Posted:
9/2/2025, 7:54:57 AM
Location(s):
Fort Lauderdale, Florida, United States ⋅ Florida, United States
Experience Level(s):
Internship
Field(s):
Product
What You Get Out of the Internship
At Stryker, we believe that developing the next generation of talent is just as important as developing life-changing medical technologies. As an intern, you won’t just observe — you’ll contribute to meaningful projects, gain exposure to leaders who will mentor you, and experience a culture of innovation and teamwork that is shaping the future of healthcare. As an intern, you will:
Who we want
Challengers. People who seek out the hard projects and work to find just the right solutions.
Teammates. Partners who listen to ideas, share thoughts and work together to move the business forward.
Charismatic networkers. Relationship-savvy people who intentionally make connections with both internal partners and external contacts.
Strategic thinkers. Interns who propose innovative ideas and consistently exceed their performance objectives.
Customer-oriented achievers. Individuals with an unparalleled work ethic and customer-focused attitude who bring value to their partnerships.
Game changers. Persistent interns who will stop at nothing to live out Stryker’s mission to make healthcare better.
What You Will Do
The Design Assurance Engineering (DAE) intern will support new product development activities for Stryker’s Mako Robotic System, contributing to the design quality and regulatory readiness of complex medical devices. DAEs work at the intersection of innovation and compliance, ensuring hardware and software components meet safety, performance, and documentation standards throughout the product lifecycle.
Majors Targeted: Marketing, Business, Business Administration/Management, Communications
What You Need
Website: https://www.stryker.com/
Headquarter Location: Kalamazoo, Michigan, United States
Employee Count: 10001+
Year Founded: 1941
IPO Status: Public
Industries: Biotechnology ⋅ Health Care ⋅ Life Science ⋅ Medical ⋅ Medical Device