Question

Topic: Career/Training

Intern By E-mail??

Posted by Anonymous on 125 Points
I work for a non-profit organization and I am the sole person in the marketing department. I'm responsible for all of our ads, brochures, website, internal, communications, etc.

Now, there is a girl, in college that helps out all the administrators in the office when she’s home for breaks.

She’s going to school for marketing and needs to do an internship and asked I’d be willing to to have her. Great I can use all the help I can get!!!

But the catch is she wants to do it all by e-mail, have you ever heard of such a thing? I want to help her, but I’m just not sure what I can give her to do via e-mail. Any ideas??
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RESPONSES

  • Posted by michael on Member
    Shouldn't be a problem unless she asks to be paid by the hour. Yes, some internships pay.

    Consider: Will she have access to the company server from a distance? Does she have the same programs on her computer at home? Can they be securely added to her computer without additional license cost? What sort of checks and balances will there be to assure you that she's working the amount of time (I'd be more concerned with projects getting done than the amount of time she's on a clock) she needs to get credit for the internship?

    If you can iron out all that, go for it!

    Michael
  • Posted on Member
    Part of the idea of an internship is that someone will mentor the intern, give them a sense of how the day-to-day activities support the strategy and feed into the mission. It's not impossible to do all of that by email, but it's not nearly as good as being in the same physical location and talking about why you're doing what you're doing, etc.

    I'd be reluctant to have an intern who is just trying to get his/her ticket punched and doing everything remotely. I know that's old-school, but I don't know that I've ever heard of an [entirely] off-site intern.

    Maybe you can negotiate a combination: at least 50% on-site, and the balance via email if/when convenient for both of you. Surely some tasks can be done off-site, and if the person is already familiar with the organization and the on-site stuff, then perhaps there's room for a compromise (on both your parts).
  • Posted on Member
    I sound like my grandmother, but in this day and age, everything is changing, so you have to keep up with the time. (Yikes!) In my interning days, I wouldn't dream of asking or expecting a telecommuting option. But if you are getting the labor (cheaply), and she's getting what she wants out of it...it should be workable.

    I'd consider setting some boundaries, responsibilites, and schedules. For example, if she's paid hourly, do you want to set minimum or maximum number of hours per week? Might help you manage any padding of hours if you and she know what to expect. What about allowing the email setup, provided she does a weekly or biweekly telephone call to discuss status of her projects?

    Oh, one more thing: you might want to consider whether everyone else on your team has the same priveleges. If not, it is probably wise to set a formal telecommuting policy for all staff and interns. We don't have one, and it's ruffled a few feathers. There are always people who cannot reasonably telecommute all the time (help desk, receptionists, etc.), but we'd save a lot of headaches and whining (seriously, if I hear it again, I will pull my hair out one by one) ...if we just set a formal policy and stuck to it.

    Good luck! Cheap labor, small concessions, here and there, get some grunt work off your desk...I say long live the intern!
  • Posted by telemoxie on Accepted
    I'm working as a remote marketing department for over a dozen companies... I have never met most of my clients (in person) and certainly there is a ton of work the intern could do...

    ... I have considered working with remote marketing interns, and the task I've considered would be to develop marketing collateral. You can give them some guidance on how to research your industry and competitors, some directives on how to make this research helpful to you (e.g. a Features/Benefits matrix) and have them develop sales letters, direct mail pieces, press releases, etc. Naturally, you will need to do some finishing work on the marketing pieces, but sometimes it is easier to improve a letter than to start from scratch.

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