Saturday, May 9, 2020
Is This a Resume-Building Internship or a Waste of Time
Is This a Resume-Building Internship or a Waste of Time 25 Flares 25 Flares Dave Ellis is an original member of the YouTern team where serves as the Content and Community Manager, and enjoys his role as the companyâs âMan Behind the Curtainâ. In his spare time, Dave volunteers, rescuing and rehabilitating sea lions and baby elephant seals. Connect with Dave on LinkedIn and follow him on Twitter! Ideally, by now youâve heard the news â" internships are no longer optional. Having some professional experience under you when you graduate is necessary to present yourself as a competitive job candidate. Thereâs no such thing as âjust gimme a chanceâ in a recruiterâs world. They need to hire someone with the necessary skills, whoâs ready to start today. âOk, so Iâll just go out and get some internships on my resumeâ you think. Problem solved. Sure youâll have experience on your resume. But if your internships are low quality â" the stereotypical âcoffee and copiesâ internships â" when recruiters read your resume⦠when you answer questions during the interview⦠during any one of the steps in the hiring process, youâll quickly be found out. And if somehow you do get hired and have no real skills, youâll have a harder time ramping up fast enough to keep that new job. You donât want just any internships on your resume. You want real, solid internships that give you the professional experience youâll need to excel as a young professional. There are several steps you can take ahead of time to gauge the quality of an internship, to see whether it will be an internship youâll want on your resume, or a waste of your time. Ask Questions Many internship candidates make the mistake of viewing the internship as a type of King/serf relationship⦠where the employer has all the power, and the candidate is at their mercy. Wrong. The employer isnât looking for an intern for charityâs sake. They have a need to fulfill⦠a problem to solve. And this need gives you some leverage. (Not a lot⦠but some). View the interview as your chance to learn more about the internship⦠the day-to-day details not covered in the online description. Remember, you should give your best effort to the employer during an internship. But itâs also the employerâs obligation to give you opportunities to learn and gain experience. Prepare a list of important must-haves that you want to see in a good internship program, and confidently ask questions. Your list might include: Do you have an established mentorship program? If I show initiative and aptitude, will I be able to take on more responsibility? How often does this company hire its best interns into full-time positions? How would you describe a typical day for an intern in this office⦠duties, responsibilities, etc.? What you should hear: If the company doesnât have a formal mentorship program, thatâs ok. But mentoring interns should be important to them. You should get a sense that interns are valued and are considered part of the team. Red flags: If thereâs no focus of mentoring, or if that part of your question is glossed over or avoided⦠donât walk⦠run from the interview. Listen closely to the way the day-to-day is described in the answer to your question. There should be clarity in the answers about responsibilities. Vague answers like âOh, yes our interns get lots of responsibility around hereâ donât tell you anything. This type of answer should be followed up with a request for specifics. Do Your Research If only there were some kind of device that enabled you to gather information and learn more about a company before you apply to intern there. Oh yeah⦠there is. Itâs called the Internet. There are innumerable resources to research companies online. Sites like Yelp, Glassdoor, Hoovers, CareerBliss, and the companyâs own website⦠these are just a start. Get a sense for the companyâs culture and how it treats employees. Donât just read the company website alone, though. Of course thatâs going to be fluffy, happy âweâre a familyâ verbiage. Use this information to get a sense of the companyâs culture. What you should read: Look for employees talking about how they are given responsibility and growth opportunities. Ideally youâll see an emphasis that the company hires from within. This is an indication that they may hire interns on full-time. Red flag: Donât expect that every review will be positive. There will be some disgruntled employees or people who donât fit the culture. Thatâs ok. What you donât want to see is a lot of references to âmicro-managementâ, or an emphasis on bureaucracy or politics. See if you can determine if the negative reviews are localized to one department, or if it appears to be systemic throughout the company. Informational Interviews This step serves a dual purpose. The first is networking. Surveys show that the number one way to get hired is through a referral by a current employee. An informational interview is a great networking tool to build relationships with current employees. Additionally, an informational interview is a fantastic, low-pressure way to learn the inside scoop on the company. Your schoolâs career center, alumni association and LinkedIn are three great resources to find people to interview. (Note: remember an informational interview is not a job interview. You are not meeting with this person to ask for a job. Thatâs a big mis-step in the professional world). What you should hear: An informational interview is a fantastic way to gauge the company culture. Find out what type of people work there. How well do they âplay togetherâ? What is the real story behind the fluffy, happy website verbiage? Like your other research, remember that this personâs opinions and information is from their perspective. But youâll be able to spot patterns in the way they answer your questions and describe the company experience. Ask some questions specifically what the person knows and thinks about the internship program. Red flag: Similar to what to look for during your research, look for a lack of enthusiasm in the way your interviewee describes working at the company. Is it just their personal experience? Or is it a widespread cultural issue? Is the culture rigid and hierarchical, or is teamwork emphasized? If the former⦠interns will likely be the low man on the totem poll, and treated accordingly. Companies have a lot of applicants for each open position. So, they have a lot of choice in who to hire. Your high GPA is interesting but, outside of very technical industries, recruiters value work experience over classroom theory nine times out of ten. When you interview for your first jobs, youâll have stiff competition. Make sure you have strong internships with mentoring and real responsibility behind you. Not just internships.
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