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I interned at my current place of employment for 2.5 years while I was an undergrad. During that time, I worked 40 hours per week during the summer and averaged 20 hours per week during the school year. I have since been hired full-time and I have been with the company a little over 3 years now.

How many years of work experience do I have?

Background info:

There is a significant income disparity between someone with 1 year of experience vs 3 years (as per salary.com). I have job responsibilities equivalent to that of someone who has been at my company for about 5 years. I am trying to determine what I should expect in terms of income, raises, etc.

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I meant that I have been with the company a total of a little over 3 years, including internship. I've only been full time for less than a year. – James Jones Oct 20 at 15:13
I think a better title is needed, any ideals anyone... – Ian Ringrose Oct 20 at 15:16
related question: stackoverflow.com/questions/1106331/… – marcgg Oct 25 at 20:13

6 Answers

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If I were you, I would say that I had 4 years of experience (counting my intern time as roughly half-time). I would be very explicit about this on my resume, however, since potential employers might not agree with my math.

Ultimately, years-of-experience is about as sorry a metric as lines-of-code. Most companies I've dealt with use it as only a rough filter for potential hires. The only real division I pay attention to is whether or not a candidate qualifies as "senior", which really just means that they can get stuff done of their own volition. A "junior" programmer is someone who requires more or less constant supervision. I've known junior developers who had 10+ years programming experience, although I've never encountered a senior developer who had programmed for less than about 5 years.

Update: since your comment said you've actually been full-time for less than a year, I would actually say that you have only 1 year of experience (allowing your internship to fill in the remainder of a year). Again, it's important to be totally up-front about your experience on your resume. Also, you're still at a stage in your career where it's unwise to be overly concerned about how much you're being paid. You should be focused on learning to do your job well and making yourself indispensable to your company. Once you're there, you can write your own ticket.

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Luckily, I think that I have already made myself indispensable. I was brought on full-time December '08, just after the stock market fell off of a cliff. – James Jones Oct 21 at 19:11
My other advice is to make friends with your bosses on Facebook. That way you can collect embarrassing information about them that you can use against them as necessary. The corollary to this advice is to remember to tell your friends not to post things on your wall like "dude, you left your shotgun bong at my house again last night". – MusiGenesis Oct 21 at 19:41
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I would divide my resume up into two entries for the current company one for the internship and one for the fulltime. State upfront that the internship was part time and let their HR figure out how they want to calculate years of experience.

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Well it depends on the company that you are applying to. Some companies only include years of FULL time employment under the "years of experience" heading, which in the U.S. is about 40 hours per week, so you would only be able to include the summer months. Others are more lenient in their interpretation of years of experience and would include the internship as years of experience.

Personally I would look back at the internship years and see what parts of it relate directly to your current career. Then add that portion to your years of work experience. In your resume make sure to include the internship and explain in detail all the work you have done during this internship and what your key contributions were during this time.

At the end of the day it is not the years of experience, but instead the amount of key contributions that you have made for the company that matter most. If you are renegotiating your wage then you have to arm yourself with a listing of all the contributions you have done for the company and how they have helped the company. In addition to this you can bring in a listing of your current job responsibilities and based on those responsibilities compare it to industry standard wages. Make sure to take into account the differences between industries when you compare wages, because a Non-Profit will surely pay less than a commercial company for the same job.

Hope this helps.

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5.5 YEARS. I don't know where you are from, but down here internships is the way an employer can say:

lower salary, renew your contract every 6 months (if i want to), same responsabilities as for example, a Junior developer.

I worked as an intern for about a year. I even had people in charge. Low salary though.

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The purpose of an internship is to gain experience. So, yes, I would include that in any "years of experience" calculation.

Regarding the larger issue of salary: salary is a completely negotiable item. At the end of the day it doesn't matter what is "standard". What matters is whether the company feels you are worth the amount of money you are asking for.

Go ahead and use the "standard" to get an idea of a range. Then start at the top of the range and see where the negotiation takes you.

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You have about 5 years experience. There are websites that will give you an idea what that is worth. Google salary survey.

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