I guess the issue is with your job position, Business Analyst. As to my personal knowledge, this position is half technical and half business related, so it does require some specific knowledge and understanding of Canadian economy and business.nidakh said:I guess you did not read my assumptions.....As I said I am very good at my job and have at least three to four recruiters tell me that if I just had a month or two of Canadian experience things could be very different......IT is more than technical knowledge specifically outside India.....I am a Business Analyst......I am not saying I am perfect but I am pretty damn sure I am very good at my job and I have strong and successful professional career working for an American Software Company developing and enhancing their leading software for top tier American Insurance Companies....My company considered me one of the pillars of their team....Having said all this 8)
I just wanted to have a positive discussion about how I can improve my job search and some motivation from people who might have gone through similar situations before they landed a job.......People keep telling me you take on an average of 6 months to land a decent job and I just thought what better place to discuss this other than this fourm
Very accurate and on point. Your resume will not pass the "HR round" if it doesn't contain the keywords they are looking for.moelaghil said:- Another problem is how the online job sites filter some of the resumes, your resume might get missed if they don't share some keywords with the job posting. The solution to that is to tailor your resume for each position. If you use a generic resume to apply to jobs, I won't be surprised if you don't have any luck. Quality over quantity.
- Cover letters speak more about you as a candidate then a resume does. Everyone can make a good resume, but a cover letter is hard to nail since it involves a decent amount of research about the company, business and the job duties.
Thanks for the inputs....My Resume to begin with was not great but over the past few months it has evolved into a decent one and I have tried to use the typical key words, the ones usually companies are looking for, obviously the ones that I have experience withmoelaghil said:I might not be the best person to give advice in this manner since I graduated from a Canadian university and at the time of graduation I had 16 months of Co-op experience, but maybe what I have to say might be useful to you. I am an electrical and computer engineer working in automation and information systems (kinda/sorta similar to IT). Finding a job in Canada is not a simple task for anyone, me included. I was lucky that one of the companies I worked for a Co-op student liked me so they offered me a contract to work on a project. During the time I was working as a contractor I applied everywhere. When I say everywhere I mean everywhere. It got to the point that one time I got a call from a company and I had no idea what the company was/what they do.
- I found out that a very large percentage of the jobs out there don't necessarily mean they are hiring. They are just baiting the hook to see if their perfect candidate will bite.
- Another problem is how the online job sites filter some of the resumes, your resume might get missed if they don't share some keywords with the job posting. The solution to that is to tailor your resume for each position. If you use a generic resume to apply to jobs, I won't be surprised if you don't have any luck. Quality over quantity.
- Cover letters speak more about you as a candidate then a resume does. Everyone can make a good resume, but a cover letter is hard to nail since it involves a decent amount of research about the company, business and the job duties.
- Job/career fairs is where I had the most luck. Selling myself when speaking face to face with a recruiter is far easier then hoping my resume gets picked out of the giant lot that recruiters have to see.
nidakh said:Thanks for the inputs....My Resume to begin with was not great but over the past few months it has evolved into a decent one and I have tried to use the typical key words, the ones usually companies are looking for, obviously the ones that I have experience with
Cover Letter is something I think I haven't laid much stress on and probably I have to work on!
Job fairs is something I haven't tried yet!
Thanks will surely try these tips......So I have really good references from my employers and American clients but what is the best time to showcase these because I guess they are only asked for when you have cleared a round or two....Is there any other way??moelaghil said:When it comes to building your resume, use action statements (google it). My understanding is that you did a lot for your previous employer and therefore action statements will be perfect for you. Limit your resume to 2 pages max with no cluttering. Your resume needs to be visually appealing, if the indentation is not consistent, font is to small or even if the margins or font don't make sense your resume could be thrown away.
What I have done in the past is, come up with 8 to 9 really good statements for every section in my resume that highlight my qualities. When I apply for a job I would only pick 3 of these 8 to 9 statements depending on the job posting and what they are looking for. This helps in tailoring the resume for a specific job, apply for more jobs while preventing cluttering of the resume.
As for reference letters from your previous employer/colleagues.
nidakh said:Thanks will surely try these tips......So I have really good references from my employers and American clients but what is the best time to showcase these because I guess they are only asked for when you have a cleared a or round two....Is there any other way??
andremarques19751 said:I would like to add my 2 cents in this topic.
I am on a Open Work Permit for 2yrs, NOC 2171.
The first job I got here in Canada after 1 month searching is as a Programmer making 90K/year. I am in this position right now.
What I had when I got here:
- no canadian experience
- 15 years of experience in IT in Brazil
- Msc in Computer Science in Brazil
- a resume reviewed by a coach to fit local standards
- fluent english (really fluent, you need to be able to understand the recruiter when he calls you, and most likely his english is not the best one, as he is probably an immigrant like you)
What I used:
- indeed.ca - I applied for positions that are announced by the companies, not by headhunters. This is one of the things I learned from the coach
- patience - I was invited to 1 interview on every 20 applications
- start narrow - expand as needed - apply to a position that really fits your knowledge, adapt depending on the outcome
- know your skills - I never applied for DBA, help desk, project manager, open source stuff, although I have experience in all of these. I am a programmer, Microsoft shop - C#,VB.NET. Look for the keywords you are good at
Result:
- I did about 5 interviews and got 3 job offers at the end. Accepted 1, refused the second and the third was too late, I had already accepted the first
- Even many weeks after hired I still received feedback from other applications. It is crazy, sometimes it just take months for them to get back to you. I was hire in Feb2016 and on Aug2016 I was invited to an interview for a position I applied n January 2016. Crazy.
Things I learned:
- They don't care about your visa - all I was asked was - 'are you eligible to legally work in Canada?' That's all. If PR, citizen, work permit, whatever.
- They don't care about your age - I'm 40+, look like 40+, no one ever asked how old I am, they can pretty much infer it by your resume
- They don't care about your nationality - of course they can know that again from resume, but no one cares. My team has 17 people, 2 canadians. 15 who cares.
- They DO care about your english - again, on the first phone call they will know if you can speak or not with the default basic questions - 'why do you move to Canada?' / 'tell me about your career?' / 'where do you see yourself in the next 5 years?' (Really??? Really...)
- They DO care about your skills - you need to know ho to do the things you listed. You need to know well. You might get tested. I did, but not on the one I accepted.
What else:
- I'm now also helping on recruiting IT positions, so I can talk a little bit about the other side (less experience here, but here it goes):
- VERY,VERY,VERY unlikely to get even a call if not in Canada and not eligible to work. I see no sponsorship, no LMIA, no one willing to bet on you. Not impossible, but extremely unlikely...
- I receive about 10 resumes for a position from HR after they knock down around 190 others. From these 10 I select 5 based on experience related to the position (keywords, keywords, I read them all but I use CTRL+F...)
- These 5 will get a call from HR, 2 will be interviewed. Why??? The english of the other 3 was not good enough. I meant it, happens a LOT!!!!
- 2 are interviewed, we select the less weird
So, in a nutshell:
- Be here on a working status, have your English and skills and be normal, that's ALL!
Good luck friends!
Andre
+1 for your inputs......I will try this on my next application!moelaghil said:What I've done in the past is quote excerpts of the reference letters in my cover letters. As in reference the reference letter if that makes any sense to you.
Ok back in the game ... you lifted my mood again, thanksandremarques19751 said:I would like to add my 2 cents in this topic.
I am on a Open Work Permit for 2yrs, NOC 2171.
The first job I got here in Canada after 1 month searching is as a Programmer making 90K/year. I am in this position right now.
What I had when I got here:
- no canadian experience
- 15 years of experience in IT in Brazil
- Msc in Computer Science in Brazil
- a resume reviewed by a coach to fit local standards
- fluent english (really fluent, you need to be able to understand the recruiter when he calls you, and most likely his english is not the best one, as he is probably an immigrant like you)
What I used:
- indeed.ca - I applied for positions that are announced by the companies, not by headhunters. This is one of the things I learned from the coach
- patience - I was invited to 1 interview on every 20 applications
- start narrow - expand as needed - apply to a position that really fits your knowledge, adapt depending on the outcome
- know your skills - I never applied for DBA, help desk, project manager, open source stuff, although I have experience in all of these. I am a programmer, Microsoft shop - C#,VB.NET. Look for the keywords you are good at
Result:
- I did about 5 interviews and got 3 job offers at the end. Accepted 1, refused the second and the third was too late, I had already accepted the first
- Even many weeks after hired I still received feedback from other applications. It is crazy, sometimes it just take months for them to get back to you. I was hire in Feb2016 and on Aug2016 I was invited to an interview for a position I applied n January 2016. Crazy.
Things I learned:
- They don't care about your visa - all I was asked was - 'are you eligible to legally work in Canada?' That's all. If PR, citizen, work permit, whatever.
- They don't care about your age - I'm 40+, look like 40+, no one ever asked how old I am, they can pretty much infer it by your resume
- They don't care about your nationality - of course they can know that again from resume, but no one cares. My team has 17 people, 2 canadians. 15 who cares.
- They DO care about your english - again, on the first phone call they will know if you can speak or not with the default basic questions - 'why do you move to Canada?' / 'tell me about your career?' / 'where do you see yourself in the next 5 years?' (Really??? Really...)
- They DO care about your skills - you need to know ho to do the things you listed. You need to know well. You might get tested. I did, but not on the one I accepted.
What else:
- I'm now also helping on recruiting IT positions, so I can talk a little bit about the other side (less experience here, but here it goes):
- VERY,VERY,VERY unlikely to get even a call if not in Canada and not eligible to work. I see no sponsorship, no LMIA, no one willing to bet on you. Not impossible, but extremely unlikely...
- I receive about 10 resumes for a position from HR after they knock down around 190 others. From these 10 I select 5 based on experience related to the position (keywords, keywords, I read them all but I use CTRL+F...)
- These 5 will get a call from HR, 2 will be interviewed. Why??? The english of the other 3 was not good enough. I meant it, happens a LOT!!!!
- 2 are interviewed, we select the less weird
So, in a nutshell:
- Be here on a working status, have your english and skills and be normal, that's ALL!
Good luck friends!
Andre
teekayx said:Thanks @moelaghil and @andremarques19751[sup][/sup]! Very valid and helpful points.
I hear a lot about Pain Letters replacing the traditional cover letters. How valid and better would it be to have it instead of cover letters.