Oh, I am sure you do, Britsimon After telling folks in your blog that DJT becoming President was simply impossible and would just not be happening... Again, I don't blame you, I just think a DV sub-forum for OC applicants seems to be a rather unlikely place to get anything remotely resolved on the matter. Anyways...
Well, if you feel the OC DV sub-forum is the right place and time for these matters... Anyways, DV Applicants from Australia and NZ are probably the ones to be least concerned right now.If you don't like the conversation - feel free to ignore those comments, and comment on other topics. No need to shut people down for expressing their legitimate concerns. Simple really.
Hello everyone - long time! I know I'm a DV2015-er, forgive me for posting here.
Back in the days of DV2015 being a selectee was much more stressful. Hoping and praying each month to make the cutoff. Refreshing your browser constantly to see if visa bulletin had changed. Hours in excel multiplying cutoffs from previous years to calculate your chances of an interview. You kids don't know how good you've got it!
If you don't like the conversation - feel free to ignore those comments, and comment on other topics. No need to shut people down for expressing their legitimate concerns. Simple really.
I have several job related questions... but the main one is, did you have a degree that you had to get evaluated to the US? Who did you use if you did, and did you need the general analysis or course-by course? Thanks.
Hey guys, just been getting my stuff together i have my interview dec 13th. Im trying to organize my medical and im currently living in hobart. From the looks of the website theres no approved physicians here so ill have to goto Melbourne to get it done but on reading the us consulate page it says this:
"There are no authorized panel physicians in South Australia, Tasmania, ACT or the Northern Territory; therefore, it is recommended that visa applicants from these states/territories make a medical appointment with a Sydney panel physician on the day before or after your visa interview where possible."
I can do the medical after my interview?, so am i to understand i only need the medical for when i actually enter the states and not the actual interview... i have no idea why i'm finding it so difficult to find info on the medical process.
~ Post moved from the DV2017 AOS Thread ~
- The background checks this company performed were extensive - hair sample drug test, criminal check, referee check x 3, credit check, immigration legality. Because I worked in the USA previously I had US referees, addresses, drivers' license and a credit history. Most of you won't?
Ok finding a job (remotely). As @Britsimon alluded, my job is fairly specialist so they were prepared to hire outside their area, however I think many of these points have value for everyone.
You should start by reading this from an OC DV-er.
One piece of advice he says is:
"foreign = visa = sponsorship = big bucks. I have nothing to back this up, but I’m still convinced that the Australian experience atop my resume was a deterrent to many of the employers I applied to work for. Not because they’re xenophobes, but because it probably seemed like all too much damn work. I can dig it."
I agree. Then he says:
"To try and remedy this, I was always up-front. Within the first couple of paragraphs of my cover letters, I’d explain that while I was Australian, I have full permanent residency and work eligibility and did not need sponsorship."
I don't agree. I left anything foreign out, and let them assume I was an American. My key strategy was to reduce my foreign-ness until they met me. As an example, I honestly put my degree and university, but why put Australia in there? My university's name sounds American. My only goal was to get past the resume-bin filtration system, make it to the interview stage, then win them over. Sounds a little deceptive, but I just wanted a chance.
More points:
- Don't use your Aussie CV! They use Resumes in the USA and it's a different format. I used a format that was available online here. Also do a cover letter. Download and modify it to suit your industry. For Every job I changed it to match the application.
- As per my previous post I converted my GPA into the USA numbering system for my resume. I used this free service to do it: http://www.wes.org/students/igpacalc.asp
- Use the USA date format (12/31/2016), use z instead of s in some words (organize), and drop the u (color).
- The main job site is indeed.com. Perform searches on your target company/industry and get daily email alerts. Every morning I would get 20 emails and scan them for likely positions.
- I'd spend alot of time googling likely companies, join their "Career" portal then activate alert emails.
- On Sunday I'd fire out all my applications, unless I saw a particularly good match. Modify resume - submit.
- I bought a USA skype phone number for $50. This worked really well.
- For the phone interview make sure your accent is more English/Tony Blair than Aussie/Paul Hogan.
- For my interview I made sure it was on Friday and flew from Australia. You land before you left, then clean up in a hotel.
- I wore a business shirt, slacks, black shoes, no tie, no jacket.
- The background checks this company performed were extensive - hair sample drug test, criminal check, referee check x 3, credit check, immigration legality. Because I worked in the USA previously I had US referees, addresses, drivers' license and a credit history. Most of you won't?
Can I just say that alot of the people who voted Trump aren't bad people. Just like alot of the people who voted Hillary aren't bad people. If you want to generalize, have at it. That's what's caused the anger in this country to begin with: demonizing each other with stereotypes and buzzwords that don't reflect reality.
America is truly a diverse place with the good and bad all mixed in together. If you only want to live in a place where people agree with you all the time and only hold beliefs that you hold (i.e. utopoian groupthink), then America is not the place for you. Stay in Australia and be happy.
Last week, in my work's cafeteria, the day after the election, I felt truly blessed to see Hillary and Trump supporters talking about their difference in a civil, thoughtful and kind way. Both sides representing their ideals but respecting the other person's ideals as well. No shouting abuse or name calling.
THAT is the majority of Americans, in my opinion. Not the extremists on either end of the spectrum. There's a whole chunk in the middle who are just good people.
The important thing to understand is that, after 8 years of Obama, folks in the US voted for change, so change it will be - what change it will be concretely, nobody knows for sure everyone is welcome to speculate "until the cows go home". Green Card Holders can not vote until they eventually will become US Citizens, and therefore are not of much interest to US politicians until they do.I don't know if that was targeted at me specifically, but I don't recall saying anything about trump supporters... Trump concerns me because the views he has portrayed throughout his campaign, as well as before that, are vastly different to my views and beliefs. That being said, Hillary has displayed some fairly unsavoury behaviour and I don't agree with a lot of what she does or believes either. I just think out of the two options, she is unlikely to cause as much damage as Trump to the United States and its people. But my views, like your views are fairly irrelevant, they won't change the outcome of the election, so onwards and upwards.
As for "utopian groupspeak"... Australia has a lot of things going for it but our politics sure as hell aren't one of them. No marriage equality, no legal abortions in several states, religion like America impinging on our society and legislation at most levels, politicians scared shitless of upsetting the Christian white middle class so not pushing through bills that majority of Australians want, similar levels if not slightly more racism just targeted at slightly different groups.... Should I go on. I should mention that my father doesn't support marriage equality for no other reason other than he's white middle class and thinks it's "gross". So I am not surrounded by people that think like me in Australia. I don't think there is a utopia, maybe Scandinavia, but I'm sure even it has problems.
There are good people everywhere, but I think until Trump is sworn in, there can only be speculation around what will happen, I am more than happy to be proved wrong, but I think you need to let people voice their concerns without implying that they should just stay in Australia where its warm and fuzzy, because in a lot of ways, we are actually more oppressed than America.
I don't know if that was targeted at me specifically, but I don't recall saying anything about trump supporters... Trump concerns me because the views he has portrayed throughout his campaign, as well as before that, are vastly different to my views and beliefs. That being said, Hillary has displayed some fairly unsavoury behaviour and I don't agree with a lot of what she does or believes either. I just think out of the two options, she is unlikely to cause as much damage as Trump to the United States and its people. But my views, like your views are fairly irrelevant, they won't change the outcome of the election, so onwards and upwards.
As for "utopian groupspeak"... Australia has a lot of things going for it but our politics sure as hell aren't one of them. No marriage equality, no legal abortions in several states, religion like America impinging on our society and legislation at most levels, politicians scared shitless of upsetting the Christian white middle class so not pushing through bills that majority of Australians want, similar levels if not slightly more racism just targeted at slightly different groups.... Should I go on. I should mention that my father doesn't support marriage equality for no other reason other than he's white middle class and thinks it's "gross". So I am not surrounded by people that think like me in Australia. I don't think there is a utopia, maybe Scandinavia, but I'm sure even it has problems.
There are good people everywhere, but I think until Trump is sworn in, there can only be speculation around what will happen, I am more than happy to be proved wrong, but I think you need to let people voice their concerns without implying that they should just stay in Australia where its warm and fuzzy, because in a lot of ways, we are actually more oppressed than America.
Heck - last day at work in Melbourne today before my flight on Monday. It's like a pendulum between being over the moon excited and feeling like I could throw up with nerves.
Will do! I've got my first two interviews with recruiters ready (one private and one Fortune listed), gotta hit up the bank, cell provider and DMV in the first week, then all being well I can relax a little bit and enjoy the Christmas season.Best of luck @BenCreswick! I met a good friend on his flight over to LA when he made the big move - I distinctly remember him saying a very similar phrase! Haha! I can only imagine the roller coaster. Let us know how you go!