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Build an International Employment Profile: International Careers and Jobs

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International Job Hunting Skills. Essentials for finding international work. ... international work and living, and your job-hunting methods should reflect this. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Build an International Employment Profile: International Careers and Jobs


1
Build an International Employment Profile
International Careers and Jobs
  • Mark Brostoff
  • Associate Director
  • Undergraduate Career Services Office
  • Kelley School of Business
  • October 2005

2
International careers dont just happen
  • They are carefully planned and built up over a
    period of time
  • Gain international internship experience before
    considering work abroad
  • The key to gaining international experience is to
    dive into all things international
  • Build up a host of international experiences
    before you are ready to start applying for
    professional international jobs.
  • And the great thing about building these
    experiences is that you can have a blast doing
    it!

3
Getting Started
  • International careers are built on experience in
    various areas.
  • Preparation, preparation, preparation
  • will improve your odds of getting a full-time,
    professional international job after you graduate.

4
Academic Studies
  • An MA is a prerequisite for most international
    positions
  • social sciences, pure sciences, and business
  • less important in health careers, engineering,
    and computer science
  • A BA in any field with outside electives broadens
    your skills inventory
  • Include language skills with all types of
    disciplines
  • Other academic experience is important
  • Attend or help organize a conference
  • participate in a professor-led research project
  • work as a teaching assistant
  • participate in academic competitions
  • become a tutor
  • actively seek to work on team projects and
    preferably team up with foreign students.

5
Networking and Cross-Cultural Experience
  • Network with at least three international experts
    in your field of interest.
  • For example, write essays that require you to
    speak directly to someone working internationally
    in your field of interest.
  • Guide foreigners who are new to your country.
  • act as a tour guide for visiting professors
    assist with foreign student orientation or teach
    English as a second language.
  • Befriend foreign students on your campus.
  • Join foreign student social circles on campus
  • visit with them in their homes
  • become familiar with their food and social
    behavior
  • try to pay a visit to them and their families in
    their home country
  • actively participate in foreign student
    associations.
  • Become socially active and knowledgeable in a
    culture other than your own.
  • ethnic social clubs
  • become knowledgeable in one or more fields of
    ethnic music
  • focus on the writing or history from one region
    or country
  • learn ethnic cooking

6
Overseas Experience
  • Work internationally for 26 months.
  • intern or volunteer, preferably in your field of
    expertise.
  • Try for two professional internships
  • Study abroad for one or more semesters
  • Study abroad in your field and learn a new
    language.
  • Travel for 26 months.
  • Do not underestimate the value of backpacking for
    six months.
  • Interact closely with people from other countries
    in order to learn the skills required by
    international employers.
  • Add onto your experience with a short trip.
  • Be creative.
  • Extend the value of all your international travel
    by combining two or more objectives while abroad.
  • For example, take four months off and study
    Spanish full-time in Guatemala while living with
    a local family and having a full-time one-on-one
    instructor for less then the cost of going to
    school

7
Hard Skills
  • Proficiency in a new language
  • Be able to speak and read another language
  • Be an active listener and learn to pick up at
    least 20 or 30 words in any country you visit,
    however briefly.
  • Economic and geographic knowledge of the world
  • Gain a solid knowledge of the political and
    social forces shaping the planet.
  • Writing and analytical skills
  • Demonstrate these skills outside of course work
    by participating in a research project or writing
    for a web site.
  • Computer skills
  • Business skills
  • business backgrounds that include strong people
    skills.
  • such as strategic planning, financial management,
    and systems analysis.
  • Other management skills
  • These include project management, accounting,
    training, research, report writing, evaluating.

8
Soft Skills
  • Organizing, people, and leadership skills.
  • Demonstrate these through work and volunteer
    experience, preferably with an international
    group, organizing an event, or as an executive
    member of a committee.
  • Intercultural communications abilities.
  • Demonstrate these by being conversant in
    describing patterns of behavior in cross-cultural
    work and social environments. Learn to
    professionally describe these real-life
    experiences.
  • Coping and adapting abilities.
  • Demonstrate these with examples of how you coped
    when living away from your support structure of
    family and friends.

9
International Job Hunting Skills
  • Essentials for finding international work.
  • Experience has shown that those who are
    successful at finding international work have all
    done something extraordinary to land their first
    job.
  • They have gone out on a limb, acted boldly (but
    politely), have been entrepreneurial, have
    sacrificed certainty and taken risks to gain
    international experience and land that first job.
  • International employers are looking for
    individuals who are fully committed to
    international work and living, and your
    job-hunting methods should reflect this.

10
Make the Commitment
  • International jobs require a long-term commitment
  • you need to invest in yourself to build an
    international IQ.
  • this becomes a lifestyle, an outlook on life, a
    commitment to internationalism and cross-cultural
    learning.
  • Go forth and have fun with the exploration!

11
Managing Expectations
  • Finding overseas or more broadly-defined
    international employment can be a long and
    exacting, sometimes frustrating but also
    extremely rewarding process.
  • When starting your search, it is important to
    understand both the possibilities and limitations
    before you.

12
Understanding the process
  • Many organizations do not hire students straight
    out of college for positions abroad
  • such employment is typically reserved for
    employees with considerable experience in the
    profession.
  • many firms start initial hires in domestic
    offices, offering the possibility of working into
    a position overseas.
  • Some companies are increasingly less willing to
    hire expatriates for their overseas offices,
    looking instead to the local employee pool.
  • This is largely due to cost/expense issues
    involved.

13
Making the process work
  • Dont give up
  • research and target firms in your job search that
    do a great deal of work internationally and/or
    have overseas offices, knowing that you will need
    to work your way to overseas employment or work
    internationally from a domestic base.
  • Your Resume
  • resume and cover letter are key to your job
    search.
  • make sure you understand the necessary
    formalities, style, language and format
    particular to the firm, field, and country.
  • Do not apply for a position until you know how to
    tailor your resume to the position.
  • Internship or volunteer opportunities
  • If you have the flexibility, consider a
    short-term position overseas during the summer, a
    long break, a semester, or following graduation.

14
Other venues to consider
  • Your first jobs abroad need not be career-focused
    in any narrow sense.
  • If you have the time and inclination, low-level
    jobs such as
  • apple picking in Spain or bartending at a Greek
    resort can open the door to traveling with a
    purpose.
  • these positions can earn you valuable experience
    living, working and navigating abroad.

15
Finally
  • Securing full-time, permanent overseas placement
    through an online jobs site can be difficult and
    time consuming.
  • Patience is required!

16
Resources
  • http//www.4icj.com/
  • http//www.transitionsabroad.com/
  • http//go.global.wisc.edu/
  • http//overseasdigest.com/scams.htm

Sources 1. The BIG Guide to Living and Working
Overseas (Univ. of Toronto, 4th ed., 2004) at
www.workingoverseas.com.
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