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DV 2016 OC Selectees

How early does everyone suggest being for the interview. I keep seeing how everyone has there's really early in the morning. But mine isn't till 1:45pm on the 2nd of Feb in Auckland. So yeah, not sure what time I should be there at.
 
How early does everyone suggest being for the interview. I keep seeing how everyone has there's really early in the morning. But mine isn't till 1:45pm on the 2nd of Feb in Auckland. So yeah, not sure what time I should be there at.

Don't think it's necessary to rock up too early. The Sydney consulate recommended not getting there earlier than 15 mins before.
 
I loved Nashville so much. I have a Johnny Cash tattoo so went and spent a couple of hours in the museum. And we got to see a minor league baseball match while we were there which was - in so many ways - more exciting and interest than the majors.
 
Hi all,

It's so exciting reading your stories here. What a rad bunch of adventurers.

So today I have a story, and a question:

Story:
I thought I'd quickly recount our interview story (a little more) as there was a weird issue at the start.
We got to our interview on time and were asked to wait outside until they were open (it was early morning). Then into the first room, which is the security checkpoint – they asked for my name and my husband's, and then they asked him to wait outside. We were both pretty surprised, because obviously he's coming with me to the US and needed to be interviewed, but he waited out in the waiting area with his documents (I asked if I should take them up to the consulate, but they said no). Then, when I arrived upstairs, the woman behind the desk asked for my passport, and then she said 'There's supposed to be two of you here today.' I said, 'I know! My husband's waiting downstairs!' She looked at me strangely, and asked, 'Why would they make him do that?' 'I have no idea,' I answered, and then she was on the phone ordering the people downstairs to bring him up immediately. Which they did, and then we were admitted to the consular area, and then our interview went pretty much as smoothly as everyone else's: First window, pay, fingerprints, second window, a couple of questions about where we were going (New York) and if we'd ever been in trouble with the law (nope – apart from a speeding ticket a long time ago). Then, the CO said that our doctor had filled out the forms incorrectly, so we were put on AP while we waited for her to complete them properly, and once that had been done (about a week later) we received our passports with the visas in them pretty quickly.
Just thought I'd share that story, as I thought the fact that they wouldn't let my husband in initially was weird. There was no explanation in the end, and it all turned out fine, so it must have just been a human error, I guess.

Question:
My work has asked me to stay past my visa expiry date, so we have to do an activation trip to Hawaii before April. Is one week long enough there? I want to go into a social security office and get that stuff underway, too.

Thanks guys!
 
One day is enough to activate!

You don't need to go into the Social Security. The number automatically goes to your POE address. Trust me, the wait in the SSO is interesting from an anthropological perspective but it's not somewhere you want to spend any length of time.
 
Hey everyone, 2 weeks to my interview. Nervous/excited.

I feel like I'm over thinking EVERYTHING, I always do this, but what sorta dress code does one suggest wearing to the interview. Is it more like business casual?
 
Dress code varies. Some have turned up in full suits. Others (like @AussieGemma's husband) have turned up in casual shorts. Both were approved without issue.

As long as you are clean, I think dress code is pretty irrelevant in Sydney (Sydney is a relaxed consulate though). For us, I wore a dress with flats, my husband wore a short sleeve collared shirt and chinos, the kids were in jeans and shirts. Tidy but definitely not business attire.
 
Dress code varies. Some have turned up in full suits. Others (like @AussieGemma's husband) have turned up in casual shorts. Both were approved without issue.

As long as you are clean, I think dress code is pretty irrelevant in Sydney (Sydney is a relaxed consulate though). For us, I wore a dress with flats, my husband wore a short sleeve collared shirt and chinos, the kids were in jeans and shirts. Tidy but definitely not business attire.

Thank you :) I was considering just wearing tidy jeans and like a dressier top & blazer and it would look tidy. But I wasn't sure if that was a no and I should just dress fully business like. Thank you :)

I stress about the tiniest things :oops:
 
Thank you :) I was considering just wearing tidy jeans and like a dressier top & blazer and it would look tidy. But I wasn't sure if that was a no and I should just dress fully business like. Thank you :)

I stress about the tiniest things :oops:

If a CO is pondering someone's finances or employability, dressing poorly could push a 50/50 call in the wrong direction. I think it's better to dress-up to fractionally improve your chances.
 
they asked for my name and my husband's, and then they asked him to wait outside. We were both pretty surprised, because obviously he's coming with me to the US and needed to be interviewed, but he waited out in the waiting area with his documents (I asked if I should take them up to the consulate, but they said no). Then, when I arrived upstairs, the woman behind the desk asked for my passport, and then she said 'There's supposed to be two of you here today.' I said, 'I know! My husband's waiting downstairs!' She looked at me strangely, and asked, 'Why would they make him do that?' 'I have no idea,' I answered, and then she was on the phone ordering the people downstairs to bring him up immediately. Which they did

Strange story. Must've been someone's first day at work!
 
If a CO is pondering someone's finances or employability, dressing poorly could push a 50/50 call in the wrong direction. I think it's better to dress-up to fractionally improve your chances.

That's what I was worried about. I have some more formal stuff that I'm thinking I should go just to be safe. Don't wanna take any risks at all with this.
 
If a CO is pondering someone's finances or employability, dressing poorly could push a 50/50 call in the wrong direction. I think it's better to dress-up to fractionally improve your chances.

But does wearing a cheap $200 suit make you look better for those purposes than a $600 pair of designer jeans teamed with $200 t-shirt? ;)

Personally, unless your clothes are threadbare and your toes are poking through the worn fronts of your shoes I really don't think it makes any difference at all, but people need to do what they feel most comfortable with at interview. Some people dress like it's a job interview, if that makes them feel better/more confident then that's great.
 
One day is enough to activate!

You don't need to go into the Social Security. The number automatically goes to your POE address. Trust me, the wait in the SSO is interesting from an anthropological perspective but it's not somewhere you want to spend any length of time.
OK, but say work asked you how long you needed to be in Hawaii and offered to pay for it... You'd probs need at least a week, right?

Ha, point taken re SSO.

Thanks @EmilyW
 
Thank you :) I was considering just wearing tidy jeans and like a dressier top & blazer and it would look tidy. But I wasn't sure if that was a no and I should just dress fully business like. Thank you :)

I stress about the tiniest things :oops:

I wore black jeans and a blazer to my interview and all was good, so go for it! You'll knock 'em dead. ;)
 
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