Not necessarily. If at all - it's applicable for 'Regulated Professions' - which too gets u waivers for the foreign courses attended.Optimist22222 said:Thanks Qorax for the useful info. Indeed survival is more important than ego. One more thing. I have the understanding that Canadian system accepts only Canadian qualifications and in order to succeed, one has to get a degree from Canadian University.
1. Avg 3-4 months. Many get one within the first month itself. Your best bet is to do the 'Co-Op' & go forward.cheetah said:Hi Qorax,
Thank you so much for the info. You really are awesome!!!
There are couple of other things that I would like to know about surviving in Canada.
1. How difficult is to secure a survival job over there ?( The job which helps me pay basic pills like - Food, Transport & Rent for example). Also, what is the average time will it take to find one?
2. What is the avg expenditure that a individual incur per month assuming he is living with bare minimal facilities?
3. Does a survival job be sufficient to cover all the above mentioned bills assuming we work 40hrs/week.
Thank You So much once again!
Be aware that survival jobs are normally only paid at the minimum wage rate / hour.cheetah said:Hi Qorax,
Thanks for the invaluable information. Your answer to point -3 is little concerning me as of now. You were saying that the survival job may not be sufficient for our basic daily expenditure and will contribute to 70% of it. Now, assuming Canada not having a very good job market...I am assuming I might take about 6-14 months to find a intermediate job (which falls in my vertical of experience). So, I would be spending money from my pocket till I get a stable job. Is this situation common among all the immigrants or do some of them are making a living out of the survival jobs?
I live across the river from Quebec (my wife is Québécoise), lets see if those who live in Quebec can give you first hand comments.cheetah said:Hi Baloo - thanks for the link. I am planning to route my visa through the immigrants scheme and I would quality for QUEBEC. Can you please give me an average monthly expenditure for QUEBEC. Qorax has indicated that its between $1600 - $2200 for Canada in general and I think QUEBEC must be little lower than that ( I am not sure though). What are your thoughts on this?
cheetah said:Hi Qorax,
Thanks for the invaluable information. Your answer to point -3 is little concerning me as of now. You were saying that the survival job may not be sufficient for our basic daily expenditure and will contribute to 70% of it. Now, assuming Canada not having a very good job market...I am assuming I might take about 6-14 months to find a intermediate job (which falls in my vertical of experience). So, I would be spending money from my pocket till I get a stable job. Is this situation common among all the immigrants or do some of them are making a living out of the survival jobs?
Baloo is right. However, many get $12-15 in their survival works as well [incidentally all pax in our google-group here got above 12.5/hr.]. Besides, u r looking@a timeframe of 6-12 months for that kind of job. Thereafter, u should be earning modestly till another yr+.Baloo said:Be aware that survival jobs are normally only paid at the minimum wage rate / hour.
http://immipedia.ca/Minimum_wage
Baloo has again given a nice info. Their cost components r given here:cheetah said:Hi Baloo - thanks for the link. I am planning to route my visa through the immigrants scheme and I would quality for QUEBEC. Can you please give me an average monthly expenditure for QUEBEC. Qorax has indicated that its between $1600 - $2200 for Canada in general and I think QUEBEC must be little lower than that ( I am not sure though). What are your thoughts on this?
ankit_20 said:Excuse me if I sound too concentrated around 0213
In my case I have worked in four different areas (same filed but different verticals) and have tried to figure out which of these areas has maximum potential for finding a job.
One thing that I figured out was that even though 38 occupation list managers (0213) actually there is very little chance of finding such role in Canada. The more technical (hands on) you are better are the chances to find the job. A Canadian citizen born in Canada, who is Manager (in my field) with a PMP and high flying certificate in information security told me that they can find too many people in Manager's profile and they are looking for technical people and my best bet would to prepare my self with hands on tech certificates rather than Managerial certs (PMP, ITIL, CISM) if I want to be job ready
Also most of the jobs do not get published these days (recession to blame) so networking with people in the same field and recruiters is going to help a great deal. Also as if you have worked in different areas, pick two most technical areas, do the international certifications around them and start posting on job sites as even before landing. Customer care and Technical Support can be two job profiles that can be targeted till job in own field is available
As rupesh mentioned in one of the posts, soft skills are really important as well. What ever time is there before we land in Canada we should ensure that we work in our current jobs and place our selves to be job ready when we arrive in Canada
Repeat post... replied elsewhere.w3soul said:Dear Qorax
Is it a good practice to contact/ask Settlement agencies in Toronto for job before landing ?
Please give some good settlement agencies in Toronto ?
I am looking for an IT Job there
URGENT PLEASE