Jump to content

CrozierFamily

Members
  • Posts

    164
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

CrozierFamily's Achievements

Senior Member

Senior Member (4/6)

20

Reputation

  1. Hi, yes I have seen the sheet, but I wasn't able to work out whether what the migration team are telling me at Deloitte is correct. It appears to be a bit all over the place. Hopefully will hear soon. Thanks.
  2. Hi there. I lodged my application for our 186 visa (direct entry stream) back on 17th February and have as yet had no response or update on how the visa is progressing. Deloitte are dealing with my application and they are telling me that the department are still dealing with applications in early February, but I feel they have been telling me that for a while! Can anyone here who has recently had their application picked up and processed tell me when they made their application? I am not dealing with mine directly as it is all being handled by my employer, but it is taking much longer than I originally expected and I was really hoping it would be dealt with by Christmas!
  3. We just moved to Mount Eliza a few weeks ago, love the place!
  4. Hi there. You will need to be moving to an area in the zone for that School, if you don't live in the zone you are unlikely to get in. You can find details of the zone online. Other schools in the area like Kunyung are also great, you really cannot go wrong for a primary school in Mount Eliza.
  5. I personally found HSBC to be a shambles. I applied for an account about 6 weeks ago, told them I was moving and needed everything sorted as soon as possible. After a few weeks of applying and going to their branch to verify my identity (I am an existing customer), I called to see how the app was going. Turns out they hadnt got to it yet and was still going nowhere. I chased it and it turned out the branch needed to sign something (they forgot), another week passed while they messed about. Eventually I got my account (6 weeks later). By the time I had opened my account with HSBC I had got bored with their service and opened and account with NAB in 4 days! My advice is stay away from HSBC. The worlds local bank my erse.
  6. I am not quite sure how it would go if Boris ever became prime minister, but one things for sure, it would be entertaining. I agree with every word he said in the above speech. I have much more in common with people from English speaking lands than I do with other Europeans. I would much rather a Union with Australia, New Zealand and Canada than any European nation. Not that I am against European folks, I just don't feel as close to them as the nations above. I would never fancy living in other European places either, but would happily live in English speaking places.
  7. I think if someone had their eyes on Syrian resources they would have been in there last year when they first had an excuse. I don't really like wars and I especially don't like wars that seem to be motivated for the wrong reasons (Iraq), however it does appear something needs to happen to help the civillian people in Syria who appear to be living in a terrible situation at the moment. If there really has been chemical attacks then personally I think that is a red line that is crossed and the UN needs to react. I hope whatever happens does so for the right reasons.
  8. No. It says you must 'retain a permanent residential address in the UK for the account to remain open.' I am not going to have a permanent address in the UK and they are happy for it to remain open. The point I am making is that sometime banks have terms such as this in their T&Cs that are not enforced. Trust me on this, I do it for a living.
  9. I bank with Santander and I called them a few days ago about changing my address, they are only to happy to change it to an Australian one, so I don't think that rule is enforced all the time. They told me they have no issue with me having an Australian address.
  10. I have a sure fire way to win the lottery. Buy a ticket for every possible number combination. It will probably cost you more than you will win, but still, you won the lotto.
  11. Hi I have recently managed to find a job in Australia and get sponsorship from the UK. I can tell you what I did, but there are no guarantees. I think the first thing I would say is that you have to be willing to be patient. When I set out to find a job I told myself that I would give it two years of trying and in the end it took just under a year to get an offer. Typically I got two offers in one week, jobs are like buses! My background is in financial services, mainly in product management and marketing. I knew I had no option to apply straight off for a permanent visa as my skills are not on the list. I identified my only chance to get to Australia was a 457 visa. I recognised this was not a guarantee of permanent residency by any means but accepted the risk that it was worth a shot, with the aim of going permanent if things work out with my employer. So advice part 1: Work out what your visa options are and accept the risks they pose. What you do for a living will guide your options to some extend, for example with me, most of the work I do would be found in either Melbourne or Sydney. I wouldnt really have the option of working in a rural area, so I narrowed my search for jobs to the two biggest cities. Advice number two: Identify the areas of the country you can realistically target to find a job. Once I had worked out the visa and the areas I could search I took a few routes to try and find out the appetite for my skills in Australia and to find out what I should expect from a salary perspective. I asked a few questions on forums and searched the web. I got a bit of info, but nothing majorly helpful. This is advice number 3: Work out whether you are in demand and find out whether what you will be getting paid is in line with your expectations. Having failed to answer the above questions I decided to do two things. Firstly I decided to identify people in my network who knew someone in Australia who might be able to help me. Secondly I tried to find the specialist recruitment agencies that recruit people with my skills. This is advice number 4: Work your network. Everyone knows someone in Australia who can help you if you look hard enough. I managed to find someone through a friend of my Mums who I last saw when I was a kid, who just so happened to have married someone who used to work for a bank, he gave me a name of someone in a bank who worked in HR. I contacted the HR guy and he helped me out a bit. Most importantly he gave me details of recruitment agencies to speak to and promised to keep me in mind for jobs. In addition to the above I searched the web for specialist agencies to register with and contact. My strategy here was to search on Seek and Linkedin and find the agencies that were advertising roles in my general profession. My thinking is that they may not be advertising the exact role for you, but they will be most likely to have some interest in your skills. After emailing quite a few agencies I got a fair number of responses and spoke to a brave few consultants on the phone. Many of whom talk tripe, some of whom are quite useful. However, I had managed to build a small network in Australia of some people who might be able to help me in the future. I set a reminder in my calender and mailed each of them every 4 weeks, just to remind them that I was still here and looking for the right opportunity. Some of them replied every month, some I never heard from after the first telephone chat. I sent these emails every 4 weeks for a year. They were probably sick of me at the end. Advice number 5: Never give up, don't let them forget you. Having built up a network, I decided I would also try and apply to roles directly. I thought this was more of a long shot, but I gave it a go. I checked Seek every day, and Linkedin jobs, and the job sites of the main employers I had identified. When I saw a direct role I applied for it. Or if one of the people I knew in my network had mentioned they had links to this employer I contacted them and asked them if they would see if they would consider me. Furthermore if I saw someone I had been in touch with was advertising something and hadnt emailed me about it, I emailed them and asked them whether they would consider an international applicant. Any new contacts I picked up were added to the 4 weekly email! So in the end I repeated the above process for a year. I checked Seek and Linkedin every day and I found new people to contact all the time. I got a few bites from people, even had a couple of interviews over Skype, but for various reasons they did not work out. I even got offered a good role, but it didnt feel right to me so I passed it up. I kept on searching and emailing, knowing that sooner or later something would happen. By the time I did find a job I had sent over 3000 emails, had a network of over 100 people in Australia who might be able to help and applied for I dont know how many jobs (a few a day at least, some with very boring application forms). I did all of my interviews via Skype, which made things easier even than an interview in the UK! Funnily enough the recruitment agent who found me the job was the person that my mums, friends, husbands. contact in HR gave me details of! The other job I was offered I applied to directly by calling the recruiting manager on their mobile (which I found on google) about 4 hours after my second child was born and I was in a hospital still awake in the middle of the night! So to be honest it was a total pain in the neck, it took ages and it was soul destroying at times. But in the end I found a job. Totally worth every email and late night interview when I should have been sleeping. I think in summary my advice is to plan well, know your market, work and build your network, dont just accept the first thing you get and never give up. Hope this helps.
  12. It seems to be a bit random with the time it takes to get a 457 through. Personally I was one of the lucky ones in that it only took a week to go through, but I have seen others on this forum waiting a very long time. I am not sure if the speed of processing is helped by who you are being employed by (I am going to work for a big health insurer) or the migration agent you use or what, but it does appear there is a very wide range of timings if this forum is anything to go by.
  13. I would not expect Australian (or any kind of foreign accounts) would be something a UK lender would be overly interested in as they do not demonstrate any kind of future earning in the UK. For a number of reasons it is unlikely a lender here would have any real interest in foreign books, unless the foreign business is still trading and generating income of some kind. What the lender would be more interested in is forward looking income, so any solid contracts of future income etc. There will be companies out there that can help. But you will pay a high price for being a very high risk in the eyes of a lender.
  14. Hi there In the good old (or not so good) days you could probably have self certified and been fine, but that is no longer an option post credit crunch. You might want to have a quick read of this from Which and maybe give them a call. http://www.whichmortgageadvisers.co.uk/specialist/self-employed-mortgages/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=generic_e&utm_content=self_cert_e&utm_term=self_certification_mortgages&cmp=ppc_google I would agree with other posters that because you have no books to show your previous income, you will be considered a higher risk than an established self employed person. However, the risk decision will also depend on what your profession is and whether you can demonstrate steady income. I would imagine if for example you are a project manager or an IT contractor with a contract for work for decent length of time that could help. Having a chunky deposit can't help either, because if the you know what hits the fan at least the lender can sell your property and recover their funds. You will be paying a premium until you can get a few years books though. That unfortunately for you is a certainty in this market.
  15. House prices in Belfast may be low, but so are comparable wages. I had a call from a recruitment agency a month or so ago asking if I would be interested in a job back in Belfast. It was a product manager role for a bank, and the salary was £23k. The same role here in sunny Swindon would pay a minimum of £45k. Unfortunately Belfast has fallen apart on me since I left 6 years ago. It is sad to see how bad it has got over there. Great place to live all the same, but if you need to find a job paying decent money it's not so good. It has so many highly qualified people looking for a very small number of jobs the employers are getting away with paying very low salaries. That said, if you have a few quid knocking about, it is a great place to pick up a bargain at the moment, the rental yields are probably the best in any area in the UK based on purchase costs.
×
×
  • Create New...