Interns....
I could go on and on about interns, but I'll keep it brief. Interns can be useful to a studio--basically it's free labor. But you have to bring something to the table. Be a good musician, know MIDI inside and out, have connections that lead to paying clients, know how to tune a drum kit in 5 minutes flat or SOMETHING that makes you an asset.
The "guy off the street that knows some mixin' and recordin' stuff" just ain't going to cut it.
The other thing is don't be a lazy ass. My number one complaint with every intern I've worked with is that they don't get motivated because they're not getting "paid." They bail last minute on sessions that I was counting on them to be present at for lugging drums or getting my Subway order in, or doing some routine editing while I tweak guitar sounds.
Right now I have two guys that I've known for a few years that tend to drag their feet when it comes to getting in the studio and buffing their mixing skills. I spent hours creating these practice mix sessions for them so they can practice mixing and they barely touch 'em. It's stupid. They could be logging 5-10 hours mix time on *real* practice sessions but they'd rather screw around with their band.
That's another thing--if you want to record KISS YOUR BAND GOODBYE. View it as a conflict of interests. If you are focusing on your band you aren't focusing on the client's band. I'm not saying you can't do both (one day), just not while you are attempting to establish yourself.
And get more clients.
Clients is the name of the game in this biz.
I'm bringing on a 20,000 dollar client this week--a large non-denominational church that wants to record this huge album of their choir. They're talking (but hey, maybe just talk) about doing this every year like he did at his previous church down in Florida. Get something half as juicy and you'll have a full time recording gig before anyone with a signed bird cage liner... oops, I mean a degree in recording.
Cold hard truth in this (and any) biz--money talks, bullshit walks. If you want any chance to do anything you gotta go out there and get the money. Also remember the second rule: the more you do, the more you get to do.
I started out "professionally" 3 years ago using a MOTU 824 II, a G3 running Waves Platinum and renting mics. I went out and got clients, kept busy, did some free gigs early on, and now I'm working on a ProTools HD 4 system with every plugin available.
And I'm not even a great engineer. All I did was work hard, all the time, and GOT THE BUSINESS.