I'm currently looking for an internship as the last step before getting my diploma and I was wondering what could make me stand out from other applicants. I'm taking the traditional route with LinkedIn Jobs, Indeed, etc, but I feel like my resume doesn't even reach a real person and I had no luck so far. Are there ways to connect with employers in a more productive and different way? If someone could share their experience I would really appreciate it.
Thanks
(I'm in software development)
Given the forum, going to assume you are seeking an internship in tech.
FWIW, I created/lead an internship program for software devs at a small(er) venture-backed startup. The program was responsible for hiring ~20 interns over two years.
Among the interns I hired, those that stood out had a demonstrated genuine passion for the field as well as our company, had deployed their own side projects to production, and were very very clear in what they were seeking to gain from an internship with us.
Also, very early in my career, I recall a discussion with an intern on how he landed the role at the company I was with at the time. He said he cold-emailed the CEO. He also said that was how he had landed an earlier internship at Amazon!
Every company I interviewed with said it was the thing that stood out the most about my CV, and it gives you an interesting subject to talk about in interviews.
It helps if you have a personal project to highlight on the resume and discuss in interviews. But if you don't, highlight an interesting school project.
If you're graduating soon, you're also graduating into a downturn, so you're going to have to work harder to get started. Keep an eye out for good work in your field, but also look for other stuff where you can build up experience in a workplace, even if it's just office work.
for designers it could be dribbble stuff
for devs it could be github stuff
everyone can write things on a resume but i want something more tactile, more tangible, more itneractive. something that communicates your pursuit of your curiosity.
The tl;dr is that there are tons of ways to stand out, you just should pick one and work at it.