Anonymous wrote:I’m the manager of a rising senior undergrad intern (business major) at a Fortune 500. We have about 100 summer interns in a 10-week corporate program.
It does much more for them than it does for me.
I’m a little burnt out and have been doing it for 5+ years so I probably won’t do it next year.
What they get:
Their first exposure to a white collar, desk job.
An understanding of how different major departments work.
Learning a bunch of industry/corporate acronyms (pmp, saas, etc)
An immediate understanding of how important soft skills and internal politics are.
An understanding of diverse corporate backgrounds and career paths.
The details of a particular department (finance, hr, etc)
A sense of whether or not they’d want to work at the company or in the industry after graduation.
We are a company that doesn’t make an offer at the end of the summer, they have to apply to something open in the spring of graduation. But, they tend to get hired faster than a regular undergraduate.
Anonymous wrote:I'm in the investment management business and I love having interns. We have a kid right now who's starting a freshman at Harvard in the fall. The pod that he is in was working on a fairly complex model that involved a number of compartment transitions that had tricky kinetics and it was taking a while to perfect the system model in Excel. This kid set the system up as a system of ordinary differential equations and solved the system in R in 30 minutes. The rest of us looked around each other and all had the same thought: our shelf life is approaching expiry. But then we realized we can learn something new every day, and we have the perfect instructor sitting with us.
Anonymous wrote:I’m the manager of a rising senior undergrad intern (business major) at a Fortune 500. We have about 100 summer interns in a 10-week corporate program.
It does much more for them than it does for me.
I’m a little burnt out and have been doing it for 5+ years so I probably won’t do it next year.
What they get:
Their first exposure to a white collar, desk job.
An understanding of how different major departments work.
Learning a bunch of industry/corporate acronyms (pmp, saas, etc)
An immediate understanding of how important soft skills and internal politics are.
An understanding of diverse corporate backgrounds and career paths.
The details of a particular department (finance, hr, etc)
A sense of whether or not they’d want to work at the company or in the industry after graduation.
We are a company that doesn’t make an offer at the end of the summer, they have to apply to something open in the spring of graduation. But, they tend to get hired faster than a regular undergraduate.
Anonymous wrote:Internships are also great for exposure to different areas/position within the same field.
Anonymous wrote:At my job they are doing real work. It's great experience!