Sunday, October 12, 2008

Money & Business

The Inside Job by Liz Wolgemuth

Rudeness: A Quick Way to Ruin an Internship

May 06, 2008 12:50 PM ET | Liz Wolgemuth | Permanent Link | Print

When I talked about internship trials and tribulations with hiring expert Brad Karsh last week, we touched on one issue that I didn't have space to include in the story but really is an important topic.

I told Karsh that I had recently spoken with someone who holds a small but important position in her office—she keeps things, like the coffee machine, running. The woman, who is quite friendly, says she dreads the start of internship season. The reason: She believes the newly desked and penciled corporate contenders treat her with little to none of the respect she deserves.

Here's what Karsh has to say about it:

As an intern, you need to think of your internship as a 10-week interview.... Everything you do is being evaluated. It's not like they're taking notes everyday and saying: "Ah, you wore that blue shirt on Tuesday, not so sure about that." But if someone like this woman you've described went to a manager and said, "I really hate Jim—he was totally rude to me," you might think twice about hiring this person.

You may have heard this about interviews, that candidates have lost jobs because they were rude to a waiter at a business lunch or they were rude to the receptionist when they checked in.

Think about that concept within the context of a 10-week interview. Because that's sort of how you're being judged and those people will comment, whether it's an interview or not.... Realize that you work with everybody, not just your boss, or those clients or coworkers that you have. Everyone in that company is your coworker.

Tags: careers | internships

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Reader Comments

rudeness in the workplace

When a person is rude in the workplace, they are rude people, period! if someone has to practice being polite in a certain setting there is something fundementally wrong inside that person. Try practicing being respectful everywhere to everyone untill it becomes part of you. End of problem.

Thanks for bringing this up... it's very important. I blogged about something similar some while ago, and your readers might find it useful. It's two-part advice; "be polite" is the second part. Here:

http://staringatemptypages.blogspot.com/2006/12/careers.html

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You're taking a break from your job-hunting and job-hopping ways and have decided to stay put in your current position. Liz Wolgemuth’s careers blog will show you how to make the very best of your job, each day. You can send her your career questions: theinsidejob@usnews.com.

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