Hi everyone.
I moved to Canada from India last year in October. Coming from a tropical zone to the winters of Canada was tough, but the people here are warm enough to make your stay pleasant.
I have written about my experiences in finding a job during winters in Canada in another thread.
Here I focus on how Canadian employers expect candidates to talk during interviews.
Last year, I cleared the 23rd interview I appeared for. Since then, I have shifted one more job (full-time) and cleared the first opportunity I was called to interview for. This is my experience, but I hope it helps young job seekers who are new to job sector in Canada.
What I was doing wrong:
I was too operational in my explanation - just talking about what I did and what I was good at. I was good with my work, but the employer was not able to see a team player, and an excellent communicator in me. Yes, they don't just write it in their job description. They actually expect candidates to be great with English.
What I modified:
I started being more conversational. I allowed the recruiter take his/her own time before coming to job-specific questions, which I was confident I was good at already. This has taken my job search efforts up a notch.
For reference, you may check this piece which I found really helpful to prepare for interviews especially in Canada:
https://www.dg.ca/blog/how-to-talk-during-an-interview
Everyone's journey is different. This experience is just to provide you a foreground as to what to expect being questioned in an interview. A couple of times I have been told they are "surprised" to find my English so good. You have to understand that from a Canadian employer's perspective too: a number of immigrants land in the country under refugee status, with no real experience in a professional setting, or in professional communication in English language.
It is these things that are assessed in an interview. The way you open your conversation, and especially, the way you close it will be more important than the number of years of professional experience on your resume.
Hope it helps. If there is anything else I may supply some input on, kindly let me know.
Wish you all the very best in your job search in this beautiful country.
Thanks.
I moved to Canada from India last year in October. Coming from a tropical zone to the winters of Canada was tough, but the people here are warm enough to make your stay pleasant.
I have written about my experiences in finding a job during winters in Canada in another thread.
Here I focus on how Canadian employers expect candidates to talk during interviews.
Last year, I cleared the 23rd interview I appeared for. Since then, I have shifted one more job (full-time) and cleared the first opportunity I was called to interview for. This is my experience, but I hope it helps young job seekers who are new to job sector in Canada.
What I was doing wrong:
I was too operational in my explanation - just talking about what I did and what I was good at. I was good with my work, but the employer was not able to see a team player, and an excellent communicator in me. Yes, they don't just write it in their job description. They actually expect candidates to be great with English.
What I modified:
I started being more conversational. I allowed the recruiter take his/her own time before coming to job-specific questions, which I was confident I was good at already. This has taken my job search efforts up a notch.
For reference, you may check this piece which I found really helpful to prepare for interviews especially in Canada:
https://www.dg.ca/blog/how-to-talk-during-an-interview
Everyone's journey is different. This experience is just to provide you a foreground as to what to expect being questioned in an interview. A couple of times I have been told they are "surprised" to find my English so good. You have to understand that from a Canadian employer's perspective too: a number of immigrants land in the country under refugee status, with no real experience in a professional setting, or in professional communication in English language.
It is these things that are assessed in an interview. The way you open your conversation, and especially, the way you close it will be more important than the number of years of professional experience on your resume.
Hope it helps. If there is anything else I may supply some input on, kindly let me know.
Wish you all the very best in your job search in this beautiful country.
Thanks.