I started my journey to move from the US to Europe over a year ago, and I started out a pretty high point. I found that through my family’s heritage I could actually obtain Hungarian citizenship, and through months of paperwork and waiting managed to successfully do so.

So that’s pretty much it. I thought to myself. Because the biggest hurdle companies face is whether it’s worth it to sponsor a visa of someone when they could just find a local candidate. I thought that the moment I could proudly say I was citizen of an EU country that would allow me to work in (most) countries, things would get easier.

But I have never been more wrong in my life. I’m a fresh out of college IT worker that has 4 years of work experience and 3 certifications under my belt, and I have managed to get exactly 2 interviews and maybe 20-30 real human responses in about 5 months despite hundreds of applications. And it’s not like I am thinking high and mighty of myself and looking at jobs that I want. I’ve applied to the lowest paying helpdesk roles up to the ones that I barely have any overlapping skills. I have revised my resume 2-3 times, had professionals look at it during a resume workshop at college… I just get nothing. Some seem to think that I am asking for sponsorship or relocation benefits despite the fact that it is boldly written at the top of my resume, and I always make sure to include it in my cover letter.

Am I doing something wrong? Is there something I should be doing besides trolling LinkedIn and other job sites for roles? I don’t know if this is a rant post or advice post. I am just so sick of getting ghosted or looking for that dreaded “unfortunately” email in my inbox every morning.

  • chardrizard@alien.top
    cake
    B
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    1 year ago

    When it comes to first screening from open job postings, they would always resort to local first unless you have a niche and specific skillset for them to relocate you. As a fresh graduate, you stand little chance in this bracket.

    Second option to consider is start networking, get your resume on referral pile. Get an insider to understand your capabilities and ‘how fun you are as colleague’, in the end people hire who they want to work with and majority of people do land jobs these way if they are not being headhunted.

    Things such as developer meetups, tech conferences, forums, tech twitter, various discords. Get yourself out there and make friends, it’s not going to be a quick solution because building relationship takes time but often they bear fruit when you most needed it.

    Market is rough right now, I wish you the best of luck.