PHILADELPHIA — For the record, summer intern Neal Cook does make the coffee and empty the trash.
But more significant, Cook, a Temple University sports-management major, and fellow intern David Twamley, a business major at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School, have other responsib
ilities that might make them the envy of their copy-making, phone-answering compatriots.
They are running their own business — at Front Rush LLC, a company that develops sports-team recruiting and compliance software in an old factory along a canal in Lambertville, N.J.
“On our first day, we were building our own desks,” Twamley said. “Two weeks later, we were running our own company.”
The business Cook and Twamley are trying to bring to market is called Online Sales Board. It’s an offshoot of internal-sales scorekeeping software that Front Rush’s founders developed to motivate their sales staff.
“We went from screwing in desk legs to designing pricing models,” Twamley said.
Internship is a rite of passage for college students making their way toward careers. But in these hard times, when unemployment in the 20-to-24 age range is running at 14.5 percent, an internship is more than just a way to pass the summer.
Employers routinely hire their interns when they graduate, the National Association of Colleges and Employers reported recently, drawing from a survey of 266 companies conducted in January. In fact, the companies said, four of the 10 new graduates hired from the Class of 2010 had previously worked as interns.
That may happen to Cook, who graduates in December, but no one’s making any commitments yet. Twamley will be a junior in September.
“From our perspective, it’s a great way to analyze talent,” said Front Rush co-founder Brad Downs, 30. “There’s no better way to evaluate someone than to watch them work.”
The interns were hired because Front Rush had been using an online sales board to motivate its staff. It worked well but wasn’t core to the business.
Developing it would be a distraction. Why not let the interns do it? “We feel that we got our MBA the first year we were running our business. You have to learn to manage cash flow. You have to learn how to hire people, and you have to learn it like that,” Devlin said, snapping his fingers.
That’s what Devlin and Downs decided to provide for Cook and Twamley.
So far, everything has been a learning experience.
“Search-engine optimization,” Cook said, giving an example. He said it was necessary for the two to design their company’s website so it popped up high when someone typed “sales leader board”?
Online Sales Board allows each salesperson and that person’s managers to track how they are doing against company quotas, while also allowing personal goals to be set. The twist: It’s all applied with a customizable sense of humor designed to goad rivals.
Little details matter.
Cook talked about having to arrange a merchant’s account for online payments, then realizing that transaction fees needed to be figured into product pricing.
“You think it’s like a lemonade stand,” Twamley said. “You hand someone a glass, and they hand you money. But if you can’t sign up easily, that’s a bad omen for your product.
“We want to make it easy for people to sign up and make it easy for them to pay.”
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