Hi everyone,
I graduated a 3-year tech program from a college in Ontario this April with good grades and even some awards. By the end of our program only 3 out of the original 15 International students remained, and I didn't know who the other 2 were because they were in Academic Year 2, while I was on co-op. So I didn't network with them and cannot tell how they are faring.
I wasn't able to dive straight into job searching right after graduation due to family issues that I had to travel to resolve. I've been seriously looking for jobs that are directly related to what I went to school for since Sep and it's been slow going with only a couple of interviews so far.
I got my PGWP for 3 years starting Aug19 so there's been some silver lining at least.
The main thing I could use some help with is how to make myself more enticing to hire to prospective employers. Currently, even with a combination of good college work experience, good grades, good resume (as vetted by my Canadian friends), program awards and decent written and oral communication skills I find myself submitting tailored cover letters to every employer but not receiving as many responses, interviews or offers. As I see it, I am doing the maximum in my power to make myself look good for jobs (aside from going to the employer in person). Any tips or info would be greatly appreciated!!
Some things to note, I am willing to relocate, but I have limited funds and would have to terminate a lease so the job would definitely have to be worth it. On that note how high in demand does your vocation have to be to encourage employers to cherry pick you for a job from another province? Is there an efficient way to apply to jobs in other provinces? I would love to travel more but...
I have a vehicle and a G, so that's not too much of a consideration and should be a positive to whoever cares about that.
I would also like to point out that there's no one in Canada looking after my direct welfare anymore, it truly feels like I'm on my own since all of my Citizen friends have moved on but I'm still new to everything. So getting help and advice is not easy for me anymore.
On an unrelated note, while i realize the value adding diversity to your company can provide, why would an employer choose to pick a non-Canadian for a job offer if they have the same credentials? This, in combination with graduating a kinda difficult course (went from 150 students to like, 30) makes me feel that picking something to study that I actually wanted to do for a living was a bad idea. Maybe I should try to get my PR as fast as I can and then go back to school on taxpayer money for something cool and useless, but still makes you a lot of money (real estate, anyone?).
My first post, please go easy, and I didn't proofread it
Sincerely,
R.G.
I graduated a 3-year tech program from a college in Ontario this April with good grades and even some awards. By the end of our program only 3 out of the original 15 International students remained, and I didn't know who the other 2 were because they were in Academic Year 2, while I was on co-op. So I didn't network with them and cannot tell how they are faring.
I wasn't able to dive straight into job searching right after graduation due to family issues that I had to travel to resolve. I've been seriously looking for jobs that are directly related to what I went to school for since Sep and it's been slow going with only a couple of interviews so far.
I got my PGWP for 3 years starting Aug19 so there's been some silver lining at least.
The main thing I could use some help with is how to make myself more enticing to hire to prospective employers. Currently, even with a combination of good college work experience, good grades, good resume (as vetted by my Canadian friends), program awards and decent written and oral communication skills I find myself submitting tailored cover letters to every employer but not receiving as many responses, interviews or offers. As I see it, I am doing the maximum in my power to make myself look good for jobs (aside from going to the employer in person). Any tips or info would be greatly appreciated!!
Some things to note, I am willing to relocate, but I have limited funds and would have to terminate a lease so the job would definitely have to be worth it. On that note how high in demand does your vocation have to be to encourage employers to cherry pick you for a job from another province? Is there an efficient way to apply to jobs in other provinces? I would love to travel more but...
I have a vehicle and a G, so that's not too much of a consideration and should be a positive to whoever cares about that.
I would also like to point out that there's no one in Canada looking after my direct welfare anymore, it truly feels like I'm on my own since all of my Citizen friends have moved on but I'm still new to everything. So getting help and advice is not easy for me anymore.
On an unrelated note, while i realize the value adding diversity to your company can provide, why would an employer choose to pick a non-Canadian for a job offer if they have the same credentials? This, in combination with graduating a kinda difficult course (went from 150 students to like, 30) makes me feel that picking something to study that I actually wanted to do for a living was a bad idea. Maybe I should try to get my PR as fast as I can and then go back to school on taxpayer money for something cool and useless, but still makes you a lot of money (real estate, anyone?).
My first post, please go easy, and I didn't proofread it
Sincerely,
R.G.