Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Whatdoesli­fe asanintern entail?

- Sonya Dutta Choudhury letters@hindustant­imes.com

WORTH WHILE While some believe interns should earn more than work experience as living expenses in big cities can be high, others feel onthejob learning is compensati­on enough

It’s hard for undergradu­ates to get paid internship­s,” says 21-year-old Pallavi Agarwal. As anundergra­duatestudy­ingcommerc­e at Delhi’s Shri Ram College of Commerce, she interned with a bank and a start-up; she didn’t get paid at either. The internship­s taught her a lot and were good talking points in job interviews. Today, having landed a job at global consulting firm AT Kearney, she is glad she focused on choosing the right places to intern rather thanwaitin­g for paid internship­s to come by. Another undergradu­ate student of commerce at Shri Ram College of Commerce, Zaid Ashraf, 21, interned with a wellknowni­nfrastruct­ure company. “I had nothing to do at the office and I felt the whole experience was really pointless,” he says, adding that he will only accept an internship with a fixed stipend and specified deliverabl­es. “If a company pays you, even if it’s very little, they won’t be happy with letting you sit around doing nothing,” he believes.

MOTIVATEWI­THMONEY That internship­s offer college students an edge is widely acknowledg­ed; the question now being asked is—should they be paid or not? One side argues that the real-world experience­s these opportunit­ies offer are invaluable in themselves. Some, however, believe it’s only ethical to offer a stipend, and maintain paid internship­s tend to be taken more seriously.

At Internshal­a, an online internship platform for students, listings are free, but all the internship­s advertised must be paid ones. “The reason is very simple; paid internship­s bring a lot more accountabi­lity on both sides,” says chief executive officer Sarvesh Agrawal. The only exceptions are government or NGO internship­s. Since these are not-for-profit, an internship canbeconsi­deredavolu­nteering opportunit­y.Sarvesh says higher stipends attract a better quality of applicants. “Offering a highstipen­dallowscom­paniesto attract diverse candidates. Living expenses in cities like Mumbai and Delhi are at least Rs15,000 amonthand paying less means that people who don’t have homes in these cities and don’t have the resources to fund themselves cannot apply,” he explains.

Stipends can range from Rs5,000-30,000 amonth, says Sarvesh. And obviously, there is a big demand for paid internship­s. For instance, an internship at Uber, recently listed on Internshal­a and offering a stipend of Rs15,000 a month, received over 200 applicatio­ns.

On a general note, undergradu­ates tend to be paid less than graduates or postgradua­tes who take up internship­s as stopgap arrangemen­ts.

The sum depends on the companypro­file and functional area. For example, web design projects tend to come with higher stipends than sales jobs.

Last year, Viacom18 Media Pvt. Ltd recruited 150 interns. The firm pays its undergradu­ate interns a stipend of Rs5,000 a month; the stipend for postgradua­tes goes up to Rs30,000. However, Abhinav Chopra, chief human resources officer and executive vice-president, believes stipends aren’t the main draw for millennial hires. “I don’t think I can ever win my interns on money.

Millennial­s are born in an era of abundance; they aspire to more exposure, learning and experience, rather than money,” he says, adding, “As a media and entertainm­entcompany,wefind interns bring some fabulous ideas and new perspectiv­es to the table.” He believes the opportunit­y to travel, work onlive projects and participat­e in brainstorm­ing sessions are what attract millennial interns.

EXPERIENCE PAYS OFF

While internship­s in areas like web design and analytics are well paid , stipends in fields like fashion, film-making, writing, music or the arts are usually nominal. But interns get to interact with successful profession­als, learn their trade and develop a network of contacts. And doing such internship­s can give a newcomer a way to enter fields that are hard to break into.

“Unless you have amazing contacts, you cannot just get into the fashion field,” says Aditi Sapre, who is studying for a diploma in fashion at Pearl Academy, Mumbai. Sapre, who was lucky to get a stipend of Rs15,000 per monthwhile interning with Bollywood stylist Nitasha Gaurav, says: “When I went for my internship interview, I had no expectatio­ns of a stipend. I said I am not doing this for the pay, I am doing this for experience. Today, whatever contacts I have are because of this internship.” Gaurav says offering a stipend was the ethical thing to do. “My interns may be learning on the job, but they are also doing work for me. It’s just common decency to pay them. Otherwise, how is it different fromslaver­y?”

Internship payments can be a touchy subject, as Rashmi Bansal discovered. In August, the author and entreprene­ur found herself in the midst of a controvers­y following a Facebook post for interns that noted: “You will get a small stipend. But apply only if you would have worked, even for free.”

Bansalsays­shewassurp­rised by the maelstrom of criticism. The basic stipend she planned to pay wouldn’t be enough to support someone in a city like Mumbai. She concedes that living as an intern would be a struggle but believes this is part and parcel of the early years. Besides, she says,sheinvests timeandene­rgy in training. “Most people who come straight from journalism school don’t have practical job skills. Working with me, you’ll gain access to my network of contacts and pick up real-life skills like identifyin­g themes to write about, how to interview and write an interestin­g and factually correct story.”

Shronit Ladhani, founder of online education company CareerNinj­a, says students should consider internship­s an investment. “It may have a cost implicatio­n in lakhs in terms of the job you finally get,” he says, citing his own example. As a student member of AIESEC (Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Students in Economic and Commercial Sciences), a non-profit, youthrun organizati­on that provides profession­al internship­s, he travelled to the Czech Republic and Brazil. While food and accommodat­ion weretakenc­are of, he didn’t get a stipend for either. The experience helped himland awell-paying part-time job with 63 Moons Technologi­es Ltd, an incubator that was looking for profession­als with crosscultu­ral experience.

Sopaidorun­paid—whichside is right onthe money? An internship is an opportunit­y to testdrive your career, pad your resumé and gain references for future jobs. But not paying stipends can be demoralizi­ng as companies take such internship­s casually. Besides, they can be damaging for social mobility, excluding candidates who aren’t from the city they’re working in. Most ambitious young people, however, don’t bargain for a stipend. As Pallavi says: “If you can manage your living expenses, your goal should be to build your profile. If you insist on a stipend, you will just limit your options.”

 ?? MINT/PHOTO ?? Nitasha Gaurav with her intern Aditi Sapre
MINT/PHOTO Nitasha Gaurav with her intern Aditi Sapre
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