SparklyKoala
SparklyKoala

The "Not So Obvious" Things That Get You A Return Offer?

Hey everyone, heading into my first internship this summer, no other work experience and want to hear from full time employees on the lesser known things that secure the return offer. By this I mean things other than being able to adapt to work, ask questions, not making same mistake over and over - basically the things that aren't talked about but from your perspective really makes huge a difference in your opinion on the intern.

Thanks in advance!

13mo ago
Talking product sense with Ridhi
9 min AI interview5 questions
Round 1 by Grapevine
SwirlyLlama
SwirlyLlama

After joining a top company after getting help from someone on Grapevine, here's my advice. Thanks @Devgyan btw.

  1. Slow and accurate is better than fast and shitty.

Whenever you get a task, add a small buffer for how long it will take you to do it. Then add some buffer for review and other assignments you will get. Reviewing any written documentation or even just Slack notes is crucial because your work will speak for itself. There are ways to improve your accuracy (take a walk after 90 minute working session), but the idea is to set the standard for the quality of work you provide your supervisor and colleagues.

  1. Visibility and approachability matters Taking initiative and seeing if other colleagues or supervisors need work, or seeing if they have 15-20 minutes run you through their current assignment task helps with networking. This will help you stand out. I'm not sure how common this is in Tech but I've always stood out by just being curious about the company ecosystem and understanding the different workflows and stuff that gets done by my peers and colleagues. This can also bring on opportunities to you.

  2. Consistency is better than Intensity

It doesn't matter as much if you pull an all-nighter one night if it leads to you calling in sick the next day. With the corporate world, the most important factor is simply showing up day in and day out. You'll have good days, great days and some really sh*t days as well. Life happens, you get sick, or get bad news, or don't get enough sleep. In those moments, more than anything, just showing up and doing the work is important.

  1. Be Coachable

One thing to remember is to come into the office with humility. It's natural for many interns to be somewhat egotistic, it's only natural after spending near endless hours getting into a good company, but the folks you work with have more experience in the execution of the work, and if they're taking the time to teach you or show you something, make sure to be coachable and open-minded.

As for what NOT to do... I'd say showing up bored, distracted, or entitled will pretty much do it. Karma is a bitch.

FloatingBoba
FloatingBoba
PayTM13mo

Keep your manager very happy and give detailed updates always.

JumpyBiscuit
JumpyBiscuit

Two from my side -

  1. Be easy to work with. Its an underrated skill.

  2. Be proactive and close threads. If you ever said that you'd do something, do it.

GroovyBoba
GroovyBoba

don’t be an asshole and don’t assume you’re smarter than everyone else

GroovyBoba
GroovyBoba

and show curiosity and initiative

SwirlyPretzel
SwirlyPretzel
Google13mo

Just do your job buddy. It will work.

JazzyNarwhal
JazzyNarwhal

I assume you already know general answer.

"things that aren't talked about" this answer depends alot on your org, ask you colleagues how they got PPO.

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