What Institutions Should Know
Otter noted OPM partnerships once involved long agreements, approximately 10 years, and 50-50 revenue splits, but the terms are currently changing.
“We’re becoming more savvy as negotiators,” she said. “The terms of contracts are evolving and shortening.”
Wiley suggests that institutions gather input from key institutional stakeholders and develop a clear and collaborative vision.
“Roles and responsibilities of the engagement must also be clearly defined and communicated up front,” the spokesperson said. “It’s important to preserve institutional autonomy in decision-making, especially for admissions criteria and decisions, the awarding and distribution of financial aid, academic offerings and instruction.”
Carroll-Glover feels it’s important for institutions to do their due diligence upfront by assessing their internal capabilities and looking closely at market opportunities.
“Vetting out any OPM partners that one may be considering and making sure there’s a good fit with your mission, vision and values is really important,” said Carroll-Glover.
The study Graham conducted during his doctoral studies found the majority of the roughly 300 respondents were neutral to very satisfied with their OPM partnerships.
“There was not a very large group of respondents that were dissatisfied,” he said.
He noted that OPMs are businesses and are out to get every dime they can, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have a role to play. Institutions, he said, should evaluate the utility of an OPM based on whether it can benefit the institution and help provide students with a quality education.
“You have to have complete control of them. You have to have a very strong contract. You have to have a very strong relationship,” he said. He also advised institutions to build transparency into their contracts so that both partners can see what’s going on.
The biggest mistake Otter sees among institutions that partner with OPMs is that they turn over the keys to the car and don’t manage the partnership.
“The institution should always maintain control of the admissions standards, determining who is admitted and making certain that the students are being communicated the same message from the partner team as they’d hear from the school team,” she said. “There needs to be close alignment.”