Tuesday, March 26, 2013

How to advertise your Computer Science department

(...or at least how I did)

I wanted to write this blog post because:
  1. I'm proud of the brochure I made for my CS department when I was a member of the CS Ambassadors club, one year ago.
  2. I realized that my CS department wasn't all that great at describing what it was about—and I imagine it isn't just my university that has this problem.
  3. I believe that if a department can't describe Computer Science in an intriguing way at university and outreach events, they're throwing away a valuable method of drawing in new students. Mainly those who already know about Computer Science before college will enroll, which bodes badly for diversity in your department.
Here is the original flyer (click to enlarge if you like). To be fair, it's more an "intro to the major" brochure than an outreach brochure, which could explain the wordiness. But that can't explain the picture of a guy looking into what I assume is a chemistry machine? Or the idea that one of the best jobs you can get with this degree is Mac Genius?

I decided I wanted to emphasize a few things in my version:
  • People, including women (looking back, I should have been more conscious about including minority students, but luckily I got a representative sampling of photos)
  • What CS is exactly, and options for what you can do with it beyond software engineering
  • Links for students to explore CS on their own, so the flyer could serve as a more general outreach tool in high schools and middle schools
Here's how it turned out! (You can click to make the images larger)

If you can find some use for my original Word document in your own project, feel free—it's here [docx, 23.3 MB]. If you don't have the font I used, it's here. I also welcome your comments for improvement!

If I were to redo it today, I'd probably search for better links for the CS-related games and resources section—maybe there is something more interactive than downloading those books I recommended. I would also try to make it look more professional. But I think it represents our department pretty well, and at least now there's something to hand out to potential students. We might not be able to compete with the gorgeous, glossy brochures from engineering without professional graphic designers, but hey, it's a start.

After the jump, see more examples of what I think makes good advertising for Computer Science departments.