The Denver Post

Interns at 25 firms make more than median U.S. worker

- By JenaMcGreg­or

Summer is nearing, and workplaces everywhere are awaiting the arrival of this year’s interns to help out on extra projects and shoulder the seasonal load. But among certain companies, they’re likely doing more than getting coffee and making copies. Or at least, they’re being paid that way.

According to a new report by the jobs site Glassdoor, the 25 best-paying companies for internship­s each pay their median summer worker more than $4,500 a month. That amount, if it was paid over the course of a full year, would be north of $54,000, exceeding the median annual pay for a U.S. worker, according to Glassdoor’s own local pay reports ($51,350), and the annual figure calculated from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ latest weekly earnings data for full-time wage and salary workers ($44,460).

Topping the listwas Facebook, where the median pay for interns is $8,000 a month, according to the reports from the newest analysis. That’s $1,800 more than the $6,200 the social media giant reportedly paid internswhe­n Glassdoor last issued its last highest paying internship report, in 2014. The next three were Microsoft (which pays a median $7,100 a month); ExxonMobil ($6,507) and Salesforce ($6,450).

Interns are “doing real work with real deadlines and very high expectatio­ns,” said Scott Dobroski, Glassdoor’s community expert. “But they’re getting hired at a level that’smuch more than the averageU.S. worker.”

Glassdoor’s analysis is culled from self-reported salary numbers offered by current or recent interns (thosewho have completed an internship within the past year) and includes only companies that have at least 25 reports.

Among the top 25, the list remains heavily technology focused, with 16 of the top 25 in tech or tech-related fields, along with finance, oil and gas, and consulting firms. At all but three of the 16 companies that made repeat ap- pearances from2014, themedianp­aywentup, sometimes sizably, with seven seeing percentage increases of 10 percent or more.

Some firms well known for high summer pay — investment banks, say, or law firms— might not be represente­d if there are not enough salary reports from interns to meet the sample size, Dobroski said. That was the case with firms such as Goldman Sachs or Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, he said. Geography also plays a role: Companies with large employee population­s in big coastal cities, such as Bloomberg (No. 7) or the many tech firms on the list, end up paying more, even to interns. “Part of it is definitely driven by geography,” he said. “More than half of them are headquarte­red in the San Francisco Bay Area or New York.”

Dobroski says Glassdoor does not have data on whether the lawsuits in recent years over paid versus unpaid internship­s may have had an impact on an increase.

“But what we see anec- dotally and hear from employers and in policymaki­ng is a push toward paying for interns, aswell as guidelines within companies that they’re being treated more like full-time or part-time employees,” he said. “They’ve no longer just comein for babysittin­g. The internship is designed for you to get experience.”

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