The Commercial Appeal

6 things you should do if you want to work abroad

- Michael Hoon GETTY IMAGES

1. Start your job search before you go abroad

While it may seem adventurou­s or romantic to go exploring the world, there’s a lot of research that has to go into creating a financiall­y feasible plan. Landing a job is different than bumming around Europe with a backpack. While it can have similar benefits like language and cultural immersion, finding shortterm and long-term work is much different than your average vacation. It may be as simple as defining your search delimiters on the right job site, to much more targeted, like seeking out the job ads that are in local news websites from your desired location or networking among friends and alumni organizati­ons. Depending on your financial situation and ultimate goals for working abroad, lining up the job beforehand is almost always better than going broke for a month while you try to find opportunit­ies locally.

2. Nail down all paperwork well in advance

There’s one tricky thing you don’t worry about in your average job search in your home country: work permits. Technicall­y, you can just show up and live for a few weeks in another country, but if you find a job, you’ll need to know how to get a work permit. In many countries the work permit applicatio­n may need to be approved before you arrive. Oftentimes a company procures a work permit for you for a particular job. You may also need to have a residency permit. Thus, changing jobs while you’re overseas comes with an added complicati­on: new work permit applicatio­ns. There are also different types of visas, like a working holiday visa (for those between the ages of 18 to 35) and temporary work visas which are offered to American citizens by some countries like Canada and the UK for several months. Whether you’re considerin­g long-term or short-term work, it’s best to set up your work permits before you pack up and move – even before you buy a plane ticket.

3. Know you might have to deal with low-paid work

The tradeoff, for most overseas opportunit­ies, is of course money. There are countless opportunit­ies for volunteeri­ng and internship­s world-wide with various reputable organizati­ons. Students can often take advantage of internship­s during study abroad programs. Joining the Peace Corps, an another example, will take you places and use your skills to serve an impoverish­ed community abroad. This is good experience to broaden your horizons and for your resume, but this type of opportunit­y is one you have to weigh against your current financial stressors. The Peace Corps provides language training, cultural immersion by living with a host family, a monthly living allowance and paid airfare.

4. Brush up on your teaching skills

You may have hated high school English but being able to teach English is one of those “needed skills” for many countries when you’re applying for a work visa. If you don’t want to teach long-term but do want to remain in a foreign country, you can consider a teaching job as your foot in the door to find other local job opportunit­ies. There are many teaching placement programs that can get you started, though some require prior experience.

5. Consider global company opportunit­ies

Even applying for a position at a global company could get you to the place you want to be eventually. This is perhaps the lengthiest way to find a job overseas, but also one of the most financiall­y stable. Search for travel opportunit­ies within your current organizati­on. Business trips are a short-term way to get you to feed the travel bug, get paid to do it, and not worry about establishi­ng residency in a foreign country. But you never know when your organizati­on may be opening new positions overseas. Keep an eye out for these internal hiring opportunit­ies.

6. Find a job that will always go abroad

If you’re just starting in your career or looking to change careers to one that brings you more travel opportunit­ies, there are a number of fields that offer the travel-driven a regular influx of travel opportunit­ies. Jobs in tourism and leisure, travel writing, and working for an internatio­nal airline are perhaps the most obvious. But there are other lessobviou­s choices that require you to work globally like a job in geophysics, archeology, and many government jobs in foreign affairs.

Michael Hoon is a career advice journalist for TheJobNetw­ork.com where this article was originally published. He investigat­es and writes about current strategies, tips, and trending topics related to all stages of one’s career.

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SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16, 2018
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