Hi forum, I am here to discuss a situation, more typical with IT people who works as contractors, or college students who majors in IT and has been interning for a big/reputable company for a while.
This is happening to both me and a classmate of mine in school. We both started our IT internships early, he started in his second year in college, up until now and he is about to graduate in 2 month. I started my internship experiences since last Jan, which is my third year in college. We both are having amazing experiences in our internships, in terms of pay and work. The company he intern with is maybe the biggest accounting technology firms out there in the US, and he does a vital job as a SAP security intern. I intern with maybe one of the oldest and most well known website company that deals with automobiles. My point is, the companies we are interning for are all outstanding and health in terms of profit and reputation.
However, in talking with each other today, we found out that we are both in the same boat:being told by our respective companies that even though we were interning for a long time with the company, and doing a good job, and the company is making a health profit. The company don't have a big chance to bring us in as a full time employee because of "head count" issues, and our respective manager is trying "very hard" to convince his boss to give our team more "head count", so the manager can bring on temp. employees such as us interns and contractors to full time benefited employees.
My question for the forum is, have any one of you, in the early stages of your career, encounter problems like this? Really i am surprised that the word "head count" is a word that gets throw around a lot in big companies, even when they are making big profits they still don't want to hire on employees that has already been tested and trusted...at this stage me and him are both actively looking for other opportunities outside of the companies that we are interning for...but isn't this against what an internship is for a company? I thought companies, especially blue-chip cooperation uses internship position to test out young workers to see if they are a good fit for the company in the future, but why is that case not true today?