How To Get A Job In Japan | Non-English Teaching Jobs 日本で就職活動する internationallyME | Tokyo
Information | History | View | Sightseeing | Video
How to get a job in Japan - not english teaching or part-time jobs but real company jobs! How to find a job in Japan may seem hard at first and you may not know where to start so I wanted to help you guys and share some of the things I wish I knew when I was finding a job in Japan :) You can follow these tips even if you aren’t in Japan - some companies do Skype or phone interviews. Here are the four parts and the links - 1) Getting an agent 3:04 https://job.rikunabi.com/agent/kaigai/ http://job.rikunabi.com/agent/ http://agent.career-tasu.jp 2) Job fairs 3:46 http://www.careerforum.net http://job.mynavi.jp/conts/event/2016... http://www.rikunabi.com 3) Net working 5:05 http://www.meetup.com http://www.craigslist.co.jp 4) Internships 5:26 Go to company homepage that you want to apply for マイナビ (mainabi) and リクナビ (rikunabi) are good sites for anyone finding a job - whether you are a student, new graduate or someone with experience and wants to change jobs. Most jobs start April 1st as it is the starting year for Japanese Company's but it may change depending on each company. Hope this video helped you guys! Subscribe and join me on my journey! ☺ https://youtube.com/internationallyme ------------------------------------------------------------- ♦ S O C I A L M E D I A ♦ ↬ Instagram | https://instagram.com/internationallyme ↬ Twitter | https://twitter.com/NZ2JAPAN
Comments
-
how to cantact
-
im new to the channel. and just found this video is amazing. helps me alot. I want to work at a Subway food place in Japan. and study Japan Volcanoes and physically go to them and study them in person. I love the Japanese culture and want to leanr all about them. especially taste all the awesome foods they have.
-
hi there really enjoying the videos you're making from tokyo. Just wondering did you apply makeup on only one side of your eyebrow? just wondering. You still look amazing though. :)
-
hi can you give me the agent details..please
-
I sell propane and propane accessories
-
I don't get why "a company" or corporate job should be someone's goal if it is boring or non-productive or dronish. I used to be a Trademark lawyer and hated every minute of my job so I quit after 2.5 years to become a law professor. The money is less but teaching law as a job is rewarding and you have time to do other things.
-
i thought the table behind you was the floor, and i was thinking that door knob seems real low
-
Good channel to learn English,thank you
-
I am not from an English speaking country, do i have any chance of getting a job in japan?
-
Hello! Thanks for this tips, but I really want to know, how can someone be an English teacher without knowing Japanese? Please write me, thanks and bye :)
-
very helpful, regards from Peru
-
only know English can find jod in japan? ?
-
your reply is much appreciated thanks .. I hope to apply to in japan
-
hey how can I translate the site im from ph
-
i heard that if we graduated from japan itself the minimal amount of profit is more than $1500 but if we graduated from another country it's just around $700-$1500, so do we have to took study in their local university first or we can just go search for the job even if we are graduated from another country? i'll be so grateful if you can answer my question, thank you though for your info :)
-
i want to go japab to get job . . . .
-
Tip 1: I already have an agent, should I get more of them?
Tip 2: I can't attend the career forum, seeing that all events are too far away from me (maybe except for London, but it's still not easy to reach).
Tip 3: How does networking exactly work?
Tip 4: Weren't internships only for students studying at a university or college? -
based on what you said in the video i found some bright sides to find a job in Japan. But most of my friends say it's just recently getting hard and even harder if you a foreigner can't speak Japanese fluently hix hix anyway thank you for some helpful tips!!
-
Most IT job postings in Japan require N2 at least in order to work there(my line of work), many ask for N1 (according to my teacher, N1 is hard even for them), besides that and according to the internetz the easiest way to get to Japan is to teach English/Spanish/Portuguese. Does anybody know if it is harder to land a job as a 30ish guy in Japan?
-
Living in Japan for a long time (11 years) and being military, I never really worried about this... Now, that I am coming up on retirement (could be as early as in 2 years) and wanting to move back to Tokyo, I really worry about finding work. This video eases my anxieties a little bit... just a little.