2. Align managers on supervision expectations
 For many managers, supervising an intern is different from managing a fulltime direct report and not every manager has done it before.
Before the cohort arrives, HR should set clear expectations: how often managers should check in, what feedback cadence looks like, and what level of guidance interns are likely to need early on.
A short preprogram briefing or manager guide goes a long way toward making that consistent across teams.
3. Prepare onboarding materials in advance
 Intern specific onboarding materials should be ready before day one not assembled the morning of.
That includes program overviews, team introductions, communication norms, tools and systems guides, and any intern handbook or resource documents.
If interns are expected to complete any prereading or administrative steps before starting, those instructions should go out well in advance.
4. Coordinate start dates across teams
 When interns across different teams start on the same day, shared onboarding programming becomes possible cohort welcome sessions, group introductions, and collective orientation moments that help interns connect with each other from the start.
That only works if start dates are aligned. HR should confirm dates with every team early enough to build the day one experience around the full cohort.
5. Set up tool and system access before arrival
 Few things disrupt an intern's first week more reliably than not having access to the tools they need to do their work.
System access, communication platforms, and any project specific tools should be provisioned and tested before interns arrive not submitted as a ticket on the morning of day one.