ARTICLE
TITLE

The relationship between e-learning and student satisfaction as marketing strategy: A case study at a private university

SUMMARY

Universities have incorporated e-learning into their educational structures because of the unanticipated transition from conventional learning to digital and hybrid learning methods to the closure of educational facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic. This study aims to ascertain how e-learning influences students' satisfaction at private universities and to develop a marketing strategy to keep institutions of higher learning competitive throughout the COVID-19 or similarly disrupting events. In the study, we utilise a quantitative descriptive method. Collecting data was done by distributing e-questionnaires to students at a private university in Bandung. The sampling technique used random sampling with 245 respondents. The data was subjected to numerous linear regression analyses using SPSS. ICT, ESQ, and EIQ are the study's dependent variables, and e-learning is the study's independent variable. The findings indicate that all variables influence and significance of e-learning and students' satisfaction with 65.9%, which can enhance learning outcomes in private universities.

 Articles related

Andrezza Marques Duque, Marcus Valerius Peixoto, Shirley V.M.A Lima, Marco Aurélio O. Goes, Allan D. Santos, Karina Conceição Gomes Machado Araújo, Marco Antonio P. Nunes    

The process of population aging is a worldwide reality becoming a global public health challenge. Although population aging is especially noticeable in more developed regions, there has also been a significant advance in the quantity of elderly people in... see more


Sabelo Nick Dlamini, Jonas Franke, Penelope Vounatsou    

Many entomological studies have analyzed remotely sensed data to assess the relationship between malaria vector distribution and the associated environmental factors. However, the high cost of remotely sensed products with high spatial resolution has oft... see more


André Oliveira, António J.R. Cabral, Jorge M. Mendes, Maria R.O. Martins, Pedro Cabral    

Stroke risk has been shown to display varying patterns of geographic distribution amongst countries but also between regions of the same country. Traditionally a disease of older persons, a global 25% increase in incidence instead was noticed between 199... see more


Rebekah S. Huber, Namkug Kim, Carl E. Renshaw, Perry F. Renshaw, Douglas G. Kondo    

Therapeutic dosages of lithium are known to reduce suicide rates, which has led to investigations of confounding environmental risk factors for suicide such as lithium in groundwater. It has been speculated that this might play a role in the potential re... see more


Lawrence N. Kazembe, Christopher C. Appleton, Immo Kleinschmidt    

Spatial differences in mortality have been reported in Africa amongst children under-five years of age. Risk factors contributing to this geographical variation include bio-demographic and socio-economic factors, the prevalence of infectious diseases and... see more