Depending on your major and grad school plans college internships can be the most influential part of any college experience because these summer jobs have a tremendous influence on career success.
This website will specifically address how any college student regardless of their interest can get a paid internship in any city they want.
If you want to work in fashion in San Francisco this website will tell you how.
If you want to work in the NBA front offices in New York City this website will tell you how.
If you want to work in finance in Chicago this website will tell you how.
If you want to work for a movie studio in LA this website will tell you how.
If you want to work in advertising in Dallas this website will tell you how.
If you want to work for a golf course designer in Phoenix this website will tell you how.
If you want to work for a real estate developer in Miami this website will tell you how.
If it isn't already apparent this website will show absolutely anyone how they can find their dream internship that will give them their best shot at landing their dream job. The way to do it is surprisingly simple and I know from personal experience.
Why I know what I'm talking about:
While the current economic recession unquestionably makes the job environment exceptionally difficult for college students this isn't the first time the market has been extremely unfriendly to recent grads. I was an underclassmen when 9-11 happened and I sat by as I saw fraternity brothers and other seniors graduating into a world that wasn't offering the same opportunities for new grads that could easily be had just the spring before. Of course that summer I faced the same difficulties in finding a summer internship that my recently graduated friends were experiencing with full time permanent jobs. While my plight wasn't as serious because I still had years of school ahead of me to get my act together the process of how to land the ideal job quickly became apparent to me. I had to get creative and it's worked out very well for me.
Here's what I did
The first step in landing your dream job is to decide exactly what that job is.
The question of what's your ideal job is really a grown up version of the childhood question "what do you want to be when you grow up?" It can be surprisingly difficult both then and now to come up with a good answer.
If you don't already know what your passion is let's break it down to figure it out. What's important to you? Where do you want to live? Do you want to have a lot of money? Do you want to have a lot of free time? Do you want to have a lot of money and a lot of free time? Your priorities are your business and no one else (yes including me) can tell you what they are. If teaching autistic children is what makes you feel fulfilled that's wonderful, the world could use more people like that. If you won't feel like you've made a success of your life until Steven Spielberg turns one of your screenplays into a blockbuster movie that's an entirely different set of goals and priorities.
The bottom line is this: Once you figure out where you want your career to some day be in terms of independence, security, flexibility, wealth, fulfillment, physical location, work environment, etc. then you're finally in a position to layout a road map as to exactly how to go from where you are today to where you want to be when you cross the finish line. I should mention that when performing the aforementioned exercise many people mistake the finish line or the pinnacle of their career for retirement at age sixty-five. That's not what I'm talking about here. Part of the analysis that goes into choosing a career should be how quickly you can reach your optimal level of happiness with that career path and how important that quick assent is compared to an alternative that makes takes longer but offers a higher summit.
Your Career Path
For the sake of moving this along and getting to the point of this entire blog which is what you need to do to get any internship you want in any city you want in any industry you want we're going to assume for the purposes of this conversation that either through divine intervention or through the process described above that you've decided what you want to do with your life (at least for now). The next step is to reverse engineer yourself into the place you want to be. What I mean when I say reverse engineer is that you're going to work backwards so that you can figure out what you should be doing now to get yourself on the most direct track possible to your dream scenario.
For starters do some research on what sort of people are currently doing the jobs you someday want to be doing. What kind of backgrounds do they have in terms of education, work experience, life experience, etc. Imagine the ideal resume that would make someone an outstandingly qualified candidate for your dream job and strive to someday have that resume yourself. The very idea might sound overwhelming until you consider the fact that you may have as long as decades to sculpt the background you'll need to position yourself for where you want to be in the future.
Here's an oversimplified example to further drive home my point. For simplicities sake let's say you want to the President of West Coast Operations for Best Buy.
You love the west coast, you love Best Buy, you love the idea of how much money this job makes, and this is what you've decided you want to do with your life. It'll be wonderful. Your office will be in San Francisco, you can send your son to USC and your daughter to Berkley. Your wife (or husband) and you can take weekend trips to wine country and celebrate anniversaries in Vegas. Life will be good.
The only thing standing between you and your happily ever after ending is everything you need to do to get there. Let's get you on a career path that will get you there ASAP.
In high school your summer jobs are at the Best Buy in your hometown. You help out with the little stuff but you're just happy to have a few extra dollars in your pocket every pay period and you mainly took the job for the employee discount anyway. In order to get into college you might need to enroll the help of CAHSEE preparation if you're a California student or a similar high school exit exam in your own state if you live elsewhere.
In college you major in some sort of related business field depending on what your university has to offer. Retailing, Marketing, Finance, or even just Economics if that's the closest fit you can find.
Using the steps that this blog will recommend you land summer internships in the retailing business while in college. Unfortunately Best Buy didn't offer anything that you qualified for but you did land with Macy's working as an assistant buyer in their Dallas offices.
During your senior year of college you realize that while working in the corporate offices for a department store might be the dream of many young girls (including Rachel Green from Friends) it's not optimal for you. You want to be on the west coast and with Best Buy or a similar technology related company. Using the knowledge you gain from this website you politely decline a job offer from Macy's and through your own efforts you parlay your relevant experience to land a job with Gap in their management training program in San Francisco.
After the initial thrill of living in San Francisco wears off and you've completed the three year training program you realize it's time for greener pastures. What you need is a change of scenario and to continue down the career path that you laid out many years ago. It's time for a change. You begin speaking to job recruiters and after deciding that there really isn't anything out there for you right now you decide to take the GMAT and got to business school because an MBA is practically a prerequisite for consideration for the job of President of West Coast Operations of Best Buy.
The combination of a strong GMAT score, pretty good grades in college, and relevant work experience secures you a spot in top tier UCLA's Anderson school of business. You're moving to Westwood (Los Angeles) for a two years school, networking, and fun in the city of angels. School is a little hard but it's mostly group projects and the professors treat the students as adults. The entire emphasis is to land the best job possible. When that happens the school looks good and you look good. There are a lot of job choices coming out of grad school from coast to coast but you've already situated yourself in the part of the world where you want to be.
The summer between your two years of business school is spent working for Microsoft is Seattle doing supply chain management. It's much more technical than your management trainee position with Gap or your assistant buyer internships with Macy's and allows you to broader your resume with an additional useful skill that would be relevant for someday landing the Best Buy President of West Coast Operations position. At the end of the internship Microsoft offers you a full time position upon your graduation from UCLA and you gladly accept. The second year of grad school is extraordinarily comfortable as you enjoy the laid back nature of a school schedule with the piece of mind that you already have a full time job locked up in Seattle after graduation.
School ends and your days of tailgating at college football games and lounging down at the beach in Santa Monica are quickly cut off when you realize it's time to move up to Seattle (where you know practically no one) and begin a serious job that involves real responsibilities and managing employees.
Stuff at Microsoft isn't wonderful. You like it okay, you really like getting the biggest paycheck you've ever received, the city's cool, and you're paying down your student loans. The problem is that the job isn't totally fulfilling. You feel like a cog in a giant machine - doomed to spend eternity bouncing around middle management positions if you don't figure out a way to move out and up. After a few years you know you need a change so that's exactly what you do.
Armed with an impressive resume filled with desirable job history and degrees you network your way into a position that's finally with Best Buy. Finally, you'll be working on stuff you're really interested in. It's not quite Head of West Coast Operations in San Fran, but you will be working San Diego as a division manager.
You absolutely LOVE San Diego. It's mid-west sensibility with weather that is somehow even superior to LA's. You realize and proudly state that San Diego has a downtown that every city envies and thrives to emulate. You quickly grow to love your lifestyle.
Yes, you're working long hours to make a good impression on your superiors but it's also because you like what you're doing and the people you're working with. You're surrounded by smart people with similar backgrounds and ambitions. When you're not working you're perusing everything that San Diego has to offer. During the long summer days you often walk straight from your office to Petco Park in the Gas Lamp District of downtown San Diego to catch a Padres game with friends. It's at one of these very baseball games that you meet your eventual wife (or husband). Life is wonderful.
You never want to leave San Diego but a job opens up at Best Buy corporate office in San Francisco and while it's not President of West Coast Operations it is Vice-President of West Coast Operations. You love San Diego but San Fran is great too and this new position would offer a big pay raise - something you're always welcoming of. The company says they want to hire internally and you're as qualified as anyone. You've been with Best Buy in San Diego for five years now and while that's not as long as a lot of people it is a substantial enough amount of time to make you more than just qualified.
After a series of interviews you're hired and just like that you're moving back to San Francisco. This time you're not moving to SF straight out of college to start working at Gap, now you're moving up from San Diego with a spouse. The city's just as beautiful as the way you left it only now you have more disposable income to enjoy it. You don't spend nearly as much time in bars or going out during the week as you did right after college (sadly your body can't handle it anymore) but you do frequently go to nice dinners, shows, pro sporing events, and ski trips to Lake Tahoe.
Time flies.
Ten years go by and you have two young children and are finally up for the President of West Coast Operations of Best Buy. This is the job you've always wanted and the one you've positioned yourself for since you were a teenager. Of course the new job will entail as increased responsibilities (what promotion doesn't) but in addition to greater compensation you'll also have an increasingly independent schedule that will allow you to organize your time how you best see fit. This added amount of autonomy will allow you go to your kids softball games and soccer matches. On the night you find out they picked you for the job you go out with your spouse and spend a night in the nicest hotel in San Francisco and celebrate your success.
Life has been good. Life is good. Life will continue to be good. College internships and summer jobs while you're still in school are the entry level positions that can set the path for a lifetime of prosperity in work and every other facet of life.
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