top | item 42839179

Ask HN: What should I do with an intern who can't complete any task

1 points| binary_slinger | 1 year ago

I hired a software engineering intern with a decent resume for an undergrad. I decided to give them a chance after an in-person interview. It's been about a year, and they still haven’t completed a single task in Jira. At first, I thought the tasks might be too complicated, so I assigned something simpler. I even asked about their interests and assigned a task accordingly. When that didn’t work, I started meeting with them daily, but it turned into an exercise in testing my patience.

6 comments

order

rvz|1 year ago

> I decided to give them a chance after an in-person interview. It's been about a year, and they still haven’t completed a single task in Jira.

A year is a very long time for them to improve and you have given them enough time to change.

So I would just let them go right now.

> I started meeting with them daily, but it turned into an exercise in testing my patience.

No hire is better than a bad hire. You will not get back that time and money you spent on that intern. Are you willing to invest more time on to someone that still cannot complete any task after hiring them a year later?

If the answer is still No, fire them right now.

gregjor|1 year ago

Either put the effort into mentoring the intern, or fire them. You wrote that you "hired" the intern but didn't mention if that means a paid internship or not. If you don't pay the person, or pay them very little, you should adjust expectations accordingly. A year of no completed tasks seems like way too long, indicating lack of guidance and management.

nonrandomstring|1 year ago

Agree. An "intern" is usually a continuation of study, not a productive team member yet. You need to put more work in or get rid of them. Love and be kind to them. Help them find a skill, an educational task no matter how useless it is to you. Forget Jira.

I had to place interns and work experience apprentices once. Most of the time nobody wants them because they're a damn liability. Someone has to handle them, and that's time out of doing real work. Even if you get smart, motivated recruits who are full of initiative, you have to kinda sandbox them and babysit.

If you're in a big org, apart from that one kid who is the boss's nephew, realise that your organisation is almost certaily taking them in as a PR move, or as part of some scheme. The real PR bit that people miss is that for the next 50 years they'll either praise or badmouth your organisation, First assignments leave a big impression. So now you're a teacher. Don't let anyone give them a broom and treat them as "free labour". Find a task that's challenging but just within their abiity. Make it really fun, even if that's all make-believe.

After a year though, it's probably too late to change the dynamic.

jpmoral|1 year ago

What do they have to say about it?