Hi there.
I am Ph.D. in Computer Science (IT) from Japan. I just graduated in December 2011. I am now looking for an employment in Japan related to my expertise. Which is the best place on the internet to look for Jobs?
Thanks.
Hi there.
I am Ph.D. in Computer Science (IT) from Japan. I just graduated in December 2011. I am now looking for an employment in Japan related to my expertise. Which is the best place on the internet to look for Jobs?
Thanks.
As for Experience, i have 2 years researcher experience in my university (Akita University) during my Ph.D. Program.
My areas of expertise are Wireless technologies (more specifically Use of Wireless technologies in Intelligent Transportation Systems)
I am currently working with a local Japanese company, plus working as a researcher in my university. But these jobs are more of part time jobs, and i am willing to fit in as a permanent employee to some organization/institute.
Have a look at this place....
National Institute of Information and Communications Technology
They have a lot of academics with no real-life work experience on their staff, and specialise in wireless technologies.
Smart Wireless Laboratory is working on research and development on using: (1) unused frequency of Millimeter­wave and Tera­Hertz wave, (2) frequency for wide area communications such as the VHF band, which are not allocated for broadband communications purposes previously, and (3) unused frequency (white space) for particular purposes.
http://www.nict.go.jp/en/index.html
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Be realistic. JLPT3 is not 'speaking good Japanese'.
So you have 2 choices :
a) Find a job at an university. You should know better than us how to do it.
b) Find a job at a company. There are many foreign IT companies in Japan, but there again, it depends what skills you can offer to them and why they should hire you. If you are looking for a research-style job, my hunch is that your J-skills would not be good enough for a Japanese company and most foreign companies would have their labs abroad. But I don't know. You should also know which kind of companies are making products in your field of expertise and send job applications to their Japan offices.
You might also have to find a job in a not so closely related area. I know a guy with a PhD in Physics who is now working as a Programmer. Or a guy like Andy Kessler who started as a researcher at AT&T labs and then moved on to became a financial analyst for the electronics industry. As a PhD you have proven that you are smart, but the companies also want to see your business sense.
Thanks for the reply. I am not defending myself but let me explain what i meant when i said i am good at speaking Japanese. I have been living in Japan for 7 years now. I took my JLPT level 3 about 4 years ago. I know JLPT 3 doesnt mean i am good at speaking Japanese but i have improved in last 4 years. I deliver University presentation in Japanese and i guess that explains alot about speaking capabilities. But again i can understand that i only have JLPT 3 level certificate with me and any organization i am applying will judge my capabilities according to that and i wont be able to explain my capabilities in every interview.
Anyways i appreciate all the comments and links.
Would drop the Doctor of IT title too.... it sounds very pretentious. You've a PhD in computer science and no real work experience.
Unless you've worked with knowledge management tools/ business systems in a commercial environment, you're not a Dr. IT.
Have a look at some of the Telematics Japan links - and the companies really involved here in Intelligent Transportations systems
http://www.telematicsupdate.com/japan/
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I have three questions; what school did you graduate from, what was the subjust of your dissertation, and did you do any type of internship while you were in school?
This school?
http://www.akita-u.ac.jp/english/index.html
You need to volunteer for an open source project and you have to creating a portfolio with a demo.
http://serverfault.com/?__=1130686391
http://unix.stackexchange.com/?__=1111469724
PS might want to think twice before deciding to work for a traditional Japanese enviroment.
Last edited by LinuxFun; 2012-04-29 at 07:06 PM.
I am taking the 2kyu exam in July and I am not convinced that level 2 is adequate enough. The Kanji level for level 2, you have graduated from ES (about 1000 kanjis). I showed my N2 vocab book to my 6th graders and they responded "kantan". The grammar on the other hand is about middle school. Working in academia, level 2 may be adequate, but if you are going to work for a Japanese company in the IT field, you are going to need level 1, IMHO (1986 kanjis, 10000 words).
I am sure you are quite knowledgeable in the IT field. However, IMHO, that won't hold much candle here without higher Japanese skills.
Last edited by StarfoxPro; 2012-05-02 at 04:54 AM.
Dreams don't pay the bills, money does.......
I worked in IT with level 2.
The only thing in Japan that is harder than being a foreigner in Japan, is being Japanese in Japan.
Japanese do AE to find jobs which is now over. It will be hard to pass any interview if you don't speak Japanese and many companies want to see 1. What kind of job are you looking for?
To repeat myself :
So you have 2 choices :
a) Find a job at an university. You should know better than us how to do it.
b) Find a job at a company. For a research-style job, my hunch is that your J-skills would not be good enough for a Japanese company and most foreign companies would have their labs abroad. But I don't know. You should also know which kind of companies are making products in your field of expertise and send job applications to their Japan offices.
As your english skills are much better than 'only' JLPT 3, not sure why are you looking for a Job in Japan and not the US ?
a) I am already looking for Jobs in Universities and research institutes.
b) I have been living in Japan for last 8 years now and feel comfortable with the environment and used to the standards of living here in Japan, if i go to US or any other country it ll be a start from scratch for me, so feel like hunting a job here in Japan first and if i cant get a job i ll try somewhere else.
Hi raziiq,
Our client, automotive OEM in ITS/telematics segment in Tokyo, have a job opening.
I would like to chat with you over Skype to see whether this may be of interest to you/if you could be a fit.
This is my first post to Gaijin Pot so I don't know how this system works.
If you can reply to me, I will explain about this position in detail.
Thank you.