LPS said:
You're confused. No one is saying that a supervisor position requires prior experience as a supervisor. But I cannot imagine any case where (a) the industry is considered to be a skilled one, and (b) it's possible to be a supervisor without having prior experience in a more junior role.
Here is an extract from his employment letter:
• Subway Sandwich Artist at our location (Store ####) Address ABC: August 26, 2011 Until April 26, 2012
• Food Service Supervisor at our location (Store # ####) Address ABC : April 27, 2012 Until August 18, 2012
• Food Service Supervisor at our location (Store # ####) Address ABC : August 19 2012 – Present
How is a "Sandwich Artist" for the period from August 2011 - April 2012 (8 months) not a junior position? Supervisor is the next step after a regular sandwich maker. If the officer requested additional docs, he would find out (assuming the candidate is still employed at the Subway), he was with that company for over 2.5 years and over 1.5 years in a supervisor role. He did not claim to be a regional manager right after graduation from college.
If my investment analyst story wasn't convincing enough, here is another one... At the time of my graduation, Target was hiring staff for it's Canadian stores. Briefly, management structure at every Target store is General Manager with 3 assistant managers (one in charge of HR, another for inventories and the third one for internal day-to-day operations). Each assistant manager is in charge of a team of employees. Annual salary: 60,000+ bonuses + benefits. Now, the most important part, job requirements for the Assistant Manager position:
(i) University degree
(ii) Leadership experience (e.g. president of a student organization, etc - not necessarily paid work experience)
I know this for a fact (and I have a job posting if you don't believe me) since I had an interview with them and met hiring HR managers (at the time I had zero work experience and just graduated from a university)
According to NOC 0621, such a position "requires several years of experience". So, according to the logic of that d*ck head officer, a fresh graduate who got accepted to the Assistant Manager Position cannot be working at that position??? But how come HR managers at Target are ready to hire fresh university graduates with zero work experience???
Please tell me how can you find ANY logic in this??