10 Business Tasks You Should Never Give Your Interns

Question: What is one job that you should never have one of your interns do for the company? (Besides the obvious ones)

by The Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC)

 

Forget Financial Reporting

“Not only is it not smart to grant a temporary employee access to important financial documents, but these reports also need to be flawless. Unless you have an amazing finance intern that you know you will hire on full-time after his stint, leave the heavy numbers out of his sight.”

– Logan Lenz | Founder / President, Endagon

 

 

Social Media And Interns Don’t Mix

“A lot of companies have brought in interns with the hope of getting free labor for all the many aspects of creating a social media campaign. But an intern is the wrong person because the intern likely doesn’t have the experience to make good judgment calls, doesn’t know your company well enough to be an effective representative and may not be around long enough for a real campaign.”

– Thursday Bram | Consultant, Hyper Modern Consulting

 

Don’t Give Interns Busy Work

“Interns are best utilized by explicitly challenging these ambitious and pursuit-oriented students to excel in independent research projects with a definitive, report-based outcome. Set clear expectations. Assign a project due date. Help them. And, for not making them sort useless contact info or stack books, you’ll win hearts who will rave about your organization.”

– Dave Ursillo | Author + Speaker, Lead Without Followers Ltd.

 

 

Ditch The Customer Service

“If there’s a fire burning, a member of the management team should be putting it out, not an intern. Avoid using interns as the face of the company; besides being temporary, they’re rarely able to appreciate the company’s vision the way a key team member does.”

– Lisa Nicole Bell | CEO, Inspired Life Media Group

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Don’t Set Up Strategic Alliances

“When it comes to formalizing or setting up new business partnerships or alliances, it’s best to leave interns out of it. Such decisions usually have important brand and financial implications and you want to make sure you’re allying with the right people for the right reasons.”

– Charlie Gilkey | Principal, Productive Flourishing

 

 

 

Don’t Delegate Sales

“It may be tempting to use any new additions to your team for revenue-generation, especially if you’re a smaller firm or a startup. However, it’s not advisable to put interns in customer-facing sales roles as these jobs require cultivating relationships and fine-tuning negotiation styles over time. If you need sales support, consider using interns for sales qualification or lead generation instead.”

– Doreen Bloch | CEO / Founder, Poshly Inc.

 

No Talking To Clients

“Interns should almost never interface with your clients/customers directly. Clients should be building relationships with you, not building relationships with your temporary staff. Rather than give interns too much autonomy, have interns draft content and communication and send it to you for review first. Once you confirm the quality of the work, you can send it to clients.”

– Lucas Sommer | Founder CEO, Audimated

Don’t Clean The Bathrooms!

“Your interns are there to learn while providing value for the company. They are not your slaves, personal assistants or janitors. Give your interns interesting tasks that will help them grow, while helping the company. The quickest way to lose quality interns or ruin your reputation for future interns is to take advantage of them.”

– Nathan Lustig | cofounder, Entrustet

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Can’t Pitch New Clients

“It doesn’t matter how competent it seems like they are — you should be the one that talks with potential clients and seals the deal. Later on, you can introduce the intern to the team, or even have a highly regarded intern at key meetings or on key calls, but make it very clear that this is your territory and don’t try and hand that off.”

– Sean Ogle | Chief Adventurer , Location 180, LLC

 

Only Use Interns For Project-Based Work

“Interns are temporary by definition, but many companies make interns integral to their business’ processes, and are then left in a lurch when they leave. Know that interns are temporary and only give them standalone projects with clear ending dates. Don’t give interns ongoing work, give them a project that they can start and finish.”

– Laura Roeder | Founder, LKR

 

The Young Entrepreneur Council (YEC) is an invite-only nonprofit organization comprised of the world’s most promising young entrepreneurs. The YEC recently published #FixYoungAmerica: How to Rebuild Our Economy and Put Young Americans Back to Work (for Good), a book of 30+ proven solutions to help end youth unemployment.

 

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