The original goal for my time here this summer had been to try and find a planning internship. Not only would this fulfill a requirement for my program, it would allow me to come back here while getting some real work experience that would hopefully get my foot in the door towards finding a real job here after graduation. However, as I found during my search, not a lot of places take on foreign interns here. As far as I could tell, most firms only hire foreigners with lots of experience, and usually for managerial type positions. I suppose the logic is that a Chinese person will work for a lot less than a foreigner (for anywhere from 1/2 to 1/6 as much, depending on the position), so at the entry level why pay more for the same work? In China, there seems to be a real dearth of experienced people with management level qualifications, so at this point it’s worth it to pay the big bucks for foreign staff. So anyway, the shake out from all of this was that I was unable to find a position. Since my backup plan came through, I headed over here to do research instead. At the last minute, just a few days before I flew out, I got word that a local firm was willing to take me on as an unpaid intern. As my grant was already going to cover my expenses, I decided to take the position and hopefully get some good work experience.
They call themselves a Canadian company because they are registered in Canada. The founder is Chinese and he and some of the senior people were educated and have some work experience in Canada. However, all the staff is Chinese and the language spoken in the office is Chinese and their headquarters is Shanghai. As far as I can tell, this is pretty much a Chinese company trying to brand themselves as Canadian. This isn’t so unusual over in China, as being a foreign company gives you some real cachet.
I arrived at their office in Pudong last Monday at 9:30 AM, not really knowing what to expect. And as it turned out, neither did they. From the beginning, it was obvious that they really didn’t know what to do with me. I spent most of the first day just waiting to talk to someone, it was almost 4 PM by the time I was given any work. The work I was given seemed ok at first, but as I presented my results, it quickly became apparent that what I had done had no bearing on the project and they had already decided what they were going to do. By the end of the second day I had had it. Most of the time I spent there was wasted waiting around. It didn’t take long for me to see that what little work I was being given was mostly just busy work to try and keep my happy. I felt silly leaving so soon, but I was already going numb after two days.
On the weekend I met up with Pei, the guy that had put me in touch with this company. We had a really great conversation over drinks and dinner and he was able to share a lot of his insight into the design and development industries over here. Pei confirmed my feelings about the difficulty of starting off here as a fresh graduate, in terms of finding good work and a reasonable salary. He said that having even just one or two years of experience in the West before coming over to China makes a world of difference. I had been feeling a bit down after my short-lived work experience and now facing the difficult task of getting my research going, but Pei seems pretty intent on helping me plug into things here.