Alumni – your most powerful global asset hiding in plain sight
At the point of choosing where to study, most students aren’t looking for more information. They’re looking for reassurance.
For universities, that shift has come at a moment of intensifying competition and constraint. Higher education has rarely looked more polished – and rarely felt harder to differentiate.
Against that backdrop, it’s striking how little attention is paid to one of universities’ most powerful assets: their alumni networks.
Many institutions already have a global presence most brands would envy. Hundreds of thousands of graduates living and working across the world. Alumni who speak the local language, understand cultural context, and have lived the reality of studying at the institution they once chose.
And yet, this network is rarely treated as a strategic asset.
For decades, alumni engagement has largely been inward-looking. Newsletters, reunions, volunteering and fundraising. All valuable in their own right. But when it comes to how universities present themselves externally – particularly to prospective students – alumni voices are often absent, or used only sporadically.
There’s an assumption that advocacy will happen organically. That proud graduates will naturally promote their university. Sometimes they do. Often they don’t – not because they are unwilling, but because they have never been invited, enabled or supported to play that role.
Through my work at Alumnify, working closely with universities across markets, I see this first-hand. Alumni are willing, credible and well-placed to help – but without structure and support, their potential remains largely untapped.
This matters more now than it did before.
We’re operating in an environment where official messaging is increasingly questioned. AI has raised the baseline quality of content, but in doing so it has also flattened it. Students have learned to look beyond what is being said and ask why it’s being said – and by whom.
In that context, alumni stand out precisely because they are not perceived as part of the sales machine. They speak from lived experience. They can talk honestly about what surprised them, what was difficult, what helped them settle, and what studying at that institution actually meant for their life and career.
Alumni stand out precisely because they are not perceived as part of the sales machine. They speak from lived experience
That distinction is important. Alumni are not there to replace marketing teams, agents or admissions staff – but they can meaningfully extend them.
When trained and supported, alumni can act as an on-the-ground extension of an institution’s international office, engaging prospective students in markets where universities cannot always be present themselves. They bring local context, cultural fluency and lived experience into conversations that might otherwise rely solely on centralised messaging.
At the same time, their role becomes especially powerful later in the journey. As students weigh risk, involve family members and look for reassurance, alumni provide something institutions often struggle to deliver at scale: timely, credible confidence-building from someone who has already made the leap – and lived with the decision.
Used well, alumni don’t just support recruitment activity; they strengthen brand affinity and long-term loyalty by showing up at the moments that matter most.
What’s interesting is that this isn’t about inventing something new. Alumni networks have always existed. The opportunity now is about recognising them as part of a university’s outward-facing strategy, not just its heritage.
As competition intensifies and trust becomes harder to earn, universities may find that one of their most powerful global assets has been there all along, hiding in plain sight.

About the author: James O’Grady is CEO of Alumnify, where he leads work with universities globally to deploy alumni at scale as a core recruitment channel, driving applicant confidence and conversion.
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