
Hello fellow gaijin`s,
Just wondering how does everybody rate Hello Work and has anybody been successful in finding a job through their system.
Thank you.


[/font][/color]
Hot Topics | |
---|---|
I think in the Kansai area especially there is not a large means for finding work. Would you rate going to a recruitment agency or perhaps contacting companies directly?Doctor Stop wrote:I wouldn`t waste my time there.
Hokuto-shinken wrote:So you would advice getting a professional business card made even though you don`t have a job? At the moment I don`t have a job but I would like to work in an office as a programmer, system engineer or in personnel. Do you think system engineer「]
It will be quite difficult to get an HR job in Kansai without speaking very fluent Japanese. Nothing is impossible, but the likelihood is....small. Finding work as a programmer or system engineer is more likely, so I would probably put both of those on the card under your name.
The card doesn't need to be anything fancy at all. A good quality (ie not too thin!) white card with crisp black lettering is perfect. Have it done in English on one side and Japanese on the other. On the English side have your name first/last like you would in English, and on the Japanese side have it last/first like you would in Japanese. Include your contact email (ideally not webmail) and a phone number or two, maybe your home number and a keitai. If you have a resume online then you might want to include the address, but maybe not depending on how much personal info you wish to give out.
Next get a simple business card holder to keep them in, and carry them with you always. (Don't keep them in your wallet, try to keep them looking good and unbent.) If you meet someone you can give them a card. If you don't have a card you will be scrambling for pen and a scrap of paper, and the paper will probably end up lost or forgotten, and it never looks professional. If you give someone a business card they will put it in their card holder and then file it away later for further reference.Hokuto-shinken wrote:Sometimes I think to myself, ARE there really jobs out there, but I am sure there must be. I reside in the Kansai area and I don` t think there are that many opportunities to engage in social networking.
CrankyBastard wrote:I got a job through them about 30 years ago. Actually, they were'nt called 'HalloWork' then but had a desk in the local ward office.
The job was only temporary, but I enjoyed it.
It was a position that required English corresponcence and was located in the animal quarantine complex in Yokohama, and it paid 200,000 yen per month.
I would be at the office from 8:45am to 5:00pm for five days a week for seven months.
During the whole seven months I wrote three letters. The rest of the time I spent fishing from the quay next to the quarantine station.
CrankyBastard wrote:Well, yes that was back in the early seventies. Things have changed since then obviously, but not so much that if you're prepared to try anything, and whatever doesn't pan out, you're willing to put down to experience, then you will succeed here in Japan just as you could anywhere.
Good Luck.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests