Silicon Valley woos interns

By Stefanie Olsen, CNET News.com
Wednesday, July 04, 2007 09:39 AM

Ben Maurer is one of hundreds of Google interns this summer whose days include free clothes, free meals and free reign to delve into Google's code.

"It's like a scuba diver and an interesting coral reef. For a software developer, diving into the code at Google is a comparable experience," said Maurer, an undergraduate at Carnegie Mellon University who's interning at the search giant for a second summer in a row, following two summer stints at software maker Novell.

As if to underscore his appreciation of the tangible perks of his summer gig at Google, Maurer added: "I really can't believe the food. It's amazing. The hardest thing for me is on the weekends and the food isn't there."

As a college kid, Maurer is in an enviable spot, and not just because he's fed well. He has a paid internship at the company widely regarded as the coolest place to work in Silicon Valley, where even press representatives have Harvard University degrees.

But as a computer science undergrad with ambition and several internships under his belt, Maurer is in another kind of sweet spot. As companies like Google and Microsoft fish in a shrinking pool of skilled job candidates to fuel innovation and growth, they're similarly looking to recruit university-level talent for next year's hires. That makes college-intern recruiting a competitive business.

"There's a lot of demand for top CS undergrads and grads, both from start-ups and big companies, because there's growing recognition of the limited supply of the really talented students," said Stephen Hsu, a professor at the University of Oregon and founder of SafeWeb, a network-security specialist that was purchased in 2003 by security company Symantec. "Companies take it pretty seriously because summer interning is a recruitment tool."

Recent statistics indicate the number of computer science majors in colleges may be shrinking. According to the Computer Research Association, total enrollment in computer science bachelor's programs in the United States was down 14 percent from 2005 to 2006, and more than 40 percent since 2002. On the upside, there were some hopeful numbers: a 10 percent rise in pre-major enrollment in computer sciences.

Similarly, the number of students earning a master's degree in computer science was down 13 percent, from 9,286 in the year ending June 2005 to 8,074 in the year ending June 2006, according to CRA.

However, the number of students graduating with a doctorate was up more than 25 percent, to 1,499 in June 2006. CRA also reported that, as was true during the dot-com heyday, a high percentage--nearly 50 percent--of doctoral students in computer science went to work in industry, rather than academia, from 2005 to 2006.

Offers that are hard to refuse
When wading into that talent pool, securing a talented workforce makes companies like Google and Microsoft work hard to pave the way for interns, beyond offering an attractive salary.

Microsoft, for example, offers students superlative benefits, according to students and recruiters. Whereas Google typically will conduct phone interviews with prospective student interns, Microsoft will fly undergraduates and graduate students to its campus for interviews. It also offers to pay new intern hires for relocating, and gives them the choice of a housing stipend or subsidized corporate housing with free transportation to and from work. New this year, Microsoft started giving interns a one-time allowance for housing.

On top of that, Microsoft sells its interns with various perks, including San Francisco Giants baseball games at AT&T Park, a sunset cruise in San Francisco Bay, and a dodgeball tournament. Out-of-state interns are also flown to Redmond, Wash., for a barbeque at Bill Gates' house during the summer.

Similarly, Google interns are treated to ice cream socials, bowling nights, a cruise on the bay, and a scavenger hunt in San Francisco. Unlike subsidized meals they might find at Microsoft, Google interns enjoy the free, all-day gourmet meals that regular employees do. And if they're envious that Microsoft interns get a date with Bill Gates, they can hang around with Google co-founders Larry Page and Sergey Brin during the company's regular Friday evening fireside chats.


2 Next 

WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 1 comments

Summer of code is another option
I saw a post about Google's summer of code program. IT's not an official google internship but is a good program for you if you love programming and open source project. www.ledova.com...
Posted by Eric on Thursday, July 24 2008 05:05 PM


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

10 open source projects worth checking out

Open Source

The open source field is pretty crowded, but certain projects stand above the rest. Here are 10 tools and solutions you don't want to overlook.


Read more »



Do we need more delivery centers?

Blog thumbnail

As I wrote a while back in about "racing to subsidies", there certainly is an increased focus by governments to attract delivery centers to their region. To do that, many..... by Michael Rehkopf

Read more »

Tags

  1. acquisition
  2. acquisitions
  3. ceo
  4. china
  5. financial
  6. google inc.
  7. green it
  8. ibm corp.
  9. india
  10. industry
  11. information technology
  12. it outsourcing
  13. job
  14. microsoft corp.
  15. network
  16. outsourcing
  17. revenue
  18. singapore
  19. software
  20. u.s.