Ruy Bilton
São Paulo (state)
Ruy Bilton
São Paulo (state)
lauranen
Sallins
If you have decent English (which seems that you do), it shouldn’t be too much of a problem, of course a lot of it depends on yourself, your own activity, your education and work experience of course.
Also, define “reasonable job” and “fast enough” :) I think theres a lot of jobs on offer still, and the great thing about Ireland is that employers are used to hiring non-Irish people, so hopefully discrimination is not going to be a problem.
If you want to check what’s on offer, have a look at irishjobs.ie or monster.ie, have a look through their ads and even apply some you find the most interesting. If you get lots of replies, that probably means that when you do get over, you are able to find something suitable fairly quickly.
That way you can also get in touch with recruitment agents, who will try and find a job for you. Even if they don’t have any suitable positions for you at the moment, they will contact you when one comes up.
If you’re looking for an office job in Dublin, it’s almost essential to register with a recruitment agent, it just makes things so much easier. They can be a bit pushy with their business sometimes but most of them do their job well and find you a job. I’ve had good experiences with 1800-People and Joslin Rowe.
If course you can also visit big companies’ own recruitment sites, Yahoo and Google are in Dublin anyway and very nice to work for, I hear.
Hope this helps!
Seannos
London
I got my degree in International Marketing and Japanese in Dublin and I worked there for just over two years before moving abroad. I know lot of people with marketing degrees in Dublin and there are less marketing jobs than canidates from my experience. Then again you are specialised in online marketing which should make you much more attractive to employers and you can speak another language which is also an advantage. I think you wont walk into your perfect job straight away so you may need to take any job quickly to get by and then be on the lookout for something more suitable. My Spanish friends had to do that when they first moved to Dublin. The main thing is dont be afraid to come to Ireland, come over, get a job doing anything, a junior marketing position or even if it is working in a bar/cafe/restaurant and then look for better job.
kleges
Leipzig
As the others already wrote:
THERE’S LOTS OF JOBS IN DUBLIN!!!
Just check out some websites (e.g. jobs.ie) and you’ll see.
I lived in Dublin for a year and I got a job within 10 days. Okay, that was just “a” job and not my dream one but it might show how easy it is to get a job there – and a well-paid one as well!
Good Luck!