Getting crucial experience
to put on the résumé
On location, off campus: Profile of three
student internships
By Marybeth Keniston ’06
Intern, Marketing & Public Relations Department

Matt Pascarella ’06
at Portland Magazine
Last summer, communications major Matt Pascarella ’06 interned
with Portland Magazine, a sleek publication that focuses on
people and places in southern Maine and Portland, but has readers from
New England to California. Pascarella, who is from Windham, Maine, began
at the 20-year-old magazine at its small office in downtown Portland
shortly after completing a Web search for local internships.
Housed in close, high-energy quarters with the friendly staff
and seven other interns, he was treated like a regular employee, in terms
of work-place interactions and the type of tasks assigned to him. He
took photographs, did interviews, answered phones, and wrote articles
and short pieces for the magazine.
True to the magazine’s promise, he became familiar with
all the elements that make up a finished publication, right down to research,
fact-checking and distributing the magazine after it’s printed.
As an intern, he also received individual reviews of his creative efforts
by the editorial staff.
“The most rewarding part was doing an interview, coming back,
putting it together, and seeing the final product in the magazine,” Pascarella
says. He found this particularly true for an article he wrote about immigrants
living in Portland, because of “everything these people went through
and how happy they are to be in Maine.”
Pascarella’s biggest obstacle was adapting to the editing process. At first,
he found all of the changes made to his pieces discouraging, but soon realized
that editing is an important part of writing.
Although his internship reinforced his desire to write, he discovered
a preference for writing entertainment copy. “But I think that any experience that involves
writing helps me get my foot in a bigger door,” he says.
Pascarella recommends that other journalism students intern at Portland Magazine. And
the editors promise student interns they will see a “topnotch commercial
magazine create itself in front of their very eyes.” In fact, the editors
go on to say, the interns help create the magazine.
In Pascarella’s case, he did so while earning six credits
and getting a lively look at what it takes to publish and be published.

Harrison Smith ’07
at IDEXX Laboratories
“You can never get a feel for what you are going to do in a field
unless you actually do it,” says finance and accounting major Harrison
Smith ’07, of Portsmouth, N.H. He discovered this while interning
at IDEXX, an international biotech firm on the Nasdaq stock exchange.
The firm, located in nearby Westbrook, Maine, specializes in veterinary
supplies and testing products.
Smith’s finance professor, Chris Lewis, who is finance
manager for the firm’s food and environmental division, gave the
company Smith’s
résumé. He was called the next day to begin his year-long internship – which
was full-time over the summer, but is now 20 hours a week while he takes a full
course load. Unlike most interns, Smith does get paid for his work and has the
option to earn credits as well.
Smith does financial analysis and reports for Asia Pacific
Operations, the part of IDEXX that deals with Japan, Australia, New
Zealand and other parts of Asia. Because Smith and his supervisor do
most of the finance work for the region, he has major responsibilities.
He often sits in on conference calls and attends meetings with executives.
By creating new methods and checks for month-end reporting, and through
constant analysis of the region, he has helped make the department
more accurate and efficient.
Smith feels a sense of camaraderie with his supervisor, who
treats him as an equal, and with the rest of the team, who have shown
him respect from the beginning. Smith’s main obstacle has been
interning after just two years of college, because he is not yet equipped
with the experience and knowledge the employees have. However, his ability
to pick up information as he goes along has garnered him respect.
Smith says his experience at IDEXX has been like an entry-level
job that gives him a great look at his future career. He hopes to become
a Chief Financial Officer (CFO) for a major firm, but for now he is
building experience and contacts that will make a successful career.
Smith hopes to do a second internship at IDEXX – this
time with former professor Lewis in the food and environmental group,
where he will focus on products, instead of a specific region. He strongly
suggests that students do an internship to gain knowledge that cannot
be obtained in the classroom.

Jessica Cote '02
at Saint Mary's Hospital
Jessica Cote ’02 interned during her junior year with St.
Mary’s Regional Medical Center in Lewiston, Maine, where she worked
under the marketing manager for women’s services in the public
relations department.
Cote learned a lot about marketing with the help of a supportive supervisor,
who continues to be her mentor. At the hospital, she proofed and edited
brochures and ads that were in development. She also learned how to use
page design software. Cote says, “Over the course of those projects,
my supervisor took time to explain design concepts, such as proper use
of fonts and color within a piece and even brought me to a printing company
to explain the print process.”
Cote particularly enjoyed working
on development of a program called Club W!, which was created to give
women life-enriching experiences, including health education. She stays
very involved in Club W! by sitting on the advisory board, where she
helps to plan and develop programs.
Working with Club W! also showed Cote how the marketing lessons she had
learned in her courses were enacted in the real world. She saw that a
program such as Club W! gets women, who often make the health care decisions
for their family, involved with the hospital in a positive way. The result
is a relationship between the hospital and the women from which both
the consumer and the provider benefit.
Did her internship open doors for her? Definitely! She found
it to be a great way to build relationships with people in her field,
and it provided her with the experience necessary to obtain a job she
desired.
“Today I work as client and web services manager at Vreeland
Marketing,” she
explains. Vreeland is an award-winning, full-service advertising and public relations
agency in Yarmouth, Maine. The fast-paced job came about through one of her former
Saint Joseph’s professors, who owns the firm. Cote says, “I truly
believe the fact that I had previous experience and was so focused on what I
wanted for my career helped me get a job in the firm.”
Cote, who lives in
Auburn, Maine, strongly encourages students to do an internship. “The knowledge
and experience I gained during my internship are probably the most valuable experiences
I took away from college,” she
says. “It’s such a rewarding and confidence-building experience.”
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