An Inside Look at the ‘Research Saves Lives’ Campaign

A behind-the-scenes look at how Johns Hopkins is striving to reframe the value of higher ed research through clarity, collaboration, and shared storytelling.

33 minutes
By: Higher Voltage

When research funding becomes a headline, higher education has a choice: retreat into complexity or step forward with clarity. In this episode of Higher Voltage, Kevin Tyler sits down with Marina Cooper, Senior Associate Vice President for Integrated Marketing and Brand at Johns Hopkins University, to unpack how one institution chose the latter.

The result was Research Saves Lives, a campaign born not from branding ambition, but from a moment of reckoning. As federal research funding faced renewed scrutiny, Cooper and her team asked a hard question: Had higher education done enough to explain why research matters to everyday life?

Rather than centering Johns Hopkins alone, the campaign was intentionally expansive. Research Saves Lives was designed as a shared platform: white-labeled, open-access, and adaptable, so institutions, researchers, patients, alumni, and advocates could all participate. The message was simple, affirmative, and grounded in impact: research improves lives, strengthens communities, fuels the economy, and protects the future.

As Cooper explains, this wasn’t meant to be a traditional marketing play. It was a content-first storytelling effort rooted in trust between marketers and faculty, between institutions and the public. From life-saving medical breakthroughs to national defense, space exploration, and job creation, the campaign widened the lens on what research universities actually do and who they serve.

That openness paid off. With millions of organic impressions, widespread adoption across institutions, and visible enthusiasm on campus — from faculty advocacy to T-shirts and yard signs — the campaign demonstrated what alignment can look like when mission leads and brand follows.

Higher Voltage

Higher Voltage

Podcast

Higher Voltage explores what’s working, what’s not, and what needs to change in higher education. Higher Voltage isn’t just for anyone who works in higher education—it’s for anyone who is interested in or cares about higher education.

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