I recruit for my F500 corporate overlords. Was just at the A&M engineering career fair last week. Saw a lot of ISENs but was generally recruiting all engineering majors. Couple of major points:
-General report from students was that nearly every company was pushing an online portal. So make sure your son is applying online even if they didn't see the company in person.
-Show interest in the company, Generally just ask the recruiter what a day in the life looks like, where their major fits. What the recruiter does. 99% of recruiters are volunteers being led by one person who is actually on a recruiting payroll within the company. Talk about some personal and school projects, some things you like about your major, the industry, etc. Its okay to not know what specifically the company does but at least know the basics of the industry.
-ISEN is interesting because there are a variety of places to get plugged in. Could be manufacturing, could be inspection, could be supply chain. Be sure to look up when Mays does a supply chain career fair as well.
-To learn about any specific company the best, ask chatgpt about the industry to learn. Read annual reports. Have Chatgpt summarize the reports. Get on twitter and see what discussions are going on.
-Firm handshake, eye contact, good hygiene, able to stand and have a conversation.
-Traits I'm looking for: Eagerness, competence, curiousity, conversationality, hands on experience. Interns are tracks to become new hires so I still ask myself the same questions - would I like to work with this person? Can I trust them with complex projects eventually?
-Have a good story that highlights technical depth and problem solving. Was there a time you kept asking why and it uncovered a bigger problem that was solved or you solved it? Your story doesn't have to end with you saving the world, I just want to see technical curiousity, eagerness, and competency depth.
An internship is usually lopsided in favor of benefiting the intern. There's usually a small 'we'd like to actually get this solved but dont have the manpower' problem we can't get around to doing that we like handing off to an intern. The biggest value an intern has is showing up eager to learn and eager to help.
I know junior year is a big year to have an internship. Personally as a mid career guy, go work at a summer camp one more time. You won't be able to get that summer back and you'll have the rest of your life to slog away at work.
Personally, previous internships never impressed me directly, but it does give students focus about what they like or don't. I worked a summer camp two summers, had two internships, and worked a summer camp again before I left. Guess which summers I look back fondly the most.
I'm happy to review resumes, talk to your son, etc. And that goes to anyone chiming in on this thread.