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UCAS - At the heart of connecting people to higher education

Introducing the UCAS Destinations Programme: Reshaping post-16 career learning Application availability: 12 – 14 June Missed your reply deadline? | UCAS Five ways to reach applicants at the moments that matter most in Clearing From vague to valuable: What students really think about course descriptions and what to do about it Five ways to support students ahead of results day Careers events: Five practical basics for getting them right UCAS Ten ways students can demonstrate experience in their personal statement UCAS Discovery: Your essential post-event guide Bank holiday closure | UCAS Bank holiday closure: 4 May Why speak to a careers adviser as a disabled student? Five ways to support care leavers applying to university Gatsby Benchmark 8: Making personal guidance work smarter, not harder What do we mean when we say 'career'? Update on UCAS Chair of Trustees What is the application fee for the 2027 cycle? Shifting the focus: Skills First Careers Fairs Customer Success Team & Data Collection Team availability: 23 April Customer Success Team availability: 15 & 23 April
Keeping the momentum going after a careers fair
2026-03-02 · via UCAS - At the heart of connecting people to higher education

You’ve just hosted or attended a fantastic careers event. Students return to school, college, or sixth form buzzing with new ideas, fresh aspirations, and a sense of possibility. But once the excitement fades, how do you help them turn that energy into meaningful next steps?

Here are my suggestions for keeping the momentum going long after the stands have been packed away.

Applying the AIDA framework

In a previous career, I learned the classic sales model AIDA – Attention, Interest, Desire, Action. Surprisingly, it’s a framework I still use every day in careers education.

A successful careers fair does the first two jobs for you: it grabs a student’s attention and sparks interest. But for careers exploration to turn into real outcomes, students need support to build desire, that motivation to take their next step, and then move into action.

So, what might those actions look like?

  • Attending an open day.
  • Booking a 1:1 with a university admissions adviser or apprenticeship employer.
  • Completing guided research after the event.
  • Preparing applications for apprenticeships or higher education.

Each of these brings students closer to achieving a successful outcome, such as a university place or apprenticeship.

Using action planning to drive progress

Action planning is one of the most effective ways to maintain momentum. After an event, sit down with students to reflect on what inspired them, what confused them, and what barriers they might be facing.

A simple written plan, agreed between adviser and student, helps them move from vague enthusiasm to clear, achievable goals. It also creates accountability and makes it easier to revisit their progress later.

Keeping employers in the conversation

If your event was offsite, hopefully you left with contact details from exhibitors. Use them! Invite employers back, virtually or in person, to continue conversations and build deeper relationships.

If your fair was onsite, you already have a strong foundation. Follow up with targeted workshops, mock interviews, subject‑linked talks, or small group sessions to help students build confidence and prepare high‑quality applications.

Students often need repeated touchpoints before they feel ready to act, so treat the fair as the beginning, not the end.

Bringing families into the loop

Careers decisions don’t happen in isolation. Use parent communications to involve families in the post‑event journey. Share key dates, resources, and conversation prompts. The AIDA principle applies to them too – they need attention, interest, desire, and action if they’re going to confidently support their young person.

By keeping conversations going, reinforcing next steps, and engaging the wider community, you can turn the buzz of a careers fair into long‑lasting progress for every student.