lohit said:
Thanks for the reply xpressentry. How tedious is the documentation? Can you throw some light on the procedure of the entire PR process?
Thanks again!
You need IELTS, ECA, reference letters, PCC, bank statements, medical, photographs and visas and stamps of your passports.
You need to take the IELTS. The consultant wont take it for you
For ECA, you have to get the transcripts from your university and give it to the consultant. The consultant will just create an account and post it. The consultant will not contact your university for transcripts.
For reference letters, you have to contact the employer and collect it from them. The consultant wont contact your employers, chase after them and collect them.
For PCC, you have to present yourself to the police or PSK. the consultant wont physically do it for you.
For bank statements, you have to go the bank. The consultant cant get bank letters for you as you are the account holder.
For photographs, you have to click your own and give it to the consultant
For medical, you have to go to the clinic. The consultant wont go for you.
Basically, you are doing all the legwork for your application. You are going to the university for transcripts. You are going to collect reference letters, get PCC and bank statements, click a photograph and visit a doctor.
All the consultant is doing is filling up a form for you, posting stuff to the ECA provider and scanning documents. If you have done all the hard work, cant you fill the form, post stuff and scan documents? Do you think it is worth spending lakhs to have someone else fill a form, post stuff and scan documents when you can do it yourself and save yourself that money?
The consultant doesnt have a magic wand that will make your application any more successful than if you did it on your own.
Some consultants dont even give you log in details of your profile. You have no control over your application and are at their mercy throughout.
If your case is complicated like having a pending separation or divorce, custody issues, crime then go for an IRCC regulated lawyer.