WORKING IN FRANCE
|
Population : |
60,2 million |
Area : |
22 regions |
Capital : |
Paris |
Main cities : |
Lyon, Marseille, Lille, Nantes, Bordeaux |
Languages : |
French and then around 10 minority languages e.g.: Alsacian, Basque, Breton, Catalonian, Occitan, Flemish, Corsican... |
Currency : |
Euro |
Unemployment rate : |
around 9,2% and decreasing |
Number of Universities : |
about 80. |
Number of students : |
2,115 millions |
University Students : |
1,5 in universities |
Finding a job
To successfully find a job, you have to start by organizing things from your home country. Be realistic: if you do not have a good knowledge of French, it is na�ve to think that you can find work in France. Another important point: top-level degrees or vocational qualifications will provide you with a wider range of employment opportunities. Lastly, you should have experience in your chosen field before applying for a position in France.
Your application for employment is also more likely to succeed if you gather a maximum of specific information about the French employment market from your country of origin and if you continue looking for work once you are in France.
Looking for a job from your home country
Stage 1 : have a well thought-out professional goal
Before burning your bridges in your home country, make sure that your professional goal meets a realistic need in France. Ask yourself the right questions: what are my qualifications? What experience do I have? Do I speak French fluently? What is my medium and long-term career plan? How long do I intend to stay in France? Gather as much information as you possibly can about career opportunities in France.
Stage 2 : finding information
Find out about your line of work, about companies that are hiring in your field, and about French labor legislation and economic policy from Eures network European employment counselors.
Get in touch with the cultural center at the local French Embassy to obtain information about opportunities for working in France, possible contacts in your field, and companies from your country with subsidiaries in France. Failing that, you can always contact the Chamber of Commerce and Industry in France for this type of information.
Stage 3 : the canvassing stage
Once you have a good list of contacts you can write letters to them. Ask for a member of the personnel department to give you an interview to discuss the company's recruitment policy and employment opportunities in their French subsidiaries.
Stage 4 : looking for vacancies
Consult the situations vacant listing on the Eures system, international publications and French newspapers available in your country. Also bear in mind opportunities for seasonal work abroad (tourism, holiday camp co-ordinator work, working as an au pair, etc.).
Lastly, have a look around the notices at your local job center and ask someone who knows about European job opportunities where the nearest office is that posts announcements for work abroad. Bear in mind, such notices are few and far between and the applicants selected will doubtless be bilingual and very well qualified.
Looking for a job in France
Once in France, your job-seeking efforts as a foreigner will be similar to those of French people.
Employment agencies
Register with the ANPE (National Employment Agency), the goal of which is to assist all EU and European Economic Space citizens (including the 15 European Union member States and Iceland, Norway and Liechtenstein) in finding work. For managerial posts, you can also consult APEC (the Managerial Employment Association). Also bear in mind the CIDJs (Youth Information and Documentation Centers), which provide useful information on each profession, with details on professional organizations and the names of recruiters in each sector.
"I sent my resum�s from Germany"
Frank Seidel, a 28 year-old German, is a multimedia designer who has been working for ADN Communications in Grenoble since December 1998.
"After attending the Berlin Arts University, I completed a Master's at Grenoble under the Erasmus student exchange program. The lifestyle there was very pleasant and the multimedia employment market is very open, so consequently I decided to look for work in Grenoble early in 1998. I did my research in Grenoble and from Germany. When I was on holiday in France, I took advantage of the opportunity to set up contacts and see my old lecturers, most of whom work professionally. In Germany, I sent my CV via mail and e-mail to arrange interviews in Grenoble. In the end, I found the post I am in thanks to a French student friend of mine who told me that ADN were hiring staff. Currently, even though my French is all right, I am not able to work as a designer-editor, which was nonetheless what I initially trained as. If I had wanted to write, I would have looked for work in Germany."
Internet
There is a French equivalent of Success and Career called "GO-Le guide des Opportunit�s de Carri�res". www.e-go.fr