endorsed it, it wouldnât have the same underground feel. And itâs that grassroots foundation that makes it popular, he said. Lapiroff said, too, that the site would lose some of its charm if it were officially endorsed by the college â âit is a renegade website that is doing its own thingâ, he said.
Its popularity has bubbled over on to campus, too, said Ilyssa Meyer, a Student Senate member and a junior studying comparative American studies. Students are sharing the siteâs link and talking about it on campus, she said. It is a âgood expression of what Oberlin is all aboutâ, she said, adding that nearly every submission is relatable for any Obie.
Capturing the Oberlin attitude is what makes the site so successful, said Elizabeth Scarborough, CEO of , a marketing research firm specialising in higher education. She said the siteâs language is not a good idea for any official university marketing strategy, but its authentic ethos is genius. âItâs fucking fantastic,â she said. âClearly these peopleâs passion for their school is shining through. Itâs the perfect translation of their brand.â
Scarborough said itâs smart that the Oberlin administration is letting the website run its course. There would be no point in attempting to take it down â it would likely only draw ire from the community, and be futile at that, she said.
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âEven with the drawback of having the bad language, itâs the perfect example of what social media can do to help an institution market itself,â she said.
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Georgy Cohen, manager of web content and strategy at Tufts University and co-founder of Meet Content, has written about the site and its merits as a substantial marketing tool. She said the site works because it speaks the internet language that exists only among this specific generation. Internet memes and other transitory internet trends are powerful in communicating to those in the student demographic, she said.
Cohen said administrators miss the mark with this type of communication by trying to force it â there is no âviralâ button on YouTube that you can press when you upload a video, she said. âThe main point is that we need to look beyond what our playbook is and understand there is a broader playbook out there about how people are sharing content and communicating and connecting online,â she said. âWe shouldnât write that off; that should be fair game.â
This website works because it is true to the Oberlin spirit, she said, and attempting to âphotocopyâ it at another institution would probably fall flat.
Seth Odell, the host of Higher Ed Live (an online show about social media and digital marketing in higher education), said that he wouldnât suggest that colleges start dropping F-bombs all over the place, but that the site is a wake-up call to think outside the box in marketing. âI donât think the lesson here is that we should swear more, but we need to take the gloves off when it comes to social media.â
Odell, too, said that thus far, higher education as a whole has harnessed social media, but only in a perfunctory capacity. Most colleges and universities use social media outlets as âmegaphonesâ to blast out information. Some have begun engaging in a discussion on social media, as well. But what Oberlin has done, in an unofficial way, is go above and beyond in creating content that lives on its own.
And while higher education still has some work to do to beef up its social media fluency, Scarborough pointed out a 2011 Dartmouth College study that shows that colleges and universities have harnessed social media at a faster clip than most Fortune 500 companies and charities.
Despite the praise, Plaut and Lapiroff say that the site is just meant to showcase the love and shared experiences of those who attended Oberlin. They said they have added a âloveâ button to the submissions, alerting the creators about the audienceâs favourite slogans. If all goes to plan, they hope to create buttons, T-shirts and other merchandise to sell. All the proceeds would be put back into the Oberlin alumni fund, Plaut said.
And Plaut and Lapiroff say they are the ones getting the last laugh â itâs rare to hear either of them drop an F-bomb in conversation.
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