They do background checks sometimes with the employer.Boviesam said:I was wondering how the CIC makes sure that the job duties of the applicants match whats written in the job duties of the NOC code. I mean the applicant might be doing something else and showing something else in the file.
They can do various spot checks including looking through information online, calling the employer, visiting the employer, etc.Boviesam said:I was wondering how the CIC makes sure that the job duties of the applicants match whats written in the job duties of the NOC code. I mean the applicant might be doing something else and showing something else in the file.
This is the whole reason why they take their sweet time to process and issue PR. They will know it, trust me.Boviesam said:I was wondering how the CIC makes sure that the job duties of the applicants match whats written in the job duties of the NOC code. I mean the applicant might be doing something else and showing something else in the file.
I checked with so many friends and one expert and some say it's matching 70-75% and some say 50%StAnger said:This is the whole reason why they take their sweet time to process and issue PR. They will know it, trust me.
Anything more than 50 should be a done deal. 100 percent will raise eyebrows.vineshparekh said:I checked with so many friends and one expert and some say it's matching 70-75% and some say 50%
So I am submitting documents on the trust that it is matching what CIC is looking for.
Don't know how they evaluate job duties.
This becomes the most complicated part by working in big companies. Can CIC reject on the basis of not matching duties completely or they give you a chance to submit additional documents if they want to have more clarification?
This is my question exactly. My company's policy is they only write employment letters with official duties that accompanied my employment contract but they describe my job in a very generic and vague manner. It hardly matches my NOC and what I actually did.vineshparekh said:This becomes the most complicated part by working in big companies. Can CIC reject on the basis of not matching duties completely or they give you a chance to submit additional documents if they want to have more clarification?
I don't think a letter from a colleague can work and no letter needs to be a notarized.alex_dinou said:This is my question exactly. My company's policy is they only write employment letters with official duties that accompanied my employment contract but they describe my job in a very generic and vague manner. It hardly matches my NOC and what I actually did.
Do you think that getting a notarized statement about my real duties from one of my colleagues along with the employment letter would suffice?
Excellent answer!StAnger said:Anything more than 50 should be a done deal. 100 percent will raise eyebrows.
You have to show he is the head of the Department/team/group you work in. I guess that is on his business card. Then you state the team you work in. If they match you have proved he is your supervisor.swsood1686 said:I am getting reference letter from my supervisor whk supervised me for 1 year since a joined and now upon my request he is ready to sign the letter but on plane paper. I wll attach his id card copy and his business card.plus i will attach copy of my offer letter, work contract, payslips, bank stat id card copy... .. will that do?
Also, how i can prove that he was my supervisor?
Pls guide me