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ryanj

Going into my final summer I'm looking at anything from large international firms (RTKL, HKS, etc.) to small, boutique firms.

I've had two internships thusfar with a medium sized (50-60) firm and am inclined to go with a small firm to get some hands on experience.

I realize that to a certain extent it depends on personal career objectives, but which will provide the more well-rounded experience for a nearly graduated student like myself?

 
Mar 4, 07 3:39 pm
binary

small firm..... learn what you can in the small firms and then in 2-3 years you can bump to a large firm with experience......... if you start in a large firm, you might be pigeoned holed for a long while.......

b

Mar 4, 07 3:47 pm  · 
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vado retro

medium sized firm...

Mar 4, 07 3:48 pm  · 
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holz.box

medium to small for the most benefit straight out of school.
cryzko's right on the pigeonholing of larger firms. though you might get lucky.

Mar 4, 07 4:17 pm  · 
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khmay

heeeuuge

Mar 4, 07 5:53 pm  · 
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find a small snug hole...dance monkey dance

Mar 4, 07 6:14 pm  · 
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the most important thing I would think is to find a practice that does work you like.

Challenging I know.

Mar 4, 07 6:14 pm  · 
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holz.box

i'd up that to:

work you like, and they'll actually let you work on, not just the bathroom remodel the principle agreed to do for his friends....

Mar 4, 07 6:26 pm  · 
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shaner

small firm with big jobs = best experience.. never leave if you find one!

Mar 4, 07 6:29 pm  · 
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good point holz.

its always good being part of the design process...esp when managed.

Mar 4, 07 8:39 pm  · 
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vado retro

actually a firm with jobs is best...

Mar 4, 07 9:00 pm  · 
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archislacker

Depends on what you want. I have worked at a small firm and a large international firm. If you want to be a CAD monkey with a decent paycheck and good benefits, go to a large firm. If you want to get your hands into all aspects of the firm's projects but don't mind a smaller paycheck and working out of someone's basement, got to a small firm... Or just split the difference and go to a medium sized firm.

Mar 4, 07 9:01 pm  · 
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jackalope

It's not likely you'll spend much of your career at the firm you work at after college. Choose the one with people who are most like-minded as you. Not getting support from clients is expected, but not getting support from your colleagues will be a low growth job for you.

Mar 5, 07 10:06 pm  · 
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snooker

JACKALOPE YOUR NOT WYOMING INFESTED ARE YOU?

Mar 5, 07 11:28 pm  · 
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Geoffgc

small-medium, ie, 10-25 people is perfect.

large firms simply need production lines.

Mar 5, 07 11:44 pm  · 
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ryanj

thanks to everyone for their feedback. i've gotten some responses from prospective employers and am currently looking at three distinct offices.

XL. dallas tx. 220+ employees
corporate, multi-disciplinary, international firm, incredible design work (and work that suits my interests)

L. fort collins co. 200+ employees
design-build, arch/development/realestate, integrated learning environment, average design work (work that somewhat suits my interests)

XS. austin tx. 7-10 employees
retail, new office expanding to 12-15, virtually unknown

Mar 6, 07 11:38 pm  · 
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jwo

does this xs firm wish to hire summer interns in its expansion?

Mar 7, 07 2:02 am  · 
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magic_pie

Is this XL firm HKS?

Apr 11, 07 8:48 pm  · 
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