You’re not a worthless person. Really, you’re not. So why does looking at your resume—currently lacking that prime internship that you wanted so desperately—make you feel like your life is going nowhere, and that you should just give up and break out the ice cream?
We’ve all had these moments of despair. The importance of internships is drilled into our heads from the moment we enter college, and spending a summer working a minimum-wage job does little to inspire confidence. While you feel like you’re gaining valuable skills and life experience, being a lifeguard has nothing to do with your accounting major. Employers couldn’t be interested in seeing that on a resume, could they?
It’s a vicious cycle; you can’t get a job without experience, and you can’t get experience without a job. So what’s the big secret? You have to either a) get relevant experience without getting a job, or b) know how to market the skills you already have. Or, ideally, both.
“If you’ve applied for a few internships and haven’t gotten them, it’s not the end of the world,” says Alicia Rodriguez, director of career development at the University of Miami’s career center. “You just have to think about, if you don’t secure the internship, what else could you be doing?”
Read on for ways to improve your resume—even if you didn’t get the internship.
Summer Jobs
Summer jobs are certainly on that list of options and can be very attractive to potential employers if described correctly. Having a job relevant to your career field would be the most valuable, but even unrelated jobs have worth. If you spent your summer waitressing at a restaurant or working the customer service desk in a clothing store, you’ve learned how to deal with the public, manage difficult people, and efficiently handle challenges. These are all things employers look for. “When it comes to part-time jobs, you want to look at opportunities that are relevant to your field in terms of skill sets,” says Rodriguez. “You want to learn transferrable skills that can be applied to multiple positions.”
Kayla Stangis, a rising sophomore and vocal music education major at the University of Northern Colorado, lists jobs as a data entry assistant and a barista at Starbucks on her resume. “I think it's important to list all of my work experience for a possible employer to see,” she says. “That way they can see how diverse I am even before meeting me in person, and it starts things off in the right direction.”
How to List it on Your Resume
Work Experience
Subway, Baldwin, NY – Cashier and Sandwich Artist
January 2012-present
Duties include assisting with customer relations, preparing sandwiches, handling cash register transactions, closing the store and calculating daily receipts.






