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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, June 26, 2006

Interns find going the extra mile helps

By Margarita Bauza
Detroit Free Press

Second-time General Motors intern Alex Keros, 29, is described as "forward thinking" by his supervisor, Britta Gross. The University of Michigan graduate student is among the summer interns who are keeping their eyes on the long-term goal: a full-time job.

MANDI WRIGHT | Detroit Free Press

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MANY INTERNS MAKE JUMP TO FULL-FLEDGED EMPLOYEE

Employers are converting a higher percentage of interns into full-time hires, according to surveys conducted by the National Association of Colleges and Employers.

  • 35.6 percent of interns in 2000 were hired full time. Surveys were sent to 561 employers, and 177 responded.

  • 44.7 percent of interns in 2003 were hired full time. Surveys were sent to 1,036 employers, and 212 responded.

  • 35.6 percent of interns in 2004 were hired full time. Surveys were sent to 1,070 employers, and 240 responded.

  • 53 percent of interns in 2005 were hired full time. Surveys were sent to 1,156 employers, and 303 responded.

    Source: National Association of Colleges and Employers

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    ADVICE FOR INTERNS

  • No one is responsible for your career except yourself. Come up with your own goals on top of what the company is offering.

  • Ask yourself who would impress you if you were the CEO of the company: someone who is just punching the clock or someone who volunteers, stays late and participates on a committee?

  • Do not walk in with an entitlement attitude, especially if you come from a prestigious school. You're starting with a clean slate.

  • All eyes are watching. Limit your personal phone calls. When you're at work, be 100 percent engaged. Show up early. Connect with as many people outside your department as possible.

  • Go to lunch with the CEO if that's a possibility. Once you have the lunch date, be extremely professional and have prepared questions you want to explore. Follow up with a thank-you note afterward.

  • At the end of your internship, let everyone know how much you enjoyed the learning opportunity and tell them that you hope they consider you for a job. Say it verbally and in writing. Thank all the people you interacted with and who helped you.

  • Review your accomplishments at the end of the internship.

    Source: Jill Jordan, owner of the Southfield, Mich.-based interview coaching firm IW Associates

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    DETROIT — A week into his internship at General Motors Corp., University of Michigan graduate student Alex Keros was asked to represent the company at a technology expo in Chicago.

    "He was a GM employee the day he showed up," said his supervisor, Britta Gross, manager of hydrogen infrastructure and strategic commercialization.

    "He's really forward thinking," Gross said, hinting that Keros' chances of employment after his current second internship at GM look good.

    "His willingness to learn about the program and express himself and his personal view — a young view — is what GM wants."

    With jobs scarcer than ever — the national unemployment rate in April was 4.6 percent — summer internships are no longer just a way to get work experience. They have evolved into a summer-long interview that job hopefuls can't afford to squander, says Jill Jordan, who owns the interview-coaching firm IW Associates in Southfield, Mich.

    Lesson No. 1? Students need to think strategically and go beyond what they're being asked to do if they hope to land a permanent job, Jordan said.

    "It's no longer a summer job to help you with the real thing," Jordan said. "You have to take this opportunity very seriously."

    Strategies include going out to lunch with co-workers, managers and the CEO and volunteering for projects outside of what you are asked to do, Jordan said.

    "I get the chance to make a difference in one of the most important companies in the world," said Keros, 29, of Ann Arbor, Mich.

    "Hopefully, my actions speak for themselves."

    Local companies say they increasingly are using internships as their main source of recruitment. It's cost-effective — companies can try out an employee at discount wages before they're hired full time.

    Employers who responded to a 2004 survey by the National Association of Colleges and Employers said they extend offers for full-time employment to nearly 45 percent of the students who served internships with their organizations in 2003, and to more than 60 percent of those who took part in co-op assignments with them. The survey was sent to 1,036 employers and received a 20.5 percent response rate.

    In Detroit, a handful of companies contacted by the Free Press said they have expanded and grown internship programs. They include General Motors Corp., Deloitte & Touche, Compuware, Campbell-Ewald and Plante & Moran.

    Accounting firm Deloitte & Touche's intern class has grown from 68 in 2003 to 90 in 2006. In 2003, 50 interns were hired full-time. This year, the company hopes to hire 80 of them, recruiter Dana Catania said.

    Deloitte & Touche audit associate Adam Tymowski was hired in the fall of 2005, following an internship in the summer of 2004.

    "I went out of my way to get to know and talk to as many people as possible," said Tymowski, 23, of Northville, Mich. "I reached out to people a little higher up in the food chain. The point of an internship is getting a job."

    Warren, Mich., advertising firm Campbell-Ewald revamped its internship program six years ago and plans to offer jobs to half of this summer's class, said Barbara Rozman-Stokes, vice president and manager of human resources.

    In those six years, the company has offered full-time jobs to 32 of 63 interns.

    "They can get their hands dirty about what happens at an advertising agency, sell creative projects, high-level exposure," Rozman-Stokes said. "And for us, we are evaluating whether we want to hire this person for a position. It allows us to get the best talent that we've tested over the summer."

    Crystal Johnson, 23, of Southfield was hired at Campbell-Ewald after her internship.

    "I gave 150 percent," Johnson said. "You want to make sure you want to take advantage of this experience. I contributed my best while I was here.

    "I tried to speak up and volunteer as much as I could, and when I met with potential clients, I made sure I was professional and made sure my voice was heard."

    If companies wait until graduation, the talent pool is vastly diluted because most public accounting job candidates, for instance, accept jobs during or following an internship, he said.

    At Michigan State University, many recruiters this year are hiring just interns, not full-time employees, said Kelly Bishop, MSU's director of career placement services.

    "More companies are doing strictly internship hiring, and there are more companies identifying talent at an early stage, developing it, growing it and retaining it," Bishop said.

    "There are also companies that, when the job market is less certain, they continue hiring interns so that when they can go out and hire, they have someone who is tested and true," he added.