Unpaid internships self-select for the worst candidates, because the best candidates will land the internships that are both prestigious and paid. So your internship is rarely going to be anyone's first choice. Terrible business model. However, your headline should probably note that Conde Nast is ending all interships, not just the unpaid ones. I assumed that this was a good thing, then read the article and realized it wasn't.
Who can afford to do an unpaid internship anyhow?
Perhaps the same people who recently worked really hard for four years, and instead of taking home a paycheck they paid out of pocket for the privilege of performing that work. Somehow they reasoned that working hard without pay would be good for them in the long run. Anybody want to join me in a class action lawsuit against the university?
No matter what you do it won't be the worst class action lawsuit of the year.
One would think it obvious that salary isn't the only remuneration one might get from an internship. Remember high school, when the guidance counselor encouraged us to join clubs and do volunteer work becuase it would be good experience and look good on a college application? Those activities required work, but they were not paid. Getting a chance to network at a place like Condé Nast sounds like a great opportunity for someone just starting out in a competitive industry, one who isn't likely to qualify for a great salary elsewhere anyway. What's next, shut down the Peace Corps? They offer plenty of benefits, but minimum wage sure ain't one of them.
I agree. The question is the length of the internship. If it's a month - maybe two - actually getting to work with a major media company, then that is something you simply couldn't pay for in terms of trying to get the equivalent experience and training - and contacts - on a university media course. Bear in mind that most interns start out pretty useless. They are a cost to a business. Much easier to hire someone who's worked for a year somewhere, and will still accept minimum wage. The media is (regrettably perhaps) a hugely aspirational and popular industry to work in. If you are prepared to roll up your sleeves and cope with a couple more months of debt, then you will show your mettle.
...*if* you can afford to live while you do it. And inevitably there are going to be people who simply can't, very smart people, people who want/need to ensure some fiscal security. Those people will skip Conde Nast's internship, and they will lose some deserving candidates. Which is why it's not a great business model in my opinion.
The same can be said for the Peace Corps: people requiring more fiscal security than they offer won't apply. Same for volunteer work anywhere. Condé Nast could always hire outstanding talent outright. Why not also leave a door open to people who are willing to do unpaid entry-level work with hopes of being recognized or forming valuable contacts? How is it different from someone who gives up a salary and leisure to take classes, hoping to improve their chances later? Some people won't be able to afford the internship or the classes. About them we agree with Sophie Tucker: "I've been rich and I've been poor. Rich is better."
It's true that if you compare Conde Nast having unpaid internships to the Peace Corps, or to college, you can make some arguments. But if you compare them to having actual paid internships it kinds falls apart. They'll still get applications, of course, but it won't be the best candidates. Yeah, they can just hire talent outright. It's better. The cult of the internship is ridiculous these days -- at my school I was essentially told that if I didn't have a couple of them on my resume before I graduated I wouldn't get a job. I hate it, like I hate everything else about my education. Internship is just a fucking buzzword, just a thing for college students to do during their summers instead of working at the family business etc. Whatever experience and networking benefits you get could just as easily be gotten at your first salaried job. No reason to accelerate the process.
I share your dim view of formal education. Aside from being so expensive, it doesn't so much prepare you for the working world as give you a framed piece of paper saying you are now eligible to enter the working world. Almost all of what I need to know for work was learned on the job. My degree isn't even related to my work, but I leave it on my resume so employers can check a box in their hiring checklist.
Too bad they didn't just end the unpaid internship policy like Hootsuite did and switch to paid internships (which I'd love to be a part of).