NEW AGE STARTUPS
Catching them Young
Young ventures are aggregating
demand for interns from firms, who wish to sample and experiment with raw
talent, before they hire. It is opening up an Internship marketplace in India
The rising demand for young internees across large corporations and startup firms is spawning a number of new ventures that link prospective employers with aspiring students. These firms are aggregating demand from companies eager to spot fresh talent and connecting them with candidates seeking multiple options on a single platform.
“Barring the IITs and
IIMs, most colleges leave students to fend for themselves when it comes to
internships, even though it is an integral part of most academic courses,” says
Karthikeyan Vijayakumar, founder of Twenty19.com, a portal which focuses on
students in their teens or twenties looking for an internship.
The 30-year-old
engineer from the Birla Institute of Technology and Sciences, Pilani, interned
with General Motors while still in college but found that most peers were not
so lucky. “The reason being the lack of a consolidated platform to fill the
demand and supply gap,” says Vijayakumar who founded his company in 2010.
Across the startup ecosystem a number of such new ventures have sprung up
including LetsIntern.com, HelloIntern. com and Internshala. These portals
together have a database of over 20,000 companies and institutes listing
internships both in India and globally.
“Interns are part of a ‘millennial’ talent
pool and bring an enhanced value to our work environment,” says Debashis
Chakraborty, a recruitment leader at IBM for India and South Asia. The
technology corporation views internships as a route to identify high-potential
talent they can recruit in future. These could include positions within the
research labs, sales and distribution as well as marketing, communication and
human resource.
For portals that are pooling together such demand, the business
model can vary. Often it is a combination of a straight fee charged for each
listing on a monthly basis or an annual subscription charge. Twenty19, which
works with around 5,400 companies, charges 2,000 for a single listing and a
flat fee of 9,000 for an annual subscription. With about 1.8 lakh visitors to its
website every month, Vijayakumar is expecting to earn revenues of 60 crore by
2015.
Entrepreneurs are also keen to tap into demand from overseas students
looking to intern in emerging markets such as India. For instance, 29-year-old
Sarvesh Agrawal set up Internshala.com in 2010, when a close friend studying in
the London Business School, was unable to find an internship opening in India.
The IIT Madras graduate says his portal now aggregates global internships from
a number of universities including Harvard, Carnegie Mellon and Arizona State
University in the US. In turn, students are lapping up the plethora of choices
that these portals now offer.
Technology undergraduate Vishal Kumar, who
develops mobile applications and games, notched up 10 internships last year. A
student of Jalandhar’s Lovely Professional University, 21-year-old Kumar earned
close to 85,000 by working for startups such as MySuperBrain. com and
Thinkappz.com. “I believe that learning from books is not a good way to acquire
knowledge. Because of these internships, I have become more tactical,” says
Kumar, who intends to launch his own venture soon.
For portals that list such
internships finding the right business model is proving to be critical.
Thirty-seven-year-old Tanuj Malik, who set up Indianinternship.com, says his
portal earns revenues from advertisements, as startup firms who form the bulk
of his customer base are not keen to pay for listing on the site. In contrast,
Delhi-based Letsintern. com charges students a fee for premium services. At
present, the portal has 18,000 openings posted by companies and 1.2 lakh
registered candidates.
“As the demand is less than the supply, we wish to keep
it free for companies,” says Rishabh Gupta, 27, who co-founded the firm in
2010. Letsintern.com is aiming to earn revenues of 100 crore by 2017.
Increasingly, more portals are offering specialist services as the industry
grows rapidly.
As in the case of Lawctopus.com set up two years ago by Tanuj
Kalia, who set up the company with four friends while recovering from a bout of
chickenpox. Kalia and his friends earn about 6 lakh per year as profit from
portal which hosts advertisements and paid blogging services.
Malavika Jaggi,
business development specialist at HelloIntern.com, says that convincing
organizations about an intern’s capability is also a challenge. To ensure they
get the best talent, the company has tied-up with institutes such as
IIT-Kanpur, NIT Trichy and BITS Pilani-Dubai Campus to ensure that specific
requirements set out by companies can be met.
For instance Google India, which
also recruits interns through Web portals, has launched an internship program
for second and third-year computer science students. The 12 –week software
project, where each internee is paired with a Google engineer, includes
training in coding and exposure to new Google tools. “The lack of internship
platforms was a definite gap in the Indian market. These new startups are
providing options across the job market,” says Nishant Saxena, founder CEO
Round One, an employee referral portal. The sector will grow rapidly as “more
models emerge to help monetise this business,” says Saxena of RoundOne.
Harsimran Julka and Janani Balasundar ET130524
Harsimran Julka and Janani Balasundar ET130524
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