Practical Advice

Bad job advice: “You have to be in New Zealand to find work”

Have you ever heard someone say: “You have to be in New Zealand to find work”? This is incomplete and potentially harmful advice because it is missing an effective strategy.

Why is this statement literally untrue?

Because many people are getting hired online. For those people, the flight into NZ includes a work visa in their hand. For example 80% of my clients are hired online today. Therefore, the above statement is not true.

Why is this statement potentially harmful?

I sometimes receive calls from migrant job-seekers who came to New Zealand because someone told them that they need to be in New Zealand to find work. Then when their arrive, they discover that making meetings is not automatically easier. Employers still need to be contacted, be interested, and be motivated enough to make an invitation. Only a few migrants realise how much can be achieved in the migrant’s home country.

What other bad advice is out there?:

1) You need to find an accredited employer to find work – not true
2) You need to hire an agent to get work – not true
3) You need to be on a shortage list, critical skills or green list to find work – not true
4) You need to be in New Zealand in order to find work – not true

The above statements often cause unnecessary delays and confusion but the truth offers a simple approach. It is all about the job offer. When you have a valid job offer, all of the other aspects of migration will unfold naturally from that point. The job offer is the most important part of a successful migration effort because the job enables the work visa, the income, residency compliance, professional opportunity, quality of lifestyle, people networks, etc…

How can good planning bring success to job finding efforts?

Let’s be honest, finding a job in a new country is a big challenge. Most people find it stressful just to change jobs within a home country, but foreign job seekers are changing not only their jobs, but also their country, their home, leaving behind friends and family to find a new life in a new culture with their partner and children forever. A project of this size and this importance surely deserves to have an excellent, well-considered plan.

Stepping into momentum without any initial risk

I have been giving migrants insights and advice about the NZ and Australian job markets for over 14-years. In that time, I have learned how to succeed with about every role, industry and region imaginable. I offer this to job seekers in support of a successful journey. If you want to have helpful feedback in support of your job finding efforts, just send your CV to my email at tate@employmentforimmigraiton.nz – I will help you map out your journey home, or at least provide initial direction at no cost.

Everyone Need Encouragement

Happy New Year 2023

Most of us have experienced challenges in the past 2-3 years.  Those challenges are now behind us. Market optimism is up, job activity is up, confidence is returning… I believe that we are entering a great new year and I wish you the best that 2023 has to offer.

This photo comes from the Marlborough Sounds, not far from where I live. It symbolises the calm beauty that life gives to us when we are going places.

Job Finding Stories

Factory Foreman / Production Manager Success Story

It hasn’t been easy to immigrate into New Zealand in recent years. Andries and Nilene came up against every possible challenge and overcame them all.

Consider the biggest challenges of the last 2+ years:

  1. Lockdowns
  2. Mandates
  3. Sudden changes in immigration policy
  4. Changes in immigration law
  5. Job offer rescinded unexpectedly by an employer

How do you overcome so many roadblocks before getting completely demoralised?

Market Updates

OPPORTUNITY “How to Get Work in NZ – AUS”

Holiday Strategy 2022 / 2023 – It happens only once per year. The post-holiday hiring boom is worth preparing for. Enter the job boom with confidence!

If you want to attend this 10-part Mini Course at no cost, I just need to see your CV first, to check your best strategy into the country so I know you are not wasting your time with this strategy.

Send your CV to me at tate@employmentforimmigration.nz for a response within a day.

Market Updates

Good news – Partner Work Visa Changes Deferred

Looks like good news to me. This was a huge area of disappointment for many of my clients – now being deferred until April 2023.

This gives INZ time to allow a reasonable transition towards raising the bar for skilled immigrants again.

Because INZ has been raising the bar on immigrants for several decades now, the best time to migrate is always “right now”!

Read more here – https://www.immigration.govt.nz/about-us/media-centre/news-notifications/changes-to-partner-work-visas-deferred-to-april-2023/view
And here – https://www.beehive.govt.nz/release/changes-partner-work-visas-deferred-april-2023

Practical Advice

CHALLENGE “How to Get Work in NZ – AUS”

Every Job-seeker has a unique and customised strategy – The hiring decision depends on two people: 1) the job-seeker and 2) the hiring manager. Both have needs that match and both benefit from a good hiring decision. The job market is just a collection of hiring decisions.

Practical Advice

INTRODUCTION “How to Get Work in NZ – AUS”

If you can answer these 3 questions successfully, you will get work. You will be successful at finding work in any country, any industry, any role. My system and support uses universal principles that apply to any competitive job market.

http://www.employmentforimmigration.nz

If you want to attend this 10-part Mini Course at no cost, I just need to see your CV and if you could also let me know your immigration status and goals, I will respond within a day.

Send to me at tate@employmentforimmigration.nz

Job Finding Stories

Christo’s Long and Positive Journey Into New Zealand

A successful immigration story about a talented tradesman who came up against many delays and challenges, but he never stopped smiling.

“You definitely need to have a positive attitude and energy to go through this journey. You will get your ups and downs. For me, you must always take your downs and turn them into positives.”

– Christo
Market Updates

Millionaire Migration Map

A few interesting facts about millionaire migrants:

1) Little New Zealand is getting half as many millionaire migrants as the United States while having only 1.5% of the population.

2) The only country receiving more millionaires than Australia is the UAE but since the UAE almost never allows citizenship, Australia will end up getting some of those as well.

3) NZ + Australia receives 4,300 millionaire migrants compared to 2,500 that US + Canada, which is like saying NZ + Australia get 170% more millionaires than the US + Canada with only 8% of the population.

Insights from the Millionaire Migration Map – If millionaires are generally smart and capable people who have the ability to live almost anywhere, then why so many want to live in New Zealand and Australia?

And can we enjoy some of the same benefits of peace, nature, opportunity, weather, family, culture, future, etc… as they do?

Market Updates

New Zealand is still New Zealand

After landing in New Zealand, foreign migrants typically comment about the friendliness of Kiwis, the cleanliness of the city, the beauty of the nature and the safe, relaxed nature of society. New Zealand is also one of the few genuinely “kid friendly” countries in the world. Job seekers have said these to me this week after landing in New Zealand and the same things were said also last month and last year and during lockdowns and before lockdowns for many years prior. New Zealand hasn’t changed.

During lockdowns, the reputation of New Zealand has been tarnished and dragged through the mud. In many cases, this is deserved. However, policies from our government don’t reflect the New Zealand society. I can offer proof of this statement based on what incoming migrants have been telling me.

I can respect the opinions of people who have been financially and professionally harmed by the bad polices of our government during lockdowns. But who is really to blame. It was a tiny few people in certain government departments who created and enforced bad policy.

New Zealand is still the best country for all those reasons that people have always loved about New Zealand. Those things have remained remarkably constant for many decades.

In my opinion and based on the informal opinion polls that I receive from new migrants; New Zealand is still the best country for all those reasons that people have always loved about New Zealand. Change is always happening, but those things have remained remarkably constant for many decades.