Moving Between Countries?
An anonymous reader writes "In six months' time, I am packing up and moving from Australia (Melbourne) to Canada (Vancouver). I'm a qualified network engineer. What I want to know is, what sort of quirks and tricks I am going to have to get used to in the Canadian job market? I'm used to Australian recruiters, and all the hoops you have to jump through, but Canada may have different hoops. I've tried contacting recruiters directly for information but they don't really give out much, as I am not actually in the country yet and therefore not worth their time. Is anyone willing to share their experiences on making the big move from country to country?"
.. as a programmer and havn`t moved between countries, so I can`t really provide a direct answer.
What I can say is that I`ve found Canadian companies want to see work samples rather than long lists of certifications. Not really sure what would constitute a work sample in your field though.
References are also very important here (and probably there as well). Generally employers want to talk to previous employers. Seeing as how that would be difficult due to timezones and long distance fees, having a few written letters of reference before you leave might be a good idea. Email might work as well.
Also there tends to be a defacto job posting site for every province, where most of the jobs in the area will be posted. Here in Nova Scotia, it is CareerBeacon. Finding out what your areas job posting site of choice is, is probably a good first step.
Seeing as you know the Australian market, and I've recently arrived here - what are the hoops here? The biggest challenge I have is finding a technically competent recruiter; many I've spoken to are fine so long as you repeat buzz words, but if you try to explain anything more complex, their eyes glaze over...
I've got a contract for the moment, but it's up in another month or so... Your experiences here would be useful.
Mate, things work pretty similar the world over for an engineer, the research you need to do is more so with visa and living arrangements.
In terms of your work, the situation is mostly the same, be it Canada, UK, Australia, in that you are expected to hold a professional attitude, and be good with your work. You will find Australians have strong work ethic reputations abroad, so you need to back that up.
Short of that, you merely need to be resourceful, and you don't necessarily need to go through recruiters. Get your resume up to speed, make sure it is within 2 pages so as not to waste others time, and advertise your skills and project work so as to give potential employment a good honest run down on your skillset.
Print it out 20-50 times, and go walk through the front door in professional attire and give it to reception, possibly ask to see if they are seeking help.
With a skills shortage of competent engineers, you will gain employment fast, and gain the margin a recruiter normally takes.
Every top 500 needs engineers, and google for the integration/IT comms companies in your city of settlement.
If you work with specialist sectors like network/comms, speak to the local distributors to find out what integrators work with those products.
Hope this helps.
MantiX
IT CEO.
I'm in Australia (Adelaide) Looking to move countries too!
;).
Canada and New Zealand are the two places I have been seriously considering, and it looks like Auckland, New Zealand has won me over. (I have a really close friend there for one, and NZ is a beautiful country.)
I'm a Software Engineer and Systems Administrator in my current role. Anyway, guess I should read what people post as that stuff my apply to me too
I bet Americans are wondering why on earth we would want to leave Australia.....
You can tell how powerful someone is by the magnitude of the crime they can commit and be able to get away with.
They are known to drop from the trees and surprise foreigners with deadly force.
... and then they built the supercollider.
I'm a Canadian who spent three years in Australia and I'm returning to Canada next month. I actually found a job back in Canada by applying online and doing interviews over the phone. I don't really know much about any "hoops" you have to go through in Australia, but can't think of anything really important to know when applying in Canada (OK, can't say for anything other than Montreal). I've pretty much dealt directly with companies, so I don't know how it is with recruiters.
Opus: the Swiss army knife of audio codec
Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
Moving to another country, you need to familiarize yourself with the important laws and assumptions that are being made there. So, go direct to the source: find a reputable lawyer to talk to, and swallow the few $100 it will cost for several hours of his time. And, that's a LAWYER IN THE COUNTRY YOU ARE MOVING TO.
There are a variety of different topics you will want to discuss, so you might need to talk to more than one lawyer. BUT DO IT. You are no longer a visitor, so you need to understand the ins and outs of the local legal system.
Here's some topics that are important:
These are but the most important I can cite off the top of my head. It's more than worth the cost of a short lawyer consultation, and you might even be able to get a good conversation out of one on the cheap (like, offer to pay for a good dinner and drinks out, since there's not going to be any paperwork or case, it's just a consultation).
Knowing the lay of the land is by far the most important thing to find out. Getting the inside scoop from an expert is the fastest, best way to do it.
-Erik
There are always four sides to every story: your side, their side, the truth, and what really happened.
Don't forget to encrypt your data and load it up on a server. Wipe your drives seven times over... no wait, better yet just send them cleaned via post so when they try to jack your hardware it's pointless. They'll likely still take your devices just to be dicks but they'll be hard pressed to have a reason to keep them very long. ;)
I'm assuming you have a valid visa. if not, get one before you go.
I would look for a job now on the job boards, pursuing *any* job over there. It will help you land on your feet over there.
also do research on the neighbourhoods, rental prices. I would get a account at citibank & amex in australia now. It will help with you establishing credit over there (which you will need to get a local bank account, credit card, and for rental applications)
The sort of reason that we would do better with fewer lawyers in this world.
This is a very vague comment about broads...
Canadian work culture is different, and was more or less of shock to me. If you could say that I am wearing Canadian underwear, the probability of getting job is better than if you say, I have designed supercomputers in Australia. I know I am exaggerating, but it is not too far from reality.
One of the best way is to start is applying directly to companies, instead of recruiting agents, as they would consider you less marketable lacking Canadian experience (god knows WTF it is.) You will wasting too much of your time if you believe that agents can help you.
Second important thing is to start working and build your credibility, which could come from working somewhere either voluntarily or accepting job that was not your profession in Australia. You will need to be patient to get job what exactly you are looking for.
Third suggestion is to start acquiring some academic qualification or certifications in Canada. It helps.
Fourth suggestion is to start looking for social services network of your own community. Surprisingly, Canada has pretty good social network of helpful people. They would guide you a lot better than anybody else.
I used to tell a lot of jokes to new immigrants, and would love to share with you. Hang on.
hilarious
Try checking "Careers Service" websites from universities in Canada. They might have useful information.
If you want $250k pa stay in Australia. If unless you want to be a robot in a Canadian 2nd-rate software factory, don't even bother.
... it might be worth a try.
But if, on the other hand, you lack talent and are hoping to find some rich clueless country that will pay you more dollars than you are worth
Hi, I can't find how to send you a message or email privately, so here goes... I lived in Melbourne for 4.5 years (Carlton and Kew) and am now a recruiter in Canada. I work for Hays in Calgary. Shoot me an email at matthew at area709 dot com - I've been through the whole gamut (brought my Aussie gf with me, got her PR, found her a job, etc etc) and work in recruitment so can probably steer you in the right direction in exchange for a pack of tim-tams on your arrival. :)
-- "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge." (Charles Darwin)
Although it may prove to be a walk in the park for you, in wasn't for me.
;-) Also seems weird, Toronto is the most multicultural place in the world by some counts. Australia and Canada are both english speaking, multicultural, Commonwealth countries - there are so many similarities but they didn't want to take the risk. So my advice, go straight to a professional recruiter or pay for a similar service to rework your resume and take whatever you can.
Went from Adelaide (Australia) to Toronto (Canada). British citizen, work visa, Masters Degree, years of work history -> not a fricken response to my resume for months.
The friends we made while there explained that they don't trust a foreigner to understand what it's like to work in Canada until you already have... makes it tricky
An Australian resume is like a brief bio in some ways, educational and work history, what you're now looking for etc. etc. Mine was often 3 pages long here and worked well. In Canada it's a 1 page resume or it's straight to the round filing cabinet. Yes, they'll barely know anything about you, but this way you have a better chance of getting to an interview, where they'll spend the first 10 minutes asking the sort of questions your Australian resume would have answered!
Once you've got the first job, the rest is easy. I started back at level 1 help desk, but jumped 5 levels of management to Director in 2 years. The O/S experience sure as hell helped once back in Australia too. I've tripled the salary I earned before I left Oz only 5 years ago now.
Oh, and socially they'll love ya. Us Aussie's rock, especially in Canada.
Cheers.
The fact that a fish swims in water does not make it an expert in fluid dynamics. GogglesPisano (199483)
I have just moved from my country to Canary Islands. Try to find as much companies as you can over the internet and send them your CV. One thing, don't forget to bring your car insurance history or you will have to pay as an new car owner.
Love many, trust a few, do harm to none.
This is assuming that the embassy staff actually is up to speed with respect to the rules and regulations, and that there is a halfway sane bureaucracy in the destination country.
Speaking from bitter experience, I have received more than a bit of misleading, and sometimes patently false, information from the Greek embassy. Still, somewhat in the embassy staff's defense, no one in the twisted bureaucracy here in Greece actually knows for certain what the rules and regulations are for various areas of public life. All I am saying is that it is better to go to the source and talk to foreigners who actually have experience living in the country in question.
Also, do not underestimate the execution of the actual move. Packing, shipping, selling stuff, deciding what to keep, making sure that all the formalities with respect to visas, pets (if any), etc. are followed, is a real nightmare, even with the best of planning. Whatever you do, make sure that you have a place to stay and people to help you in the destination country before you move.
Do it yourself, because no one else will do it yourself. [beta blockade 10-17 Feb]
Here you might not want to refer yourself as a network "engineer", unless you are licensed by the proper provincial authority - in this case the APEGBC. It is illegal to practice professional engineering without a license. The use of term "engineer" is contested - as it has been suggested that the term should always refer to professional engineering. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Controversies_over_the_term_Engineer
Typically to be licensed, you will have had to study engineering at the post-secondary level and pass an ethics exam. See the APEGBC website for more information: http://www.apeg.bc.ca/
I think you would find Vancouver almost as different as Sydney and Perth, so relax and enjoy it.
The biggest changes are driving on the wrong side of the road and turning right on a red light.
Oh, and there are some funny politicians in Ottawa, but since they are thousands of kilometers away, nobody in the west cares about them. Saskatchewan, Alberta and BC are practically independent countries. Oh, and Yukon - nobody cares about Yukon. The power of the central government doesn't seem to extend much beyond Ontario and Quebec.
Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
Immigration experience here in Canada will depend where you came from. I'm sure you will have less problems as you a are coming from a wealthy country and your mother tongue is 'English'.
... (yeah, undercover racism!!) ...
... Except the f* winter ...
The well known 'Canadian Experience' is an excuse to not hire someone you don't want to for reasons that are not technical
If you're caucasian, you will not have much problem with this
Anyways, IT professions are not regulated and there are a lot of opportunities. Create a resume as expected by Canadians recruiters (Google it) and you will do pretty well.
As for laws and living, I have a couple of friends that immigrated from Brazil to Australia and I think that both country are pretty similar in a lot of aspects
I moved from Victoria (the AU one) to BC myself 3 months ago. It was definitely an easy move to make, both personally and work wise. Canadians are kind of like more friendly Australians, it's really nice.
:)
Most important things though
1. Get your qualifications recognised. I'm currently still undergoing getting my accounting qualifications recognised, it's a lengthy process. I have my accounting degree done by these guys - http://www.bcit.ca/ices/ however I'm waiting upon the chartered accountancy guys to do their end to continue my studying. They requested a ICES recognition (they being the chartered accounting institute of BC), so it seems a good place to start.
2. Work visa, I am currently on a 2 year working holiday that has very few restrictions and was rather easy to get (took all of 3 days). All acquired via post and online at here - http://www.whpcanada.org.au/ Took me forever to get through customs in Canada, my stuff was stamped off straight away once I got to the front of the line, but I came in just after a couple of plane loads of Chinese Immigrants. So don't trust the "express" check-in
3. I had a few issues with a stopover flight into the US. Basically I needed to get a US visa for the entire time I'm in Canada just to enter the country (which was for a 2 hour stopover where I had no intention of leaving the airport). It involved meeting the US consulate for an interview and I wound up just changing my flight to fly via Auckland (air kiwi fly direct from Auckland, air canada now fly direct from Sydney). If you fly air kiwi, I highly recommend the lamb
4. As an accountant, I probably had more work issues in some regards (different laws), less in others (demand for accountants). Definitely apply directly to employers, I got stuff all help from employment agencies. Applying to companies I got a lot of "get back to us when you're in the country" replies, however I found work before I actually arrived in the country anyway (however, it was through someone I already knew here who worked at an accounting firm). I think you shouldn't have too much hassle, maybe you will finding the exact job you want, but demand for skilled employment (especially in business and IT) is high, there's plenty of work around and large employers are smart enough not to worry about where you come from, just the skills you have.
5. Check out the work laws, as mentioned. You don't get public holidays in your first 30 days with an employer (I didn't work Good Friday, fortunately my overtime I'd been working covered it), you only get 2 weeks annual leave, 5 days sick leave, etc, etc.
6. Get setup when you get here. Go to a bank and get a bank account (take your passport and any other kind of ID you have, Aussie stuff worked for me). http://www.hsbc.ca/1/2/en/personal/international-services/arriving-in-canada - HSBC have quite a range of services for new-comers and non-residents. Get a Social Insurance Number, go to Service Canada (they have a zillion offices, like Centrelink, basically) and you get it on the spot. You need one to work anywhere. Get a phone too, getting a prepaid one is easy. Getting anything on credit can be more difficult, but I haven't really gotten into that
7. And a whole heap of small things. Finding vegemite is a bitch. Most things you buy have a price on them that is BEFORE tax and you'll always wind up with a tonne of change. People are wrong about it being hard to drive on the opposite side of the road. It rains really, really hard in Vancouver sometimes, however they have the sky train, which is cool. It's as pretty as hell here as well.
8. Shit I forgot, get an international drivers licence before you leave, you can get it from RACV, takes 5 minutes and costs $20 or something. I'm not entirely sure on the legality of it though, it's meant to be 1 year, but I've heard since getting here it's only 3 months for residents. Look at getting a drivers licence here eventually, I've never been pulled over to really find out. Don't buy Ameri
My experience of recruiters in general is that they suck if you're looking for a job that's technical. They are rarely experts in their field of recruiting. If they were they would would for a tech company rather than some horrible commission based job.
I had to apply for my work permit in the UK so I had to save money and then come over and sit about while waiting for my work visa. So once I could work I just took a retail job literally on the same day as receiving my visa. I held that for about two weeks before moving onto something better which wasn't nice but I rather be a bit rude and have money than starve and have dignity.
Because of the gap without work, I obviously took my CV to as many companies and recruiters as possible to get something quick. The recruiters seem just look for buzzwords and try to match you up with stuff that way without even reading the actual CV to get some context on that buzzword. Some even assume that programming is just programming and despite no mention of C++ on my CV, I was asked to interview for jobs that required it.
Imo, it's a complete waste of time. You'd be better looking at specific companies and applying directly unless Canada has some weird obsession with recruiters and you have to go through them.
n/t;
Lemme guess... It starts with K and ends in Rudd?
KRudd?
I know I am sick of living in Adelaide (The hills). It is too small and too little industry is here.
I'm looking to move to America. I imagine it will be like the movie Coming to America.
This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
Yes, New Zealand is a beautiful place. Personally I prefer the non-Auckland parts, but YMMV.
Without wishing to state the obvious, NZ/AUS is a long way from other places. The flight to the US isn't a killer, but you'll find you only see family once or twice a year. That's OK for a while but once you have kids you may find you want them to be with their relatives more often (or maybe not!) Moving to NZ will at least keep you near your (assumedly) AUS family.
Our friends from NZ just visited last week - we last saw them about three years ago and it'll be another five years before our kids are big enough for me to happily go from the UK to NZ. We miss those friends and I'd like them to be a bigger part of my kids lives.
As for moving countries, we found it quite easy because I was seconded from my UK company. The folks we know who seem to have had the best time are the ones who committed whole-heartedly to the move and got setup in the new country with the intention of staying. Having said that, one of my friends from the US is just about to move back as he can't sell his US house and can't afford to live in the UK anymore. It's a real shame as he was really getting settled in the UK.
My experience is that getting your foot in the door is the hardest part, but once you're in you can demonstrate your competence and all is well. Its time to use every friend, contact or professional organization you can - they can be surprisingly willing to help.
Bunyip.
One thing that may trip up immigrants is lack of credit history. Whatever history you had at home usually won't matter in the new country. Records are not exchanged across borders. This may make it hard to rent a place to live or to get a car on credit, not to mention opening up bank accounts and such.
Obviously there ARE ways to do these things, else the illegal immigrants wouldn't be able to open accounts, get cars, and rent flats.
If you ever plan to go back home, it might be wise to keep your bank accounts open to help keep your history active.
there's only one version of the truth, & it's usually not a long story. it hurts the effectivity of their pr firm hypenosys. the lights are coming up all over now. conspiracy theorists are being vindicated. some might choose a tin umbrella to go with their hats. the illusionary fairytail is winding DOWn now. let your conscience be yOUR guide. you can be more helpful than you might have imagined. there are still some choices. if they do not suit you, consider the likely results of continuing to follow the corepirate nazi hypenosys story LIEn, whereas anything of relevance is replaced almost instantly with pr ?firm? scriptdead mindphuking propaganda or 'celebrity' trivia 'foam'. meanwhile; don't forget to get a little more oxygen on yOUR brain, & look up in the sky from time to time, starting early in the day. there's lots going on up there.
http://news.google.com/?ncl=1216734813&hl=en&topic=n
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/12/31/opinion/31mon1.html?em&ex=1199336400&en=c4b5414371631707&ei=5087%0A
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/29/world/29amnesty.html?hp
is it time to get real yet? A LOT of energy is being squandered in attempts to keep US in the dark. in the end (give or take a few 1000 years), the creators will prevail (world without end, etc...), as it has always been. the process of gaining yOUR release from the current hostage situation may not be what you might think it is. butt of course, most of US don't know, or care what a precarious/fatal situation we're in. for example; the insidious attempts by the felonious corepirate nazi execrable to block the suns' light, interfering with a requirement (sunlight) for us to stay healthy/alive. it's likely not good for yOUR health/memories 'else they'd be bragging about it? we're intending for the whoreabully deceptive (they'll do ANYTHING for a bit more monIE/power) felons to give up/fail even further, in attempting to control the 'weather', as well as a # of other things/events.
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=weather+manipulation&btnG=Search
http://video.google.com/videosearch?hl=en&q=video+cloud+spraying
dictator style micro management has never worked (for very long). it's an illness. tie that with life0cidal aggression & softwar gangster style bullying, & what do we have? a greed/fear/ego based recipe for disaster. meanwhile, you can help to stop the bleeding (loss of life & limb);
http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/12/28/vermont.banning.bush.ap/index.html
the bleeding must be stopped before any healing can begin. jailing a couple of corepirate nazi hired goons would send a clear message to the rest of the world from US. any truthful look at the 'scorecard' would reveal that we are a society in decline/deep doo-doo, despite all of the scriptdead pr ?firm? generated drum beating & flag waving propaganda that we are constantly bombarded with. is it time to get real yet? please consider carefully ALL of yOUR other 'options'. the creators will prevail. as it has always been.
corepirate nazi execrable costs outweigh benefits
(Score:-)mynuts won, the king is a fink)
by ourselves on everyday 24/7
as there are no benefits, just more&more death/debt & disruption. fortunately there's an 'army' of light bringers, coming yOUR way. the little ones/innocents must/will be protected. after the big flash, ALL of yOUR imaginary 'borders' may blur a bit? for each of the creators' innocents harmed in any way, there is a debt that must/will be repaid by you/us, as the perpetrators/minions of unprecedented evile, will not be available. 'vote' with (what's left in) yOUR wallet, & by your behaviors. help bring an end to unprecedented evile's manifestation through yOUR owned felonious corepirate nazi glowbull warmongering execrable. some of US should consider ourselves somewhat fortunate to be among those scheduled to survive after the big flash/implementation of the creators' wwwildly popular planet/population rescue initiative/mandate. it's right in the ma
..your savings jar is now a "looney" bin.
May contain traces of nut.
Made from the freshest electrons.
LOL You're into specifics hey? In this case I was referencing North America, more specifically NY/California.
This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
Software patents delenda est.
This is probably not unique to Canada but one thing you should always remember is that head hunters do not work for you and they are not on your side. They get paid by the company that hires you and hope to get return business from them and therefore are more concerned with making sure that the company gets the best deal. What you will find is that they usually misrepresent the compensation up front and when it comes down to the final salary negotiations, don't be afraid to call them out on it or even go as far as demanding that they (the headhunter) give you a cut of their fee. Depending on the circumstances they will give you a "signing bonus".
The difference between Canada and the USA is that in Canada healthcare is a right and gun ownership is a privilege.
I used to be self-employed as a software consultant, working out of my home in Truro, Nova Scotia. But when I grew weary of it, I found that there wasn't much in the way of programming jobs anywhere in Atlantic Canada, and what little there was paid very poorly.
So I used all the Canadian job boards - particularly Craig's List - to look for coding jobs anywhere in the country. The job I found was in Vancouver.
I've blogged about it extensively:
- The Vancouver Diaries
I kept blogging there even after I moved back to California, because I intend to return someday. Vancouver is a really wonderful place, or at least it is for some people:It's also the location of the Downtown Eastside, the poorest neighborhood in the whole nation. My job in Gastown was just a couple blocks from there. Many of my diaries are about my encounters with Vancouver's homeless, many of whom were mentally ill.
I was advised never to give money to panhandlers, lest they spend it on drugs. Crystal Meth abuse is widespread there. But I wanted to do something to help, so I often bought them meals.
Often I found that it made their day simply to ask their name and to shake their hand. Folks like that don't get paid that kind of respect very often.
Request your free CD of my piano music.
- X has been employed by us - X has been the cause for a disaster that we don't want to talk about and we have 'suggested' that he ended the employment.
- X has been working for us during N years. - X has been the cause for several near disasters during the years he has been working for us.
- X has been doing a good job - X is not a very remarkable person, neither good or bad. (average joe)
- X has been doing a very good job - X doesn't produce disasters, and delivers a bit above average without any real surprises.
- X has been doing an excellent job - We would recommend you to employ X, but don't pay him too much!
- X has been doing an outstanding job - You are stupid if you don't employ X.
- X has been a cornerstone in our company. - We are fu*d stupid to let him have reasons to leave us.
And in general - if an old employer gives incorrect references that can come back to bite them really hard, so that is very seldom a problem.If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
The Iraq war and anti-Islam propaganda has started turning the knuckle-draggers here into nationalists.
And you want to move to *America* to avoid that???
Welcome to the world of unlimited internet.
Six months ago I moved from the US to Ireland as a programmer. One of the things I was able to do that you wont, was fly over here for four days to do interviews, except an offer, fly back and resign from my current job.
But what you can do is put your resume (just rename your 'CV' to 'resume') and put it up on some Canadian Job sights. As you get closer to the move, try and get some phone interviews lined up so that when you get there you can do the face to face interviews right away.
Oh - and in Canada you cannot call yourself an engineer unless you have an engineering license. I am serious. Call yourself a Network Technician or Network Manager.
An Ask Slashdot question where the person in question actually contacted experts directly to try to get his questions answered BEFORE asking slashdot?
(this time posted in the correct thread.. after i got kicked out last time trying to post, then ended up posting to the Pringles can thread)
Richard dies and his soul is met by St. Peter at the Pearly Gates. "Welcome Richard," says St. Peter. "Before you settle in, it seems there is a problem. We are not able to dig information related to you and we don't seem to know what to do with you. Why not go around and have a look at heaven and hell both, before we find about you."
So Richard decides to have a look at heaven. It is whitish, full of saintly decent people, talking about all good and nice things. Richard got bored very fast.
He decides to have a look at hell, and to his surprise, hell is full of beaches, nice beautiful chicks in bikini moving around, Malls, restaurants, flyovers, gardens, maple trees...it almost looked like Canada.
Richard comes back and before he could spell his choice, St Peter says, "You have been brought here by mistake. You still have 7 days of life to enjoy on earth."
Richard goes back happily on earth and returns after 7 days. St Peter welcomes him and says, "You have been pretty decent guy on earth. You have choice to make. Where would you like to go? Heaven or hell?" Without hesitation, Richard chooses hell.
St. Peter decides to check on Richard after 6 months. He found Richard in shock and misery. St Peter wants to know what happened with him. Richard looks deep in space and says "I am jobless, and have no credit cards. I got some temporary job but paid heavy taxes. Nobody would give me credit cards. I can see chicks but can't touch them. Last 6 months I have found myself frustrated beyond you could imagine.".
After gaining some control of himself, Richard looks at St Peter, and asks "When I came here first, I wished I was here forever. Why am I frustrated now?". St Peter smiles and says, "That time you were on visitor visa. Now you are landed immigrant."
hilarious
CLASSIC VERSION:
The ant works hard in the withering heat all summer long,building his house and laying up supplies for the winter.
The grasshopper thinks ant is a fool, and laughs and dances and plays the summer away.
Come winter, the ant is warm and well fed.
The shivering grasshopper has no food or shelter so he dies out in the cold.
THE END
THE CANADIAN VERSION:
The ant works hard in the withering heat all summer long,building his house and laying up supplies for the winter.
The grasshopper thinks ant is a fool,and laughs and dances and plays the summer away.
Come winter, the ant is warm and well fed. The shivering grasshopper calls a press conference and demands to know why the ant should be allowed to be warm and well fed while others less fortunate, like him, are cold and starving.
The CBC shows up to provide live coverage of the shivering grasshopper,with cuts to a video of the ant in his comfortable warm home with a table laden with food.
Canadians are stunned that in a country of such wealth, this poor grasshopper is allowed to suffer so while others have plenty.
The NDP, the CAW and the Coalition Against Poverty demonstrate in front of the ant's house. The CBC, interrupting an Inuit cultural festival special from Nunavut with breaking news, broadcasts them singing "We Shall Overcome." Sven Robinson rants in an interview with Pamela Wallin that the ant has gotten rich off the backs of grasshoppers, and calls for an immediate taxhike on the ant to make him pay his "fair share".
In response to polls, the Liberal Government drafts the Economic Equity and Grasshopper Anti-Discrimination Act, retroactive to the beginning of the summer.
The ant's taxes are reassessed, and he is also fined for failing to hire grasshoppers as helpers.
Without enough money to pay both the fine and his newly imposed retroactive taxes, his home is confiscated by the government.
The ant moves to the US, and starts a successful agribiz company.
The CBC later shows the now fat grasshopper finishing up the last of the ant's food, though Spring is still months away, while the government house he is in, which just happens to be the ant's old house, crumbles around him because he hasn't bothered to maintain it. Inadequate government funding is blamed, Roy Romanow is appointed to head a commission of enquiry that will cost $10,000,000. The grasshopper is soon dead of a drug overdose, the Toronto Star blames it on the obvious failure of government to address the root causes of despair arising from social inequity.
hilarious
Lovely bird, the Norwegian Blue. Beautiful plumage.
Invenio via vel creo
so that you enter as a landed immigrant. I am just getting my landed immigrant status now after 5 years (because I'm lazy and disorganised). Of course the main thing about changing countries is that whatever you do you feel like you're the first person who ever changed countries but if you are patient, its all fine :)
If I were you though I would emigrate to NZ instead.
Everyone will tell you Tim Hortons makes good coffee. TV commercials make it seem like that's the only coffee Canadians drink.
It's utter trash. If you like brown coloured water I guess you could drink that.
I'm sure it is the most popular coffee in Canada, but there a a lot of "popular" things you shouldn't touch with a ten-foot pole.
Just a head's up.
If your boss is an ass that gives you a bad reference out of sheer malice or even as in some cases, because they depend on you and don't want you to leave then you should have every right to sue the living daylights out of him/her. They're effectively playing with your life and your future which is unacceptable.
References just don't work a lot of the time, it's already been pointed out here that a crap worker may get a good reference to get rid of them and a good worker may get a bad reference to try and prevent them leaving.
I've had a bad boss like this before, I just didn't give him as my reference in the end, I gave a friend at work who was on a higher payscale than me and hence good enough to fit the bill of someone senior. It still makes the reference process pointless though because someone who is a friend is always going to give a good reference even if I had actually done a shit job!
At the end of the day people will fiddle the system to suit them from both sides of the reference process, whatever comes out certainly is never going to be an unbiased description of the candidates work ethic or skill set.
John Howard's gone now! That said, I'm not going back. :)
you had me at #!
I'm a development manager and hire programmers and IT people in Toronto ...
I wouldn't worry too much about getting Canadian designations or education, Canadians are used to hiring Eastern Europeans, Indians and Chinese talent and know how to deal with differences in education.
Do document what you did and what you can do in resume. Keep it to two pages unless you have 10+ years of experience. Do list specific technologies you work with and relative skill level in each. When you list designations, make sure they are either the same in Canada or explain what they are.
If you are using your employer to move to Canada, I would be careful to go with a legit company. You might want to use a headhunter for that reason. There are many headhunters that are used to dealing with immigration issues. The hiring company usually the headhunter's fees not the job seeker. If you find a headhunter that is charging you a fee run away unless it is for specific services (such as immigration aid).
I wouldn't waste money hiring a lawyer unless you get a job offer that has an employment contract containing lots of restrictions. Canada has fairly good labour laws. Be careful about signing contracts that take away too many rights upon termination.
Although the parent is obviously a troll, there is one related true point: In Canada, you are not an Engineer. Here it is a legally regulated profession, much like medicine or law, and only members of the relevant provincial association may use the title. Depending on your job you may be eligible for membership, but my understanding is that most of those sorts of jobs are not considered engineering -- not to say they're not cool or difficult or anything, they just don't fit what the law defines as engineering.
Actually, the Vancouver job market is getting pretty simple these days. Sod the recruiters, pretty much all the jobs show up here.
... hmm, well, actually, that's pretty much all you really need to get along fine in Vancouver. See ya soon, mate.
http://vancouver.en.craigslist.ca/
Seriously.
One other address you may find useful: This can be helpful with getting your place furnished while you're waiting to actually have money.
http://www.freecycle.org/group/CA/British%20Columbia/Vancouver
And
...outside the US we don't need lawyers to hold our hands on everything we do, we're quite capable of finding these things out for ourselves and saving a very noticable amount of cash.
What I want to know is, what sort of quirks and tricks I am going to have to get used to in the Canadian job market?
Been there done that. The most frustrating thing was resumes. Australian resumes are different, and HR drones in Canada don't even bother looking at them. When you get here, get local help with your resume, so it looks and smells just like everybody else's.
I found out when I complained to a friend that I got no interviews from about 15 applications. After adjusting my resume, I got an interview for almost every application I sent out.
Both resumes contained pretty much exactly the same content. So I guess the lesson is: form before content.
Like all pain, suffering is a signal that something isn't right
When we called to get the reference of a new woman, her old place of employment went on and on about how great she was. Turns out, they forgot how great of an employee was. They offered her old job to her at a higher pay.
Not a Twitter sockpuppet... but I wish I was.
Aren't people in Australia really laid back and easy going? That's what my friends have told me who lived there.
North Americans are relatively anal by comparison, what with the puritan work ethic and all.
Good luck with that.
Spoon not. Fork, or fork not. There is no spoon.
...I can't think of any special hoops that you'll need to worry about jumping through.
Recently I decided to discontinue my PhD studies because my supervisor's no longer available and there is no one else in my field of research in my university. Additionally, I'm fed of up my academic institution. Hence, it's been job hunting time for me. I do have a Master's degree in computer science (although in an obscure field that's not particularly applicable to many companies, i.e. combinatorics and optimization), which may give me a slight edge over the competition, but between that and three years of PhD work (again, in obscure combinatorics), I have significantly less professional experience than someone else in my age range.
All I've been doing is sending out a polished one-page resume via e-mail that's succinct and only covers skills I feel pertain to the positions to which I'm applying, accompanied by a confident sounding cover letter that addresses why I feel I would be a suitable candidate for the position and how I meet the required qualifications (with some examples as to situations where I demonstrated the skills they request). I write with a professional tone but allow some leeway to sound excited about the posting, and end with thanking them for their time and telling them that I look forward to hearing from them.
In the first month, I sent out only about ten resumes (I wasn't in a rush to start working). I didn't bother to visit in person, demonstrate any samples of work, or provide any references. Within two weeks, I received eight interview offers. None of these were for entry level positions, either, nor, to my understanding, is there a shortage of people here in Toronto.
As my skills are nothing particularly special, I strongly believe that it's my combination resume and cover letter that get my foot in the door.
You also can't call yourself a software architect - architect is another regulated profession.
Besides, when someone at a party asks you what you do for a living, which is the cooler answer:
As for the network engineer, if you're foolish enough to admit to it at a party, you're going to have everyone asking you why their DSL service is so shitty and what you can do to help them. Better off telling everyone you're a pimp, politician, or lawyer (but I'm being redundant).
And also:
X has been given a office desk in the basement - Sometime in the past we decided to discontinue X's employment, but the request never made it through to HR.
Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
... He actually started looking for a job in Jan.
He applied directly to companies. That seemed to work much better than general online search.
There are cultural differences. Canadians are actually more US in outlook than European (unsurprisingly).
In the uk you would be a lot less forward.
ymmv in Aus.
He actually went there on hols with family to interview companies. They liked that (and so did the prospecive employers).
I spoke to the people he went to work for for about 30m (I recruited him into the place he left).
They did not ask anything I would not have thought of with positions reversed but I gained the sense that his main reason for moving - which was to provide a better life for family and thus the move is a long term one - counted for a lot.
I was told later that Canadians (well, Victorians (?) are much more family and community oriented than the Brits.
Beer is better in Canada. ;-)
Vancouver is actually a pretty cool place to work, as there is less focus on work, and you'll find most people in the work place find time for the outdoors. Hiking, sailing, skiing, etc.
The US economy runs on a few things: Big Tobacco, Big Oil, and Defense Contracts (The American PC term for war). There is a saying in the US, "Get your heart in America or get your ass out!". As red neck as I think this is, you should be warned about it. Now I know what your thinking "I said I was moving to Canada NOT America" but guess what, Canada is our sibling to the north. Everything that happens here effects them and everything that happens there effects us (even something as small as one man moving in from across the world). So if your looking to escape nationalism, then I would suggest Antarctica, I hear the penguin population there is very decentralized. BTW, did you ever stop to think that by moving to Canada you might be placed in a job that would see you working for a US company?
and i have to 'offtopicly' sympathize, since there has been cases of web sites being taken down in turkey by court order because they have criticized microsoft just like how it is done here i slashdot. valid criticism.
Read radical news here
Why are you moving? It sounds like you are moving without a job prospect in mind. I recommend having a job offer from a canadian firm before moving so that they can help streamline the paperwork, if that's possible. I wouldn't recommend that someone move within a country without a job offer and that goes double for between countries. I understand that other factors may play into it, like having a spouse from another country, but I wouldn't suggest moving without at least one of you having a job offer. It may delay you plans, but it's probably the safer choice.
The Concise Guide
Number One
Don't say 'oot and aboot' that's just stupid. And if you looked at that and thought those should have been double quotes, I'd hire you.
Number Two
Canadian girls are easy except in Toronto Montreal Calgary Vancouver St John St Johns Halifax Quebec City Gander and lets see where else have I lived...
Number Three
There is one city called St. John and another one called St Johns nobody knows which is which
Number Four
Pants are expected to be worn at work
Number Six
Math skills are important for getting a job
Number Seven
Is a nice number. Too bad that movie had to ruin it for me
Number Three Redux
I just looked it up and St John is where they actually do say oot and aboot
Number Five
Better late than never
Number Eight
Montreal has potholes and Toronto has that smell so take your pick. In Calgary, bring your own cardboard box to live in. Vancouver has a commuter train that takes you into the middle of the woods.
Number Nine
Saskatchewan is flat because the 6000 kph winds blew all the hills into Lake Superior
Number Ten
There are lots of high tech jobs in Ottawa but the only thing to do there in your spare time is laugh at Corel's office building.
Equine Mammals Are Considerably Smaller
Uh...
Canada, bro. Canada is *not* the USA. We don't assume people are shady because they don't fly flags and tie yellow ribbons around everything in sight here.
A few things you have to keep in mind about Canada.
Different provinces will have different regulations and systems when it comes to work, health care, education, taxes and driving laws. Cost of living will also vary depending on provinces.
Don't bother with recruiters much (send them your resume but keep it at that), they suck and usually won't bother dealing with you unless they have a position to fill immediately.
A lot of jobs are known through word of mouth, so try to link up with people.
"Canadian experience" is a bitch. Some employers will get stuck up on it. What will definitely help is anything that will show stability and dedication. You might have to get a lower "entry level" job to start with, however once you get it you'll be easily promoted higher up. And of course already holding a job will make you more employable.
On that line, keep your resume simple and only list the most recent things and the work experience that matters. 2 page max, preferably 1 page.
You should check http://www.servicecanada.gc.ca/ it will give you an idea of services from the federal government.
When did Australia become part of the US territory?
You can't MOVE into the US whenever you feel like!
We don't like foreigners here! You need to find a company to sponsor your worker's visa, then, after like 6 months of the approval process you might get to the USA.
I think Canada applies the same rules. If they don't we should start to deport Canadians as well, as there are probably plenty of terrorists within them...
...is insurance. Without an insurance history in Canada (or, maybe, the U.S.), you are assessed as very high risk. When I returned to Canada after many years abroad, my $900/year car insurance would have been 2x or 3x that (I had never owned a car in Canada).
if one IS willing to treat you like a decent human being then they're more deserving of the fee they'll get for placing you. They may also be able to point you toward better jobs as well. Join "linkedin" and research how many people have left your perspective new employer's shop in the last six months.
-- Programming with boost is like building a house with lego. It's a cool but I wouldn't want to live in it
Canadian law expressly forbids complaining about winter if you live in Vancouver. That may sound oppressive, but it's a question of national unity.
As a Kiwi that's moved to Aus... Why are you moving to Auckland? I mean, NZ is great. But Auckland is all the worst parts of NZ. You get more money there, but that's it.. If you're after cash, then you get far more in Aus than NZ anyway.
If you're looking for a better lifestyle, look towards Wellington. If you're looking for more cash, then stay in Aus or (possibly, I haven't looked) head towards Canada. The snowboarding in Canada beats NZ as well :)
don't move to Vancouver and move to Calgary
step 2
walk in to any company and just start working.. they will probably throw a party in your honour.
step 3
collect big pay cheque in slightly friendlier housing/rental market than Vancouver..
I've been a contracting software dev in Toronto for 8 years now. A few months ago I redesigned the loyalty card systems for Canada's largest grocer, to give you some context. Here's the rundown on the Toronto market. Oddly, it seems contradictory to the advice already out there.
1. My cv is long. 8 or more pages. I don't care, I just put down the technical details all in one place. I don't worry about whether some HR flack or middle manager can't grok it. I'm expecting it to get in the hands of a tech person during the hiring cycle who will be able to see what the deal is. I have this expectation because I get someone to do the sell for me to bypass the suits. Which leads to point 2.
2. I use recruiters to drum up the business. Prep your cv and post it on monster and workopolis. The recruiters will find you.
3. I never submit my cv directly to companies. This is because if companies have your cv in their database recruiters can't market you to them for 6 months to a year depending on what their arrangement with the company is. Usually 6 months. And corporate HR is a black hole. It's where cv's go to die. That's just been my experience anyway.
But more about #2, the recruiters. In my model of employment they're the critical element. You absolutely must know how to deal with these guys. I'll preface my following comments by saying that most of the recruiters in Toronto are weasels.
Things you must know about dealing with recruiters.
1. Many of them are willfully ignorant of supply and demand. With this type of headhunter they view themselves essentially as contract HR, which is to say that they view themselves as the gatekeepers. This manifests as a power imbalance between you and them. If you get a whiff that you have a recruiter like this you have 2 choices - set them straight or find someone else. I'm telling you upfront that you'll be shocked at how many recruiters are like this.
2. Know your rate. Recruiters use lots of different signs to figure out how to handle you the most important of which is rate. If you're ignorant of your value they will use it to their advantage and cut you out of money you should be making.
3. Try to find a recruiter you can have a relationship with. Most headhunter shops in town run a body shop operation. They use automated search tools to locate talent from their cv pool. They don't care about you and they don't care about how to market you, because they leave the sell to the account manager / biz dev guys. To them you're just a number and if you fit the bill they'll try to slot you in the role in front of them. You need to find recruiters that aren't like this - ones that know what your direction is and how to set up win/win situations with you and their clients. Use boutique recruiters instead of guys like CNC (terrible) and the other big names.
That's it in a nutshell. Good luck
One thing you'll have to get used to working in Canada is how insecure everyone is.
Now as an Australian you won't be used to this. Australian's tend to be self-assured and competent people. Canadians aren't.
Canadians base their national identity on who they aren't. They aren't the United States. But this really doesn't fly very far as their national pastry is the Boston Creme donut. It is hard to be proud of being Canadian when you have no positive (Canada is X, vs. Canada is not Y) definition of who you are. They don't really know. It is as if they are really ashamed of being Canadian, but don't want to let on to that even to themselves. Your national confidence may confuse them.
You are going to want to think of this as moving to a very insecure version of New Zealand.
Vegemite?
This space up for sale.
You'll have to get used to ending your sentences with "eh" instead of "mate."
Yeah, I've noticed the flag prevalence here, much more than back in NZ. We all like our country, more or less, but publicly displaying nationalistic tendencies (showing a flag on your shop/car/property) more or less marks you as a little retarded...
Are you prepared to work on a team that is predominantly non-white? Report to a team lead/manager who is of Chinese or Indian decent? Australia has a rep for being quite intolerant of non-whites, so you may be in for quite a shock :)
Vancouver's job market is really hot right now.
Recommendations:
Technology BC has a good website for jobs
My company (Sophos) is hiring developers with good skills all the time and is a member of the 'Top 50' employers in Canada (and a good place to work IMO)
Recruiters are a good option for people without the work network to get placed (a lot of job hunting/etc occurs through networks of 'who you know' here)
Housing costs are getting high here (relative to past, rest of Canada) - similar to Sydney now
Good luck
In the current Vancouver tech job market? Show up with a resume and some skills.
The BCTIA (British Columbia Tech Industry Association) has a magazine-like publication with lists of members. If you can get your hands on a copy, it would probably provide some inspiration for places to apply.
Pardon me, but these days it's the US Dollar that is weak. The Canadian Dollar has gained in value more than 10% against the USD over the last year. Interestingly, for the first time in over 30 years I have run across more than a few Canadian businesses that will not accept US cash.
As far as your Monopoly money analogy goes, well, guess who has the bigger counterfeiting problem? Hint: it's not Canada.
... as a software developer. Some of the comments about "work product" instead of certifications refers more to developers, not network techs. bctechnology.com's career pages are your friend.
This last quarter, the Canadian economy contracted by 0.1% but grew by 1.7% if you take the ailing auto industry, joined at the hip with the ones in the US out of the numbers. I suspect the central bank may soon do things that are good for Ontario and bad for everyone else but for now that has not happened.
I'm not sure what you meant about "hoops". Of course you need to get a "work visa", "landed immigrant status" or be a citizen, to start with but more than that...?
Were you planning on drifting from contract to contract or settling down at some company? There are a number of companies in the Greater Vancouver area that will want your skills in either case and you should be able to find a good placement with or without the help of an agent. On being hired full-time, you may find yourself routinely on three month probation but after that, short of incompetence or a business downturn, your place should be pretty secure. If you are laid off ("made redundant") you should get a pay-out of a fortnight's (or more usually a month's) pay per year of service. (If you get less, a lawyer can be of assistance unless there just ain't no more blood in that stone.)
Greater Vancouver includes North Vancouver, West Vancouver, Burnaby, New Westminster and Burnaby, as sort of an "inner ring". That's where most of the jobs are, and that's where housing is more expensive. Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, Port Moody, Maple Ridge, Pitt Meadows, Surrey, Langley, Delta and White Rock are all still technically inside Greater Vancouver, and some jobs (many of them with local government agencies) are out there along with more affordable housing.
Personally, I commute from Langley to Burnaby and have done so in the past by bus. After a recent move, I'm out beyond the pale for transit, so I do it by car and have had mixed success pooling. Fortunately, my employer is quite flexible about work-at-home and I do that several days per week. I know another guy at work took a 20% pay cut to work four days a week some years ago and the company went with that as well.
I have been in the developer market for over twenty years and have had tenures from 10 months through 7 years, mostly depending on market conditions (1992 and 2001 were particularly bad years).
All these things can be managed and juggled pretty well. Welcome to BC and maybe we'll cross paths eventually.
cheers...ank
Still hoping for Gentle Treatment...
I did something similar (Melbourne, AU to Toronto CA) in 2002 on a 1 yr Working Holiday Visa as a developer (I now have two Canadian kids (to an Australian wife) and am still living in Canada). . Elements to be aware of that you need to be prepared for
1) You are nothing without North American experience - well almost nothing - as one of the other posters said, you may have designed supercomputers. But unless the person interviewing you has an appreciation for the system, it may as well be a cluster of z80s. Of course if the position you are applying for covers 90% of your experience it will be a different matter, but those jobs are far and few between.
2) Be patient, it will take a while for you to understand the roles and the keywords that capture your the interviewer's attention. There are sometimes different words for the same thing (outlet vs powerpoint), (outlet vs socket), (powerpoint vs presentation). Not understanding these can be fatal in getting a match in your resume to the recruiters search - remember that most of applications get dumped into a big bucket with out resumes from other roles and then get searched against.
3) Accept the best position that you can as soon as possible. It may mean a paycut but you are then getting the North American experience. You can always move if you are looking at staying long term.
4) If you do get a job - most likely you will - and you are even remotely considering staying in Canada. Apply for permanent residency *as soon as possible*. It takes about a year (or more), but once you are a P.R. changing jobs is no where near as much of a challenge. If you are lucky, your company will do it for you to keep you. If you aren't it costs about $1200 per person to do it yourself, through a lawyer it will cost about $4000. I did it myself and resulted in about a 5 cm stack of paper for both my wife and my self for the submission. (Once you get PR. Apply for Citizenship ASAP, you can be dual (and you then have options for almost all of North America.
The are lots of little "funny" things to talk about, but they are the professionally important ones.
It can work, I came in 2002 as a developer. Changed companies once after a year, I now run a group of engineers at a 16,000 person company, being acknowledged internally as a domain expert in my field, with a semi-regular appearance in trade press and nearly monthly activitiy on leading tech news sites. It has worked great for me, hope it works for you.
G W Bush is a Kangaroo???
New mod option wanted: -1 DrunkenRambling
If this anonymous reader would care to forward along an email address to me, then I can put him/her in touch with a large managed hosting service in B.C. that is growing nicely and usually hungry for good network people. Sending a message to me via SlashDot is fine, or to panaqqa [at] gmail [dot] com.
Watch out calling yourself an "engineer" in Canada -- there are legal restrictions in that country as to who may call themselves engineers.
(Spudley Strikes Again!)
or "permanent resident"? :-> :->
Children of forgeiners born in Canada receive dual citizenship and are able to sponsor you, too. You can't buy that unless you happen to be Conrad Black...
I moved from the UK to Vancouver a few years ago so my experiences might be a bit dated. I had the same response from the recruiters as you though - they will not treat you seriously unless you are resident.
:) - I figured on about 12 months - but you won't care as you'll probably be hitting the slopes quite a bit. Be persistent, hawk your resume around town to the major recruiters - fill in their questionnaires and put yourself around as much as possible to get your face known. Believe it or not, Vancouver can be a quite a conservative place for the job market - they don't like strangers, so get in there and network, network, network.
:)
It depends on the job market at the time as to how you'll fare, Vancouver is quite a small town as far as IT goes, so be prepared not to work for some time
Check out the local classifieds nearer the time, although there isn't usually much in there, but there might be. Also, check out Usenet - bc.jobs - to get a feel for what's active, you should probably be doing that now to get a feel for what is happening.
Be prepared to move around quite a bit - if you can work freelance, start up your own company which is quite easy to do and I would say is by far the best way to network and get known. It also means that you don't pass up on contract work. A relative doing the same as you worked for 3 companies in the first couple of years (as a "permie") so employment can be volatile - plan on it being this way. You can be "let go" easily in the first 6 months or so, so don't treat everything as a job for life. I did some work in Calgary for a while - this is a good way to see other cities but watch out for having to pay for accommodation twice. It helps to have relatives over here.
G'luck sport! See you around town
Once I was a four stone apology. Now I am two separate gorillas.
It's a good idea to quickly build up a credit history (we came from SA, I don't know if it works differently if you come from Au). Meaning, in the first few months while you're here, don't buy your fridge/stove/TV with cash but instead on credit card, and then promptly pay it off so you don't get nailed with interest. Otherwise banks won't touch you for things like mortgages no mater how much you earn (unless 15% interest is your thing). Also, remember to get a Presidents Choice debit card and master card. You'll understand when you get here. Taste the "free as in beer".
What's the "crosstika" symbol you mentioned? Image link please.
Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
This is why we need a -1 Reading Comprehension mod.
The US dollar is only weak so that they can pay their bills to the Chinese more easily and then buy back their own dollars more cheaply.
Once I was a four stone apology. Now I am two separate gorillas.
The travel is the other way around in this: http://ars.userfriendly.org/cartoons/?id=20050411
Feel free to contact me, I can be found at my first name, Erin, at thedalzells.org.
Also you cannot call yourself an engineer there, you are an expert. The train engineers have a copyright or something similar to the term 'engineer'.
If you thought the Vancouver winter was bad, be glad you didn't move... well.. pretty much anywhere else in Canada.
Having known an IT worker who had lived in both Canada and Australia, on of the things they noticed was a difference in how the work day finished.
Typically (as was explained to me) the Aussie's would work real hard all day, but then about 3:30/4pm beer and wine would come out of the fridge a work. The difference is in Canada, that wouldn't be allowed by local law and social custom. You just don't drink at work, even socially (except for the occasional office Christmas party).
That doesn't mean Canadians don't drink, just it will be in the after hours time period.
And for the American's, watch that Canadian beer. It actually has alcohol in it.
or perhaps it was the cane toads?
Your qualifications won't count for squat so be prepared to have to start at the bottom or re-qualify. Also there's a lot of job protectionism amongst the Canadian middle ranks so be prepared for some confrontational interviews.
We moved to Canada after 4 years in the USA where I satisfied H1B labor requirements without even an interview ( I'm British with 30 yrs experience in tech and have lived and worked in a bunch of countries ) and had some interviews where the atmosphere was undeniably "if you think you're coming here to take our jobs think again".
We were members of the local ex-pats clubs and many others reported the same problems so it's not a personal issue. Also there were regular articles in papers about doctors etc with years of experience having to work as taxi drivers for 2 years whilst they re-qualified.
The business community high rollers, CEOs etc all say they have a skills shortage but the problem is their lower ranks are ultimately the ones responsible for hiring and they see those jobs as theirs whether they're skilled or not.
My advice is do your research well, different provinces have different rules and requirements so pick your province carefully. Like everywhere else Canada is awash with 'qualified' IT/IS people so look for something to give you an edge and network like crazy. Maybe even prepare for a career change, many of the ex-pats we met were doing something other than what they had originally trained/qualified in.
On the upside once you're perm res you get health care, child benefit etc immediately, it's a stunning country and the folks ( at least the ones we dealt with ) are generally open and friendly on a personal level.
assumption: poor people are poor because they are lazy.
conclusion: lazy people deserve to die.
My experience: I'm a IT contracter in Vancouver, and did a year-long stint in Sydney, Australia doing the same work, so I can relate a bit to your situation.
There's a high demand for qualified IT workers in Vancouver at the moment. Someone here suggested skipping the recruiters and applying to corporations directly; I have to strongly disagree with this, especially since you'll be immigrating here. Recruiters are fairly straight forward here, little fuss compared to the Aussie recruiters I had experience with. (And you're right, they won't pay any attention to you until you are actually in the country). I would highly recommend the following recruiters:
TRS Contract Consulting (www.trscontract.com)
TEK Systems (http://www.teksystems.ca/locations/Canada/British-Columbia/Vancouver.aspx)
And check out these job sites:
workopolis.com
monster.ca
Best of luck!
A couple of people have commented about the importance of sorting out the work visa situation. I'll second that, with emphasis on getting it completed before you enter the country. Most nations, including Canada, you can't apply from within the country. Of course, this creates a Catch 22 in which the strongest justification for issuing the visa comes from having a prospective employer write a letter of offer. And that rarely happens without an interview, or two, or sometimes three, in person. So yeah, it may be necessary to come here for a couple of months ahead of time to do interviews.
I've been trying out recruiters lately. I can recommend a couple, if you want to contact me privately. I can also list several that have, for me at least, proved to be a complete waste of time. Odds are, you can do far better looking on your own. In Vancouver, check out the BC Techlology website: http://www.bctechnology.com/frameset_emp.html
The other comment I'd like to make is that, at least acccording to my experience, there is not much that can be generalized about how employers interview, what they look for, or what you can expect to find after accepting a given position. I think we're generally honest people here in Canada, but it's a young industry in a young culture, and so every organization makes up its own rules and expectations. The interview process is almost entirely directed at finding out about you. Except for a few bare facts, you won't learn much about the organization or the people you'll be working with. What you do learn is designed to make the organization look good, rather than to disclose what sort of challenges and difficulties you can expect from the position. And given the high degree of variability that I mentioned, you really won't know what you've gotten yourself into until the first day on the job. I'm sure this is true the world over, but it has a particular flavor on the west coast of Canada. On one hand, we're bound by Canadian politeness and a mild social reserve that can be hard to break through. On the other hand, we aspire to some form of American entrepreneurialism and the frankness that goes with it. I'm delighted by our West coast liberalism and our tolerance for different cultures, but if I may say so, we're not yet as fully evolved as we think we are. You have an advantage as an Aussie, I think, in that you have lived within a similar cultural paradox. Ours ends up perhaps a bit less tolerant of people being outspoken.
Parity: What to do when the weekend comes.
Parts of Canada are equally, if not more amazing than NZ. The Banff region for one. However, there's shit for tech jobs out there, and the best tech is located in Ottawa (5000km away!) a.k.a. silicon valley north. Ottawa is a very green city (lots of trees, more than you can imagine for a city), probably moreso than any comparably sized city, but it's nothing like Western Canada.
I made a move from country to country during dot com. I found that the best job for me at the time was not in Canada. I landed the job after two phone interviews and moved to a new country. It was a great experience. It was helpful to have a job lined up before moving because there are lots of things that come up in moving to a new country. I had to find a place to live, and I needed to make new friends and contacts in a new and different culture.
I moved from eastern Canada to western Canada and the work culture is different between east and west. Despite any hype to the contrary, I see many more opportunities in Quebec and Ontario than here in the west. I hear repeatedly that BC is looking to hire people in the "service" industry but, the companies are often not willing to pay much more than minimum wage. I've met people here from Australia and New Zealand who are shocked at the terrible pay because they could make much more back home and just about anywhere else in the world. Very capable people either get fed up and leave Canada, or they settle for some menial job.
I've seen companies here that hire people from Australia and New Zealand rather than recruiting locally. In my opinion, there are some excellent technology companies to work for in Vancouver. I am starting to see a few companies open up a little bit more in western Canada. I think that they are starting to realize they need to hire people in technology and they need to pay them a decent income.
The best thing would be to land the job you want before arriving in Canada, but being here in person is obviously going to help too. Make contact, apply, do phone interviews directly with Canadian companies from Australia. The right recruiter may be able to get you access more companies.
bonne chance
http://www.bctechnology.com/scripts/search_form.cfm
Anybody want a peanut?
Bear in mind that since you are from another country, this does limit you from a security aspect. e.g. no jobs which require high clearance (or would take months to years to happen)
(1st sig) If this were a snappy sig, you'd be reading it right now. (2nd sig) I'm a karma whore. >Insert FUD here
I moved from the USA to Israel. And back to the USA. And back to Israel. Here are my tips:
1. The social network everywhere is a big part of finding jobs. That is a challenge when you are new in a country. Make friends with people in whatever community organizations or informal settings you like, and don't be shy to mention that you are new in town and looking for work in your field. Being conspicuously unemployed and apparently a normal person can help greatly.
2. Go to the trouble to get substantive letters or phone call references when applying for a job.
3. If you are out of work for a short time, stay involved in the industry by taking courses, working on volunteer software projects, etc. This makes you visible to people in the industry. It also shows employers you are really into the field, and the lack of a job for a few months was just part of adjusting to the new country. Even a year of uneployement put to constructive use doesn't look so bad as a few months where you were just floating.
4. Don't spend too much energy doing systematic cold-calls to employers. If you target specific employers and make a serious case of why you want to work there, you will have better chances of success. This means having a coherent speech about why you are interested in what that company does, how your skills are relevant, and investing in a personal interaction with someone there who has decision-making power.
5. If you can, develop your identity online with a blog or other site where you discuss industry matters. If this is up and running well in advance of your move, you have something of substance to show a possible employer, something that makes you stand out from the crowd.
6. Before interviewing, learn the salaries and other conditions that are reasonable to expect. You don't want to get taken with something too low, but you also don't want to come across as arrogant demanding more than most people with comparable jobs earn.
7. This one is a little odd, but can work well. Before you leave, get a job or even a short-term project in your old country that lets you be offsite alot, and then move and take it with you, and then look for a new job in your new country at your leisure. You have a better chance of finding something in the country you are from, and you have a better chance of being hired in the new country when you are working, because employed people are always more attractive to employers.
8. Allocate reasonable time w/o working to get set up logistically in the new country - bank account, residence, car, etc. Ideally, you don't want to start a new job till this is in place so you can appear competent from the outset.
9. Be very happy you are in IT which is needed everywhere and works about the same everywhere, so the transition shouldn't be too bad, especially if you are moving to a country that speaks the same language you will be fine.
It's largely the non-Union Jack portion of the Australian flag, so associated with Australian identity. Unfortunately as the GP alluded, the neo-nazi like folks being attracted to such causes in Australia is growing slowly at the moment as we struggle with integrating Muslims, Africans, Asians etc in a western world that has seen neo-cons rise to power.. Hopefully the change of political climate here in Aus, and a change of Whitehouse in the US might help reverse some of the damage of the last 10 years.
---Q
Australian rootsnake?
Once at a Mardi Gras in Sydney someone tried to tell me about the Australian rootsnake, but I ran away before he could show me.
Moving from country A to country B can be a bewildering experience when it comes to taxes, retirement, investment and inheritance. It's a great idea to talk to a cross-border specialist, or at least find some books on the subject. It is particularly important to examine what you will be facing in the (tax) year of your move.
Double taxation is unlikely to be an issue, because practically every country in the world has tax treaties with every other to avoid this. Depending on country A's tax laws and the amount of time you spend in each country, you may no longer have a tax liability in country A, or the tax you can't avoid paying in country A can be claimed as a credit in country B. Obviously this is something you have to find out for your particular situation. And like I said, it's most complicated for the year you make your move.
If you have any money in retirement plans in country A, be sure to find out how they are treated in country B. For example, interest in tax-deferred retirement accounts may actually be taxable in country B unless you make certain declarations on your tax return for country B. If you're a long way from retirement, you may wish to leave the money where it is in country A. Find out what you need to do to make sure nothing bad happens many years from now.
As for investing: you may find it more difficult to open certain kinds of accounts in country A once you are no longer a resident, due to regulations in either country A or B. If you want to set up such accounts, it's best to do it before you leave.
The above is only a part of what you may be facing. If you have substantial (or even modest) assets, property, investments, tax obligations or potential inheritances, it would be worth it to talk to a specialist who knows the ins and outs of the regulations for both of the countries in question.
If it weren't for deadlines, nothing would be late.
I'm been thinking for some time about moving to Canada. Though, I'm a little afraid of the Brazilian reputation outside Brazil (don't think it's very good). I'm mainly a database architect (work with PostgreSQL), but also a *nix developer. Does someone here has something to say about experiences working with or hiring people from Brazil?
... it goes down counter-clockwise instead of clockwise.
Have gnu, will travel.
That reminds me... it's worthwhile to look for jobs in the Kitchener/Waterloo area too.
Make sure your employer will help with relocation costs. It cost us at least $25k AUD to move from Melbourne to just outside of Baltimore, MD. I expect the move to Canada will be a bit more than we paid as cars are more expensive in Canada than in the US. The move back will be less as we still have our furniture, but honestly, the costs can be horrific.
We started out in a furnished apartment. Don't. Ikea is cheap and cheerful, but take my advice and buy a nice bed from a good bedding store. We furnished our second place for about $5k, which is less than we paid for the 8 months of "furnishings" at our old place. Oh, and get a power drill with an Allen bit. Takes about 10 - 15 minutes to put up a desk that would take hours with the key in the box.
We got VicRoads to do an extract of our driving history. Waste of time.
We bought RACV international driver's licenses. Don't. Just schedule some time to go for your CA province's driver's license within the first month and you'll be fine with your Victorian license until then.
Buying a car. It's way more expensive in Canada than across the border, but the import tax situation is messy. Be careful if you want to buy something in the US and bring it back across the border. The Honda Fit is a roomy economical car for not much money, but you may struggle to find a lender to fiance the car, which leads to:
Credit cards and loans. You will have zero finance history in Canada, and in our experience, a good credit history in Australia is not counted at all. We had our (good) credit history from the NAB. Meant NOTHING. I still don't have a credit card, and we had to pay out our car loan (at the top loan rate) in 12 months. If you can pay money for a car, do so. Otherwise, VW Finance has an expat / internation finance loan, which is what we ended up with. No one else would touch us. Make sure that when applying for credit that you only in writing authorize them for the loans or CC's you ask for. If they go away and try 20 folks and you get turned down 20 times, the 21st time you apply, your previously blank but okay credit history is now trashed. We've been told how to fix up our credit history now, (take out a margin loan for some C/Ds and pay the margin loan out on time automatically, get a small CC), but I don't care now that we have some decent savings. I was sort of hoping for a nice credit history at the end as it may help us get a house loan when we return to Australia, but I doubt we'll take any credit out here in the USA now.
Insurance. Driving history and lack of accidents mean nothing to insurers over here. Expect to pay $1800 per year and be treated like a 16 year old learner until at least 12 months after you have your Canadian driver's license, so get that licence as quickly as you can. Normally, a 30+ year old person with 12 years of perfect driving will pay $400-500 odd per year. You will be screwed. Budget for it.
Buying a house. I don't know the deal in Canada, but buying a house makes a lot of sense. The market is utterly trashed and you can get a lot of house for peanuts compared to two years ago. If you can qualify for a loan, buy a house. However, expect not to qualify - we can't as our visa is renewed every two years, and thus folks will not lend to us. If you can't qualify for a loan, oh well join the millions of folks here in the same basket. You'll need like an awesome income or a spotless credit history and a long term visa to qualify. Good luck.
Essentials (Vegemite etc). Whole Foods have an international aisle. You can usually get Vegemite there. Otherwise, getting it from Simply Oz will do the trick - at a price. A 150 gm jar is about $5 US shipped all told. We get our Ribena from an English expat online store as it's closer than Simply Oz.
Flying there. Go Air New Zealand. The comfy premium economy seats are upstairs, the width and pitch are fantastic, the food good (the lamb is awesome), and the privacy and quiet is worth the extra coin. The flight crew don't hate their jobs (or you) unlike t
Andrew van der Stock
If you're moving to Vancouver from Australia, as an IT person, you have one SERIOUS hoop that you may not be able to jump through!
... so damn isolated that apparently satellites and undersea cables just can't do it ... according to the guy I complained to when i visited Sydney in February.
Our internet is FAST and RELIABLE.
You won't be able to blame internet problems on Telstra or the isolation of your continent
George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
Actually, like the original poster, Cowtard wants to move to Canada .... or Canuckastan as some of my 'merican friends call my homeland. :D
.... oh this might help the geography lesson - we have better beer and hockey players, but your teams pay our players tonnes of money to play for them so ..... no Stanley Cup for a Canadian team this year
We are the country that shares a really, really long border with US
I moved from South Africa to Vancouver. I'm a Systems Analyst. I found the only way to get any attention while searching for a job from outside Canada was to use a Canadian address and phone number on your CV. You could get a Vancouver number through http://www.vonage.ca/. Any home address would do.
I'd like some detail on that statement, personally. Why would you make such a claim?
Canada's an excellent place to work, with a high standard of living and arguably a less politicized environment.
- Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
Depends on where you go. You're much more likely to see this in the south or more rural areas of the US. The cities on the coasts are much more liberal.
I'm wondering how much of an adjustment he'll have moving from a really hot place to a really cold place. I think he should see what the weather is like in January before making a commitment.
I might recommend that before you move you pick up a Canadian phone number and use it with VoIP. There are many ways to do this. You can buy a cheap SIP or Skype phone. You can run VoIP phone software on your computer. Perhaps the simplest is to get a service which will forward your voip phone, using voip, to your Australian number. This is not at all expensive, it will probably cost you in the range of 3 cents/minute to an aussie landline, total, for your incoming calls. 1-2 cents/minute for your outgoing calls, or you can get unlimited plans but they usually are not worth it unless your usage is heavy. Don't forward to an aussie mobile, that will be 25 cents/minute usually.
You can get a Vancouver number which you will keep when you get there, or you could get a Toronto number to appear more "out of town" before you move to Vancouver.
The outfit I use, vbuzzer.com, does not have Vancouver numbers, but I expect Skype does and many other providers do.
Has it been over a year since you last donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation
Hey, guess what, neither do we. But don't let your ignorance hold you back.
When I left Melbourne for the UK (20 years ago - so the advice may have dated) it was the case in Australia that people wanted to see plenty of details on a CV - a page on each position to explain who the employer was, what they did, where you fit in, what you achieved etc plus full educational history and any part time jobs etc. Without this level of detail people thought you had something to hide, or just didn't know enough about your background to consider an interview.
In the UK , on the other hand, a CV more than 3 pages was considered ridiculous and overblown - here I tend to use a single cover page (think executive summary - what I do, skills, buzzwords etc) and then another page describing the 3 or 4 most most recent positions - dates and names, a paragraph about responsibilities and major achievements, and then a few lines for older positions.
Find out what the locals expect of a CV - these are 2 extremes but who knows what the expectation is in Canada - the agent who posted here should be able to provide you a few local examples, and be prepared to adapt yours to match.
I always keep my longer version up to data, offer both to agents (so they can choose which to use) and take them to the interview in case people want more or less detail - rarely needed but it doesn't hurt to have a different version prepared should people ask.
Your lack of intelligence comes through so clearly it's almost endearing.
Find a source of income first, then move. Yes, it's hard to get a job from abroad, but it doesn't suck as much as going broke and moving back.
If you can't find a job, keep in mind projects are easier to find than jobs. Not all recruiters will find it a waste of time to help people move from abroad; keep a list of job opportunities and the respective recruiters and spot the ones that are just a waste of your time.
Things are different if you're moving over to live with someone that is already employed over there- it's probably simpler then, as you won't have to worry so much about going broke. Make sure you settle all bills, finances, tax, etc; it is handy to keep a bank account and have the receipts forwarded to your new address (or to the address of someone you trust to forward them to you). Moving to live with someone also solves the immediate problem of finding housing (possibly requiring several months worth of rent in advance).
If you are going to bring any pets, make sure they've already got their rabies shots, ID chip etc. Rules differ from one country to another; if your target country has strict rules, make sure you take care of everything *and* make sure it's taken care of in the right order (i.e. ID chip FIRST, then vaccinations). You don't want to pay for quarantine, especially if your pet has otherwise undergone all necessary treatments. As much as it sucks, the realistic option may be to leave any pets behind.
Migrating is always more expensive than you think, and the first few months will be considerably more pleasant if you have at least a few months worth of financial buffer before you move. If you haven't yet, start economizing NOW.
That said, good luck!
>That reminds me... it's worthwhile to look for jobs in the Kitchener/Waterloo area too.
You'd better like snow though - as an ex Kiwi, living in the UK, I was a little horrified by 50cm of snow one weekend... it was like the start of the next ice age.
Canada? Computers? When did that happen.
So for me at least it was quite hard to find a job.. at first. In Vancouver its a case of who you know.. not what you know. I was lucky and had a friend of a friend etc. Once I got the first job here I havent had to apply again. The market here is pretty crazy at the moment so its _very_ easy to find a job. Every company I have contacts in is looking for people. Good luck!
I did. Well, I did get engaged to an American first. I gotta take issue with the article's claim that "recruiters aren't interested until you're in the country". Of course, they're not, six months out - but a month or two? Sure. I posted (when I moved from Melbourne to Seattle 18 months ago) on Dice, and a few others, and specifically explained my situation. I got calls in the middle of the night from recruiters and companies, and the upshot was I touched down on a Friday afternoon at 2pm, and interviewed at a realllly large IT company Monday 8am (actually, they wanted to interview me 5pm Friday, "though we know you're just off the plane").
What! Ottawa is awesome, particularly for young people. Lots of restaurants and nightclubs. The strip bars and dance bars are the best I have been to in the world. China town has great food, and so does little Italy. You can skate on the canal in the winter. The NAC has some of the best modern dance and concerts I have seen, and there is the hockey team and rock bands in the stadium. The Art Museum is awesome, as is the public transit. You can blast along Colnel By avenue on a motorcycle in the summer, and it is a great time all round. Le Jardan in the market is the best French restaurant I have ever eaten at, particularly at the price. Have you ever been to Ottawa? Now RTP, NC where I live now sucks, but Ottawa is great, far better than Toronto - probably the equal of Vancouver or Montreal on the sucks/does not suck scale.
You seem to be a bit confused about your geography.
"America" is the common name for the United States of America, which is a country. It contains none of the places you mention (Chile, Ecuador, United States of Mexico).
"North America" and "South America" are continents. Two of them. Unless you consider Europe, Asia, and Africa to be a single continent.
Do you get similarly confused about other countries whose names are similar to broader geographic labels, like South Africa, Ecuador, Netherlands, Costa Rica, Iceland, Malaysia, Australia, and so on? "Which part of South Africa are you considering? Namibia? Mozambique? Lesotho? Which part of Ecuador are you considering? Uganda? Indonesia? Brazil? Which part of the Netherlands are you considering? Belgium? Luxembourg?"
The only thing worse than a sarcastic pedant is a sarcastic pedant who's wrong.
"Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
As someone who lived in Australia for years, I'm pretty sure it's not a mistake I would repeat.
Insanely high prices ensure your standard of living will be lower than in Canada.
The cities have almost no nightlife compared to major world cities (including major Canadian cities). People go to their wine bars at 6pm to show off their new clothes, then head home to watch TV by 9. After that you've got nothing but feral suburban kids, drunk old men, and bewildered Japanese tourists.
Even the once-vibrant Aussie music scene has dried up to a bunch of derivative USA-wannabe hip hop acts and a few random electronicists hiding in their cellars.
The Australian work ethic and customer service ethic is shockingly slack compared to Canada. Getting anything done takes far longer than you'd ever imagine because nobody gives a shit about doing their jobs.
Other than a few nice areas in the city centres, the architecture is overpoweringly bleak. Normally I wouldn't make a major issue of this - for example, I really enjoy New York which is quite an ugly city when you get down to it - but those endless long stretches of half-vacant cheap two-storey shop buildings in Australia made my soul ache.
While not every Australian is a gibbering racist, the country is certainly well-endowed in that regard. Too many of the rest tend to be reactionary, preachy leather-wearing vegetarians who rail at random against things they don't even begin to understand.
All these things annoyed me, but really it was the feeling of starvation for informed, interested, conversation that really sent me packing in the end.
Seriously, spend a month or two there before committing your life to it. There's definitely some natural beauty to be found, but you can find that in far more stimulating and pleasant places if you look around a bit.
"Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
Having relocated with my wife on our own from Canada to work in San Francisco and Europe, the easiest way to start is to take advantage of the relevant "youth" work/travel visa, which can be used up-to age 30 - put things into storage at home, show up with a backpack and a couple of suits, rent a temporary room in someone's apartment (see www.expatriates.com or Craigslist), make sure your resume is formatted in the style of the country of choice (Canada and the US are big on self promotion - financial impact that your work indirectly had on your company's bottom line), with your current local address and phone number of a local cell phone and let the games begin. Worry about getting your own place only once you know when/where you are going to work, as the commute is worse than you expect.
:-)
If you make it easy for people to hire you (no immediate worries about visa because of your travel/work status), you can negotiate that an amount for moving expenses be paid after your trial period proves your weight in gold, as well as that visa issues be taken care of by the HR department when your 1 year work/travel visa runs out.
Assuming you have an engineering degree, you can always make reference to the Washington Accord, that gives equivalences for US/Canada/Australia/etc degrees, depending on the university you went to (check wikipedia for details).
Credit can be established via a pre-existing ING Direct or, if you have had a lease or credit through a major international car brand (VW, Ford,etc), that can help as well - get an American Express credit card and start charging things ASAP, as it is the only Credit Card company I have found that permits your credit rating to follow you worldwide.
Start using LinkedIn.com like a madman - a friend of a friend of a friend is just waiting to hire you.
Vancouver postings can also be found at dice.com or through Workopolis.com, in addition to Craigslist and other local sites - all depends on the size of the company you want to work for.
If you know people who are planning on hiring in Melbourne in 20 months (freakin Oz bureaucratic requirements for skilled migrant workers, even those in demand, is ridiculous), please post to make my next jump a little easier
I did the move (Opposite direction, Canada to Australia) three years ago. The IT markets in the two are relatively similar. I was worried at first that my qualifications might be criticized and references would be seen as too difficult to check or considered untrustworthy; but that wasn't the case.
:)
If you're moving from Melbourne to Vancouver, you'll probably find it much different at all after long.
Check Canadian job sites and see the general availability of jobs in the various cities. If the market is hot then don't worry too much about that until you get there. You can e-mail your resume and a polite letter to a few recruiters indicating when you'll be arriving. They may even have an interview set up for you by the time you leave. Focus more on getting a plan together for getting somewhere to live, getting funds transferred over after you arrive, etc. Several cities on the Western side of Canada are going through a boom now so finding a nice place to live can be a bit tough.
I'm curious how. I'm a software engineer in Silicon valley right now and will try to get a master's (computer engineering) in the near future. I've been wondering about opportunities abroad. How do you go about doing it? Do you just start making inquires in y our country of choice and hope they will take a foreign worker?
Welcome to BIG OIL^W^WCanada
There is lots of work in the Tar Sands.
But Why Vancouver? Vancouver has the largest recent wage decrease in Canada. Ontario the largest unemployment increase.
Under Harper, Bush's mini me. Canada is America with a knuckle-dragging media, paid for by BIG oil.
Thankfully in the past, right wing leaders like Harper never lasted long. But things have changed. In the past opposition parts would have forced an election by now and Harper would have been shown the road. Instead now the official opposition party supports Harper and his right win polices and have refused to give him the boot.
Tar Sands suppling American auto suburbs oil for the next 20 years.
LOL OMG SHIT! Well that puts my plans right out!
Thanks for the warning.
Although, in Australia we tend to use a / to mean OR.
This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
Welcome to BIG OIL^W^WCanada
Tar Sands supplying American auto suburbs with oil for the next 20 years.
BIG OIL has also invested heavily in Canada's, media, government.
This investment is an efficient way to ensure that Canada' Tar Sands will continue to have the world's lowest oil extraction royalties.
An ugly change coming? It's been here for a while, and it certainly peaked with the Howard government's encouragement of xenophobia and treatment of asylum seekers. Fortunately, the Rudd government has swung the pendulum back somewhat, for now.
It's just snow, not nuclear winter. You'll live.
Come on mate, seriously? Howard is probably the worst thing that ever happened to Australia. It's going to take years to undo the damage he did to our international reputation, to our universities, education system, health system etc. And I'm not just talking about hospitals (which are partly a state responsibility), I'm talking about things like the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, which made the price of pharmaceuticals in Australia some of the lowest in the world, and was the envy of other countries. Under duress from large multinational companies (who wanted Aussies to pay more for essential drugs), the Howard government dissolved the PBS board and installed their own one. There's also the public health system. The Howard government favoured an American style 'user pays' system. Unfortunately, per capita, the American system is one of the most expensive in the world. It actually costs the American government *more* (significantly so) per capita than most other western nations with a universal health care system.
While I don't think Rudd & Co have all the answers I'll take a slightly incompetent government over a government who knew exactly what it was doing and was intent on taking Australia in a very dark, very unpleasant direction.
Slightly incompetent? That's a gross understatement.
I'm not a fan of Howard, but they did a hell of a lot better than this joker has done so far.
With Howard for me to explain what he did that was so bad is difficult.
With Rudd, all I have to say is FuelWatch.
This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
Yes. Americans are Fascists and terrible people. Thanks for your insight.
That sort of thing is required to counter enemy cultures such as Islam. It isn't pretty, but Islam is far worse.
Australia belongs to Australians. They have every right not to welcome those who would change it into the Middle East.
"It used to be that Aussies were only nationalistic when it came to sports... now, I feel an ugly change coming."
I'm glad to see they are waking up. Submission is no way to compete with Islam.
"This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
Truth? Yes.
Flamebait? Possibly.
Troll? No.
Australia has this cool rule where you can let the govmit fund your education. The catch is that if you never make money in Australia, you never have to pay back your school loans.
So go to school, get to know your teachers, they probably know about Hex and the International companies that motivated it and will pay you peanuts to move to Canada where they can pay you more peanuts for your valuable (if somewhat vaporously) education.
As someone who has come the other way (US -> Australia). Use OzForex.com.au it will save you a small bundle in foreign exchange fees and offers better exchange rates.
I lived in Auckland for a while and spent quite a few months working on projects in Oz - mainly living in Sydney. I now live in Canada As you'd expect there are similarities and differences. The similarities are similar approach to work, resume (not too long), work approach etc. . Differences are that Canadian experience is valued - now you don't have that, so make sure you have a few decent references available from where you worked before. Again because of the huge influx of migrants recruiters are often suspicious of overseas credentials and qualifications. Again it should not be too much of a problem though. The biggest difference is that, surprisingly, the recruitment industry is not as well developed here as it is in Oz and NZ. A lot of jobs are found through contacts, friends and ex-colleagues. So you have to network, network, network. Make contacts, talk to people, email people and just keep going. Recruiters in the IT industry tend to see you as a commodity - don't expect the friendliness of Oz. They won't bother with you or even respond unless they see a way of placing you. Some ways that is better - you don't get led down the garden path. You will find Canadians less outgoing than Aussies - that can be strange - they are much more like the older English. Reserved. Not unfriendly, just reserved. They don't laugh and joke very much. I would say don't cut any bridges back in Oz and don't send your stuff over until you have been here for a few months. Vancouver in the rainy season can be very very depressing. Beautiful as it is, the crappy weather can wear you down. An option would be to look to Alberta where there is an oil boom going . More employment opportunities. But cold enough to freeze them right off. Hope this helps
Not quite. They would be at risk of being sued for libel but if the claims were provably true then they case would fail and they would not be found liable. Of course most companies don't want to take the risk so the system is screwed up...but it is not quite as messed up as you suggest.
I moved from the UK 17 years ago and have held a Canadian passport for 14 years.
I've worked for 3 companies (about to start a 4th) and here is what I have found both as an employee and as an employer (with a fair bit of experience at conducting interviews).
1. Qualifications aren't as important as you might think. Experience is.
2. You would be surprised how diverse the workforce is (people from other ethnic & cultural backgrounds).
3. Doing your job is one thing, but will you fit into their work culture, are you adaptable?
4. Headhunters/Recruiters/Pimps work for their paying client (not you). Don't expect too much help from them and you wont be disappointed.
5. The phrase "it's not what you know it's who you know" is as important as ever (helps elevate you above other applicants but don't expect it to negate #1 & 3)
6. Best place to look for Tech jobs is at BC Technology T-Net http://www.bctechnology.com/frameset_emp.html
Good luck
You did not mention the Australian Aboriginals. So they must be integrated fine.
I think Columbia Internet is located in Vancouver. They may be looking for network engineers.
I live in Canada and my main reaction is to ask you why you would pick, out of all of Canada's cities, the most expensive one to live and work in? (Also has crime problems there that exceed most other large cities in Canada).
Bad choice dude.
I've done this myself, but it was from Brissie to Calgary. (I was born in Melbourne, so don't draw too many conclusions, they'd probably all be wrong).
You haven't indicated if you're coming in as a landed immigrant or just on a work Visa.
First thing you need is a SIN number (Social Insurance Number), it functions as a Tax Number.
Second thing you need to know is that until you're available to work, there's very few who will take the time to talk to you.
Third. The Canadian Revenue agency "encourages" arms length relationships with end clients, so there's many recruiting houses prepared to take 25% or more off the top for your services. If you approach the clients directly, you can often find the same work with only a $3-$5 cut.
Forth. Everything which is different is small. You'll handle the big issues like driving on the right simply. It's all the cultural quirks that'll take the time to work out and you'll offend people without even realizing it, and they won't tell you you've done it (Aussie's are used to this service). Luckily your Aussie accent will help get you some slack and most Canadians are pretty friendly.
Oh, yeah... Expect to suffer the loss of many things you didn't realize you would miss... 4n20's timtams (mentioned above), Almost any of the decent dessert snacks you're used to, Decent pavlova, Weet-bix, Vegemite(Now that the Americans have banned it, it's not being shipped to North America)
Finally just expect everything to be different and you'll cope alright. Watch the slang, and any expressions you've picked up from home, sometimes they just don't translate (Cigarettes, and Erasers for two well known examples).
Good luck and enjoy
What has Rudd done so far that's so grossly incompetent? Fuelwatch? It's hardly Watergate. All it will turn out to be is a misguided piece of populist policy that ultimately fails but doesnt cost us a huge amount of money or damage the social fabric of the country. Meanwhile, they have implemented a bunch of policies that are going to do us a lot of good in the future.
Howard set about to -
a) dismantle medicare and replace it with a user-pays system. Not only is this socially irresponsible, it is economically irresponsible - the American healthy system costs the US government more per capita than almost any universal healthcare system in the world.
b) Replace HECS/HELP university places with full fee paying positions, denying low and middle income earning Australians positions in universities, and generally lowering the standard of university graduates and Australian universities in general.
c) Remove the various awards and protections afforded to workers under the law. You might take a government mandated 4 weeks a year of paid annual leave + compulsory paid sick leave for granted, but I think our American friends would be quite envious of it.
d) Cut government funding of universities dramatically, to one of the lowest levels amongst OECD nations.
e) Replace the Pharmaceutical Benefits Advisory Committee with one that is friendlier towards big pharmaceutical companies. The PBAC are responsible for deciding which pharmaceuticals were to be subsidised by the government, which resulted in Australians benefiting from some of the cheapest essential drugs in the world. A program that has since been emulated in many other countries. The PBAC had very strict guidelines about which drugs were worth subsidising (ie. novel lifesaving treatments) and which ones werent (eg. Viagra). Unfortunately the big pharmaceuticals werent happy about this and pressured the Howard government to dissolve the board and install a more 'business friendly' one.
I'll leave Tampa etc. for another time.
On top of all of this, his economic credentials are a bit overstated. Most of the most dramatic reform of the economy took place in the 80's and 90's under Hawk and Keating. This, combined with the resources boom was largely responsible for Australia's current economic strength.
Tax cuts are nice, but not at the expense of our universities and schools.
Okay...
a) I know a lot of people who work in the health care industry all of which say it is far better than it was years ago. The only things they point to as being bad are due to MORE regulation and state intervention than LESS.
b) You don't know what you're talking about. I am doing Uni at the moment and don't pay a cent. Nothing has changed. They did reduce the ability to game the system. I would have preferred they tore it down and left it for me to pay for, however what you're saying is complete fiction. The standard of University graduates has been lowered due to regulation.
c) They did remove the "protections and awards" and it was the best thing ever. I have 3 friends who lots their jobs when Rudd put those protections back in. Just because someone is willing to work for less than you, doesn't mean he is necessarily worse. In fact regulation like this is mostly responsible for stopping younger people, older people and immigrants from working, since they are the only people who are affected. Although, everyone is affected by higher prices.
d) Australian universities have been struggling due to their inability to charge Australian residence full price. This meant that UniSA (The university I go to) is more profitable in Asia than it is here (You did know that due to forcing Universities to charge less (because we still use HECS/HELP) that Australian Universities see Australians as a liability and not a strength?). We were able to deal with these inefficiencies off of the backs of the Asian market for ages, however now a days Asian Universities are competing better than us (And they aren't subsidized).
e) If you want cheap drugs, completely deregulate the system. Done! All problems introduced which increase the price of drugs are due to the government providing a monopoly to drug companies so they have "an incentive to create". This has never changed, it is just when EVERYONE was paying for it (subsidies) on average we were paying more than when WE pay for it.
His economic credentials were good, however they could have been better.
Read Alexander Downers column in The Advertiser, the Government understands all of the issues, it is just they can't sell them to us, because too few people actually go off and learn the economics of the situation.
With regulation I can explain "We say this will cost less, and so it does" which is easy to explain, however I find it harder to explain "We can't force these prices because the market will readjust and there will be a shortage of the good".
It is easier to sell communism, than it is to sell capitalism.
This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
You want a signature? You can't handle a signature!!
Disclaimers
:)
1) I am an American who went to Australia (Melbourne)
2) In 1998
I was a SysAdmin at the time and the 1st thing I needed to learn quick fast was there is a MAJOR difference between an American resume and a Australian (or Commonwealth, perhaps?) CV. My American resume wouldn't have landed me anything because of the formatting and the fact that they were looking for. (at the time, I had to convert my 2 page resume into a 10 page CV) and I expounded on on every detail of work I did. I'm sure things have changed in 10 years, so YMMV.
Someone mentioned the laws of what your visa allows. Forgive my ignorance, but aren't folks from the Commonwealth countries allowed to work in other Commonwealth countries with few or no strings? (this was pre 9/11 so I'm sure things have changed) As an American on a Student Visa (I was finishing my undergrad work) I was only legally allowed to work 20 hours per week. The recruiter I worked for found a loophole and I put in 30+ a week. Probably not fully legal but my situation changed where that was a good thing and it didn't affect my grades so it didn't matter as far as I was concerned.
I applied for 3 positions - One I wasn't qualified/interested in, the 2nd was working in the computer lab at the university I attended (Swinburne) but I was overkill overqualified for and I personally believe the head engineer didn't want a lab rat who knew more about Netware and NDS then he did. 3rd job was perfect and I learned an awful lot about Australian Law working at the largest ambulance chasing firm around and put in my 6 months there before going home. The recruiter I worked for was chasing a large contract at Telstra that they'd need lots of bodies for that they were going to bring be back on the Aussie version of an H1-B visa but Telstra awarded the contract to another recruiter and by that point, I'd re-established myself back in the States anyway.
I think one of the big things that impressed the hiring manager where I ended up was the fact I'd actually paid attention to things going on in Australia at the time: When the recruiter took a friendly swipe at me regarding Bill Clinton and his philandering ways, I just said two words: Pauline Hanson. I'd learned something about Footy (and barracked for Collingwood since they had the least offensive uniforms, and the GF followed Hawthorn, who had the most offensive uniforms) and it didn't hurt that he was also a Collingwood fan. I could have a conversation outside of IT regarding what was going on in Melbourne at the time. I guess being a foreigner with a clue helped.
Oh, and I learned -before- I got off the plane that hoopsnakes and drop bears are as real as the chances of Ballmer and Gates getting awarded the Sexiest Couple in IT.
What I can really say is know your shit, in and outside of the IT world, figure out what's going on in the local area and be able to talk about it. That's what worked for me.
I tell them I deal drugs to school children.. I get a better response ;)
You forgot:
[X] "I'm a privatier".
That is my favourite. No Questions about DSL-providers either.
Reading comprehension problems?
Nobody in the parent posts said anything about moving into America (well, Canada, which is in North America, but you're obviously referring to the US), just out of Australia...
The only thing worse than a sarcastic pedant is a sarcastic pedant who's wrong. Actually Netherlands is the proper name for 'Holland' as in the country. Holland is one region in the western part of the Netherlands. Benelux countries are Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg.
Yes, but "Netherlands" literally means "low countries", a designation that commonly includes all three of those countries.
"Patriotism is your conviction that this country is superior to all other countries because you were born in it." -- GBS
I bet Americans are wondering where the hell on earth Australia is. Seriously though, Americans are definitely not wondering why you want to leave Australia. I don't know why you think they would be.
Wouldn't it be easier to ask your mother to move?
I mean, a basement is a basement.
$> cd
$> more beer
.. which is a much easier move since Canada is just across the border. In my point of view, the most complicated aspect of the move has been to organize my finances. I thought that financial markets were much more integrated than they are today - particularly between two countries like the US and Canada. I was in for a surprise though. There is all sorts of bogus and complicated rules involving taxes, investments... all sorts of things. For instance, if you have a retirement account in Australia, you might have to pay taxes on it in Canada. In any event, this has been the most frustrating aspect for me. I kinda wish Canada and the US were moving to something closer to the EU (though I'm not entirely sure whether the EU has tackled this issue any better).
And what is wrong with nationalism?
--- Justin Dearing http://www.justaprogrammer.net/ We're just programmers.
Every day sees more crosstikas plastered on the rear windows of SUVs, and Aussie flags are cropping up in incongruous places. It used to be that Aussies were only nationalistic when it came to sports... now, I feel an ugly change coming. Where do you live? just move cities - I'm in qld and have no idea what you're talking about.
America's a country, not a continent.
"We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
You're clearly a fervent believer in laissez-faire free market capitalism, in the divine power of self-regulating markets that somehow miraculously both return profits for shareholders, economic growth, and somehow at the same time serve the interests of the community.
This is a lie, don't buy into it, it has been proven time and time again that completely free market systems while useful in some situations do not serve the public interest when it comes to essential services.
a) Universal health care works, it is cheaper (for users as well as the government) than a US style wholly private system. Private health care is bad social policy, and it's bad economic policy. The US spends more money as a percentage of GDP on its healthcare system than any other OECD country
b) I may not know what I'm talking about, but I have been through the uni system during the Howard years, I graduated in 2003. I saw what successive funding cuts did to my university, and I watched it transition from a research and learning centre into a corporation funded by commercial grants with cost cutting at every corner. I saw the standard of learning corrode even in the time I was there. I watched as more and more places were given over to full fee paying, and thus denied to those relying on the HECS/HELP system.
You might not be paying a cent now, but you will be paying more than ever before when it comes time to pay off that HELP debt.
c) I would be suprised if your friends losing their jobs had nothing to do with workchoices being rolled back, because it hasn't in fact been rolled back yet. The government has just stipulated that no new AWAs can be implemented, and that workers currently on AWAs should transition to an equivalent agreement under the new framework, with a fairly generous timeframe for this to take place.
d) Nonsense. The majority of universities in Australia are public universities, not private universities. That is, they are (or should be) funded by public money. They are not there to make money, they are there to provide quality education to Australia's youth, at a cost that makes them available to anyone regardless of their economic status.
e) Again, nonsense. This is where free market economics fails, and fails badly. The power of competition doesnt work in this scenario because of patents. Drug companies own patents on novel treatments effectively handing a monopoly to that company who can then charge whatever the hell they want for it. You need external market controls. Additionally, it's actually not in pharmaceutical companies best interests to research new drugs, because it costs a lot of money and doesnt give great ROI when compared to say evergreening your existing products. In fact, pharmaceutical companies spend only 11-14% of their budget on R&D and a whopping 35% on marketing their products - http://www.cmaj.ca/cgi/content/full/171/12/1451#R7-12
That was just the first article I found on the ills of the pharmaceutical industry, there are plenty more out there.
If you want to see what happens to drug prices under a free market system, just go and get sick in the US. You will not believe how much they pay over there compared to us.
a) sorry, I left out a reference - http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/46/2/38980580.pdf
Man I'm bored of this subject, you obviously haven't read into this topic.
I'm going to summarize and just point out the ludicrous statements you're making, and not taking into account what actual free markets mean.
"You're clearly a fervent believer in laissez-faire free market capitalism, in the divine power of self-regulating markets that somehow miraculously both return profits for shareholders, economic growth, and somehow at the same time serve the interests of the community."
You don't understand the invisible hand, do you?
"This is a lie, don't buy into it, it has been proven time and time again that completely free market systems while useful in some situations do not serve the public interest when it comes to essential services."
This is rhetoric and completely made up.
"a) Universal health care works, it is cheaper (for users as well as the government) than a US style wholly private system. Private health care is bad social policy, and it's bad economic policy. The US spends more money as a percentage of GDP on its healthcare system than any other OECD country"
Private is efficient, markets are efficient, more so than with regulation. This isn't contested by ANY type of economics. So do not argue that it's more expensive in a private system, because that is stupid. Additionally, more money as a percentage of GDP? That's the worse economic comparison I've ever heard. Are all other countries economies like Americas?
"b) I may not know what I'm talking about, but I have been through the uni system during the Howard years, I graduated in 2003. I saw what successive funding cuts did to my university, and I watched it transition from a research and learning centre into a corporation funded by commercial grants with cost cutting at every corner. I saw the standard of learning corrode even in the time I was there. I watched as more and more places were given over to full fee paying, and thus denied to those relying on the HECS/HELP system."
I think you don't realize that you're arguing for my side. Quality erodes in public institutions, especially as they grow. Full fee paying students are given quality education, you know why? Because they actually pay for it! We get denied because the government fucks us. I've already started paying it off, it's nothing special, in fact it's way below what the education got me.
"c) I would be suprised if your friends losing their jobs had nothing to do with workchoices being rolled back, because it hasn't in fact been rolled back yet. The government has just stipulated that no new AWAs can be implemented, and that workers currently on AWAs should transition to an equivalent agreement under the new framework, with a fairly generous timeframe for this to take place."
When Rudd came in, they reinstated certain protections which could hold a business accountable.
"d) Nonsense. The majority of universities in Australia are public universities, not private universities. That is, they are (or should be) funded by public money. They are not there to make money, they are there to provide quality education to Australia's youth, at a cost that makes them available to anyone regardless of their economic status."
They aren't wholly public. No public institutions provide YOU with what YOU want because YOU aren't paying for it. They provide the GOVERNMENT with what the GOVERNMENT wants because the GOVERNMENT is paying for it.
"e) Again, nonsense. This is where free market economics fails, and fails badly."
This is where your rhetoric went up 10 levels.
"The power of competition doesnt work in this scenario because of patents. Drug companies own patents on novel treatments effectively handing a monopoly to that company who can then charge whatever the hell they want for it."
Once again you're arguing my point. Since when did a free market have patents in it?
"Additionally, it's actually not in pharmaceutical companies best interests to research new
This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
I've worked/lived in Toronto, and New York City. My advice is this: Get a job in the target country first. Play your cards right, and your new employer will pay for your move and help you jump through the customs/immigration hurdles.
- The Kessel run is for nerf herders. I can circumnavigate the entire Central Finite Curve in a lot less than 12 parse
If you haven't seen this website yet, it has a ton of tech jobs for BC, mostly in Vancouver.
http://www.bctechnology.com/
click on Tech Careers, then Job Search.
Besides, when someone at a party asks you what you do for a living, which is the cooler answer:
- [_] "I'm a software architect."
- [_] "I'm a software engineer"
- [X] "I'm a writer."
Heh. I usually say "software engineer" - doesn't usually go down too badly, responses vary greatly - I'd say about 40% impressed, 40% indifferent, and 30% disgusted. Inventing something "cool" is all very well if you've got the mental agility to field the inevitable follow-up questions without blowing your cover.Generally though, I find the subject of what people do for a living to be something that should be touched on briefly and then moved swiftly on from... a room full of people saying "so what do you do?" is a sure sign of a lousy party.
a) Alright then, they spend more per capita as well - The United States also ranks far ahead of other OECD countries in terms of total health spending per
capita, with spending of 6,401 USD (adjusted for purchasing power parity), more than twice the OECD
average of 2,759 USD in 2005. Yes, private is efficient, markets are efficient, I'm not contesting that. What I'm saying is that for essential public services, efficiency is not the only key factor. I believe that some things just aren't suited to a business model, things such as the provision of healthcare and education.
b) How is having a full fee paying system going to provide fairness of access to people from all socio-economic backgrounds?
e) Well tell that to them since they are THE most profitable (marginal revenue vs marginal cost), industry. Hell yeah they are, and yet they spend less and less on R&D each year, and more on marketing.
Healthcare in the US is not a free market system, but it is a closer model to a free market than what we have here. Drug prices there are set by the market. So, if you're poor and you need expensive chemo for example, who's going to pay for it? Your private health insurance provided by your employer? Too bad you got laid off a few months ago due to the slump in the US economy.
I'm not an economics expert by any stretch of the imagination, but I have my firm beliefs that market driven models with no regulation or government intervention have no place in the provision of public services. There is just a fundamental conflict of interest there between the needs and interests of a community, and those of the company that is supposed to be supplying that service, who are interested in delivering good returns for their investors.
Thanks for the debate.
It's called hyperbole; Learn it - live it - love it.
http://imgs.xkcd.com/comics/canada.png
Real translation: We're inflating this person's review so you take them off our hands. Please? Pretty please?
Well, if you write code, you're a writer.
If you also write design documents, you're a writer.
If you write code, you're a writer. After all, code can be copyrighted, just like anything else someone authors.
Think of it - a project SHOULD start out with certain documents - specs, overview, guidelines, detailed instructions on the data, the acceptable methods of interfacing with the data, etc. That's a lot more than just slapping some code together with a few comments and throwing it over the wall for the unwashed hordes to bang their heads on. That takes a writer, not just a code monkey.
Moving between countries?
Ok, having done this 4 times so far, let me offer you the following.
1. There are two types of situations, the first is where many people can get visas under their own steam, the second is where you need the employers sponsorship for the visa.
In the first (eg. the UK), no-one will talk to you until you get there (unless you have previously worked there). They want you to front up before they take you seriously. There are plenty of other people who can get visas on their lonesome and they are usually not willing to consider sponsorship.
In the second (ie. strong visa countries that won't let you get off the plane if your purpose is to *look* for work - the US is an example), you'll have to do phone interviews as a screening process and then probably go for a face-to-face follow up. Phone interviews are awful, video conferencing is in every way worse. You can't gauge what's really going on unless you are prepared to do the face to face.
2. When you get the job and move to a weak visa country (ie. one where you can get the visa yourself), just go. Don't embedd yourself too much in the country at first, just take your credit cards, keep your home country bank accounts open and use them at first. Get an accountant and set up the minimally legal setup. It's just too much trouble to do more than that.
Take a written reference from your existing bank manager, you might need that to open a new bank account.
And make sure you consult your foreign accountant months before you leave so you can tie everything up nice. In quite a few countries you can end up with extra tax bills if you stay even a day into a new tax year.
3. If you're going to a strong visa country however (where the employer has to sponsor your visa) ask them to provide you with legal assistance as a *minimum* for relocation. You can bear the actual costs yourself, but you *will* need guidance when you get there. Make them provide it even if they won't pay shipping, housing and other things
4. Make sure you understand housing, medical and especially schooling costs (if you have children) and build them into your compensation. In weak visa countries you'll just have to compare those costs to your market value and charge accordingly
In strong visa countries, you might end up being able to negotiate them as part of your package.
5. Get a serviced apartment at first, but get out of it fast. They're expensive. Don't bother with hotels, they're uncomfortable and impractical.
6. When you first go there, pack an office. A laptop with wifi and a small portable scanner. This will allow you to operate a job search from places like Starbucks. I can't stress this enough, it's vital. Don't worry too much about power cables, most power supplies have a "figure-8" cord that is detachable from the transformer. Buy a local cable when you get there.
7. Consult an accountant *before* you leave Australia. Australian tax law has a quirk in it that means you can - in certain circumstances, Europe and the UK particularly - end up paying tax twice. The best thing to do is to ensure that you gain non-tax resident status the instant you get on the plane. An Australian tax accountant can explain this.
8. Getting jobs in weak visa countries - ie. where you get your own visa and just show up.
Contact a few agents a couple of months before you go, send them your CV and stay in touch. A phone call once every couple of weeks is fine. The probably won't pay much attention, but you might get lucky. A week before you arrive, arrange a meeting with them.
Once you're in front of them things will go much smoother.
9. Plan for about 6 weeks before you land a job, and at least 4 weeks beyond that before you get paid. You'll need to support yourself in temporary accomodation through that period as you'll be unable to get a lease.
Which leads me to:- find out how the rental mark