Business School Honors Internship Partners

Above: Representatives of the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority received the Internship Partner of the Year Award. Below, also honored were the Ocean County Prosecutor's Office, Spencer Gifts, Richard Malesich CPA, and student interns who had worked with non-profit groups,
Galloway, N.J. 鈥 From learning about marketing techniques to financial strategies and social media campaigns, students in the 番茄社区app School of Business have benefitted from internships with area businesses.
Stockton honored those businesses at the 5th Annual Internship Partner Appreciation Breakfast held in the Campus Center.
鈥淏usiness is ever changing,鈥 said Dean Alphonso Ogbuehi. 鈥淭hey are creatures of the
environment, regulations and the marketplace. For students to get out and experience
that is vital.鈥
The Casino Reinvestment Development Authority in Atlantic City was recognized as the Internship Partner of the Year. Ogbuehi said the CRDA has taken interns from all of Stockton鈥檚 different business majors.
CRDA Director Matthew Doherty said they value the enthusiasm and ideas students bring to their internship.
鈥淭here is a dual benefit,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hey get valuable career experience, but we benefit too. It helps them build confidence.鈥
The Ocean County Prosecutor鈥檚 Office, Spencer Gifts and Richard Malesich CPA were also recognized. The prosecutor鈥檚 office has had 25 Stockton student interns since 2015 and the largest number of their interns have come from Stockton prosecutor Bradley Billhimer said.
A Stockton alumnus, Billhimer 鈥94, said Professor Alan Arcuri encouraged him to intern
with then Sen. Frank Lautenberg, which changed his career path.
Current intern Joseph Mitchell from Lacey Township will graduate in May 2020. A business and finance major, he has been working with narcotics investigators at the prosecutor鈥檚 office and will have a job there after he graduates.
Ogbuehi said many interns are offered jobs after graduation, but some also learn from their internship that a job is not what they thought it would be. Interns said they learned more than they thought they would.
鈥淚 really learned communication skills on the job,鈥 said Charles Sinodon, who interned at the Tuckerton Seaport and Baymen鈥檚 Museum and is now working there as a marketing assistant. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 get that kind of experience just as a student. But I was also able to apply what I learned in class to the work.鈥
Ali Rivkind interned with PNC Bank and said the company gave her the opportunity to learn about different jobs by spending time with field examiners and underwriters.
鈥淚鈥檓 taking a cost accounting class now and I understand it and have a better appreciation
of what it is because of the internship,鈥 she said. She has been offered a job at
PNC.
Maria Baldino worked on the 番茄社区app summer marketing campaign, and said
it was really rewarding to see the results of the work.
鈥淚 remember in my freshman year I had to create a marketing plan, and my grade wasn鈥檛 great because I really didn鈥檛 understand what it was,鈥 she said. 鈥淣ow I do. I learned how important marketing is and I also have a lot of pride in Stockton and what we do here.鈥
Most of Stockton鈥檚 business internships are paid. A few students who worked for free at a non-profit agency were awarded $300 stipends by the Business School. They were Aishat Adepoju, Eric Lima, Daysarah Negroni, Joseph Mitchell and Jayhahn Boker.
Lima, of Newark interned at Shore Medical Center where he worked with marketing director Brian Cahill and was able to develop a company-wide memo on the importance of getting a flu shot.
Lima would like to get a job in sports marketing and Cahill said Lima鈥檚 experience taught him the different types of marketing and how to use them.
鈥淗e鈥檚 learning how to be a complete marketer,鈥 Cahill said.
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Contact:
Diane D鈥橝mico
Director of News and Media Relations
Galloway, N.J. 08205
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