Why Most Enrollment Leaders Are Optimizing for the Wrong Number with Dr. John G. Haller
In this episode of The VineDown, Emily Smith sits down with John Haller, one of the most consequential enrollment leaders of the past two decades. John served for 10 years as Vice President of Enrollment Management and New Student Strategies at the University of Miami, where he didn't just fill seats.
He rewired the entire student lifecycle. Applications grew 30–80%+. Yield jumped 50%+. Freshman retention hit 94%, an institutional record. The six-year graduation rate reached 82%, another record. Average student debt dropped by $10,000. And the university shifted to meeting 100% of demonstrated financial need while growing enrollment. The thing everyone says you can't do Before all of that, John was a college football offensive coordinator.
This conversation also has a rare personal dimension: both Emily and John trace their careers back to George Dane, widely considered the father of modern enrollment management. This is the first time they've compared notes on air. And it's worth every minute.
In this episode of The VineDown with Emily Smith:
- Why "access without completion is a waste of time," and what it actually costs institutions to ignore it
- How shifting from merit-heavy aid to meeting 100% of demonstrated financial need drove stronger enrollment outcomes (the move everyone says backfires)
- Why students don't care about your org chart, and what a one-stop shop actually does for retention
- How John thinks about AI in admissions: where it belongs, where it absolutely doesn't, and what gets lost when institutions trust the score without understanding what it's measuring
- The Academy of Emerging Enrollment Leaders (AEEL): what it is, who it's for, and what gap John built it to close
- What diversified enrollment streams look like in practice as traditional-age student numbers shrink
- John's unfiltered take on what enrollment leaders won't say out loud at most conferences
- And what he'd change tomorrow, not a policy, but a mindset, about how higher education actually measures student successSubscribe to The VineDown for weekly conversations at the intersection of enrollment management, student success, and the future of higher education.