growth
, interns
I’ve got a small start up running adventure tours in the Caucasus mountains www.georidersmtb.com
I’ve built the website, we’ve got an FB community and page and we have a US agent who recently started to do some promotions.
We are at very early stages in terms of maturity of a business- e.g. just starting to get heard about, getting bookings, running biggers tours. So far so good.
However, we have a bazillion ideas and iterative improvements to complete which manifest in long facebook conversations, to do lists and tickets in a project management app.
I’m limited by time and I’m the techie out of the 3 of us so I end up doing a lot of the design and tech improvements. There is also a lot of social media to run and I take some of the responsibility for that.
I’m aware there is a big opportunity for learning for perhaps a local to help out with some of these tasks - e.g. an intern. Is this something that could work out and what are the pros and cons of this?
Also we don’t yet have a physical bike shop front or office per se (we do have a place where someone could potentially work) and there are shared offices available in Tbilisi. Any thoughts welcomed.
I’m passionate rider myself and owner/managing partner of a couple of small business. We run internships for several years now, and we are very happy with it, because:
we expand our resource pool and we get more things done than usual
you keep enthusiasm high! Usually hard work (the common setup for a start-up) decreases motivation. When a young intern comes in he has a lot of drive. His high spirit will influence your team.
On the downsize:
you will have to invest time for managing them - your time or some of your colleagues.
not everybody is as dedicated as you might think, so expect to have failures. Our experience is that 40% out of our interns are really valuable.
they will need some resources, therefore indirect cost as any FTE: computer, workplace, tools and so.
Bottom line - for a start-up it could be an easy way to face some of those chaotic time and set a stepping stone for future growth. If you should find the passionate bike rider who knows your region, you might even hit a jackpot.
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