About our career options [closed]





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I am currently working in the US as a Software Engineer on my post-graduation F1 visa OPT. Keeping in mind the visa concerns, I had a few questions:




  1. Which developed countries (in your opinion) would be easier to immigrate to? I am looking from the point of view of standard of living, good education, pay to a software engineer, work culture, no (or very less) visa challenges, low crime rate, in that order (feel free to make assumptions thinking from the point of view of a quintessential American common man's way of life).


  2. How should I develop my eccentric skills (not just technical) so that I would be able to find work in those countries quickly and easily? For example, my chances of finding work in some countries would significantly improve if I know their native languages.



I am trying to keep it general so that it would be helpful to most people. Note that I am seeking general advice, so you are free to list and make assumptions.



Note: I posted this here because this is general advise related to Career development in a particular scenario. The answers will help us understand what skills we need to learn (over the next few years) to be flexible enough to quickly move to another country and find a good job, in case visa challenges smack our families. If you believe this is incorrect, please let me know and I will delete it. I believe in being proactive and posted this in good faith. Thank you.










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J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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closed as too broad by bruglesco, solarflare, Jim G., PeteCon, Dukeling Apr 15 at 2:19


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 3





    I'm voting to close this for many reasons. It is unbelievably broad to ask how to improve ones career, your question on country immigration is phrased as an opinion poll, the phrase eccentric skills is a bit unclear, and even if you mean soft-skills (which seems likely), that too is an incredibly broad question. We like to focus on questions with a concrete goal to address. What is your goal? Maybe you can come up with a question or questions to address particular problems.

    – bruglesco
    Apr 14 at 23:46











  • @JoeStrazzere, yes, you are right.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:48











  • @bruglesco, if that is how you think you can help, then please do. Thank you.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:49











  • Information about every factor you mentioned, including how necessary learning the local language is, is readily available online in some form or another for many countries. There are also plenty of resources available on improving interpersonal skills, in general and for specific countries. I do not, however, think you'll find this in a nicely summarised form according to your preferences, because every person will see and weight different things differently (a few of the factors you listed are highly subjective, and even the objective ones might only be important within some bounds).

    – Dukeling
    Apr 15 at 2:42













  • @Dukeling, if you refer this, he mentions a point about the SWE industry in France. This is the kind of guidance I was looking for. Not statistical graphs/charts showing the growth, etc., but how the situation looks for a common man - in his words, leaving your job can lead to several months of job hunting. Of course, I will take this with a pinch of salt, but at least we came to know about the ground reality. Lastly, calling something as too broad is always debatable, I think.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 15 at 2:49


















-5















I am currently working in the US as a Software Engineer on my post-graduation F1 visa OPT. Keeping in mind the visa concerns, I had a few questions:




  1. Which developed countries (in your opinion) would be easier to immigrate to? I am looking from the point of view of standard of living, good education, pay to a software engineer, work culture, no (or very less) visa challenges, low crime rate, in that order (feel free to make assumptions thinking from the point of view of a quintessential American common man's way of life).


  2. How should I develop my eccentric skills (not just technical) so that I would be able to find work in those countries quickly and easily? For example, my chances of finding work in some countries would significantly improve if I know their native languages.



I am trying to keep it general so that it would be helpful to most people. Note that I am seeking general advice, so you are free to list and make assumptions.



Note: I posted this here because this is general advise related to Career development in a particular scenario. The answers will help us understand what skills we need to learn (over the next few years) to be flexible enough to quickly move to another country and find a good job, in case visa challenges smack our families. If you believe this is incorrect, please let me know and I will delete it. I believe in being proactive and posted this in good faith. Thank you.










share|improve this question







New contributor




J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











closed as too broad by bruglesco, solarflare, Jim G., PeteCon, Dukeling Apr 15 at 2:19


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • 3





    I'm voting to close this for many reasons. It is unbelievably broad to ask how to improve ones career, your question on country immigration is phrased as an opinion poll, the phrase eccentric skills is a bit unclear, and even if you mean soft-skills (which seems likely), that too is an incredibly broad question. We like to focus on questions with a concrete goal to address. What is your goal? Maybe you can come up with a question or questions to address particular problems.

    – bruglesco
    Apr 14 at 23:46











  • @JoeStrazzere, yes, you are right.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:48











  • @bruglesco, if that is how you think you can help, then please do. Thank you.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:49











  • Information about every factor you mentioned, including how necessary learning the local language is, is readily available online in some form or another for many countries. There are also plenty of resources available on improving interpersonal skills, in general and for specific countries. I do not, however, think you'll find this in a nicely summarised form according to your preferences, because every person will see and weight different things differently (a few of the factors you listed are highly subjective, and even the objective ones might only be important within some bounds).

    – Dukeling
    Apr 15 at 2:42













  • @Dukeling, if you refer this, he mentions a point about the SWE industry in France. This is the kind of guidance I was looking for. Not statistical graphs/charts showing the growth, etc., but how the situation looks for a common man - in his words, leaving your job can lead to several months of job hunting. Of course, I will take this with a pinch of salt, but at least we came to know about the ground reality. Lastly, calling something as too broad is always debatable, I think.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 15 at 2:49














-5












-5








-5








I am currently working in the US as a Software Engineer on my post-graduation F1 visa OPT. Keeping in mind the visa concerns, I had a few questions:




  1. Which developed countries (in your opinion) would be easier to immigrate to? I am looking from the point of view of standard of living, good education, pay to a software engineer, work culture, no (or very less) visa challenges, low crime rate, in that order (feel free to make assumptions thinking from the point of view of a quintessential American common man's way of life).


  2. How should I develop my eccentric skills (not just technical) so that I would be able to find work in those countries quickly and easily? For example, my chances of finding work in some countries would significantly improve if I know their native languages.



I am trying to keep it general so that it would be helpful to most people. Note that I am seeking general advice, so you are free to list and make assumptions.



Note: I posted this here because this is general advise related to Career development in a particular scenario. The answers will help us understand what skills we need to learn (over the next few years) to be flexible enough to quickly move to another country and find a good job, in case visa challenges smack our families. If you believe this is incorrect, please let me know and I will delete it. I believe in being proactive and posted this in good faith. Thank you.










share|improve this question







New contributor




J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












I am currently working in the US as a Software Engineer on my post-graduation F1 visa OPT. Keeping in mind the visa concerns, I had a few questions:




  1. Which developed countries (in your opinion) would be easier to immigrate to? I am looking from the point of view of standard of living, good education, pay to a software engineer, work culture, no (or very less) visa challenges, low crime rate, in that order (feel free to make assumptions thinking from the point of view of a quintessential American common man's way of life).


  2. How should I develop my eccentric skills (not just technical) so that I would be able to find work in those countries quickly and easily? For example, my chances of finding work in some countries would significantly improve if I know their native languages.



I am trying to keep it general so that it would be helpful to most people. Note that I am seeking general advice, so you are free to list and make assumptions.



Note: I posted this here because this is general advise related to Career development in a particular scenario. The answers will help us understand what skills we need to learn (over the next few years) to be flexible enough to quickly move to another country and find a good job, in case visa challenges smack our families. If you believe this is incorrect, please let me know and I will delete it. I believe in being proactive and posted this in good faith. Thank you.







software-industry software-development skills learning






share|improve this question







New contributor




J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question







New contributor




J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question






New contributor




J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked Apr 14 at 23:30









J. DoeJ. Doe

1




1




New contributor




J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






J. Doe is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




closed as too broad by bruglesco, solarflare, Jim G., PeteCon, Dukeling Apr 15 at 2:19


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.









closed as too broad by bruglesco, solarflare, Jim G., PeteCon, Dukeling Apr 15 at 2:19


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.










  • 3





    I'm voting to close this for many reasons. It is unbelievably broad to ask how to improve ones career, your question on country immigration is phrased as an opinion poll, the phrase eccentric skills is a bit unclear, and even if you mean soft-skills (which seems likely), that too is an incredibly broad question. We like to focus on questions with a concrete goal to address. What is your goal? Maybe you can come up with a question or questions to address particular problems.

    – bruglesco
    Apr 14 at 23:46











  • @JoeStrazzere, yes, you are right.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:48











  • @bruglesco, if that is how you think you can help, then please do. Thank you.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:49











  • Information about every factor you mentioned, including how necessary learning the local language is, is readily available online in some form or another for many countries. There are also plenty of resources available on improving interpersonal skills, in general and for specific countries. I do not, however, think you'll find this in a nicely summarised form according to your preferences, because every person will see and weight different things differently (a few of the factors you listed are highly subjective, and even the objective ones might only be important within some bounds).

    – Dukeling
    Apr 15 at 2:42













  • @Dukeling, if you refer this, he mentions a point about the SWE industry in France. This is the kind of guidance I was looking for. Not statistical graphs/charts showing the growth, etc., but how the situation looks for a common man - in his words, leaving your job can lead to several months of job hunting. Of course, I will take this with a pinch of salt, but at least we came to know about the ground reality. Lastly, calling something as too broad is always debatable, I think.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 15 at 2:49














  • 3





    I'm voting to close this for many reasons. It is unbelievably broad to ask how to improve ones career, your question on country immigration is phrased as an opinion poll, the phrase eccentric skills is a bit unclear, and even if you mean soft-skills (which seems likely), that too is an incredibly broad question. We like to focus on questions with a concrete goal to address. What is your goal? Maybe you can come up with a question or questions to address particular problems.

    – bruglesco
    Apr 14 at 23:46











  • @JoeStrazzere, yes, you are right.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:48











  • @bruglesco, if that is how you think you can help, then please do. Thank you.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 14 at 23:49











  • Information about every factor you mentioned, including how necessary learning the local language is, is readily available online in some form or another for many countries. There are also plenty of resources available on improving interpersonal skills, in general and for specific countries. I do not, however, think you'll find this in a nicely summarised form according to your preferences, because every person will see and weight different things differently (a few of the factors you listed are highly subjective, and even the objective ones might only be important within some bounds).

    – Dukeling
    Apr 15 at 2:42













  • @Dukeling, if you refer this, he mentions a point about the SWE industry in France. This is the kind of guidance I was looking for. Not statistical graphs/charts showing the growth, etc., but how the situation looks for a common man - in his words, leaving your job can lead to several months of job hunting. Of course, I will take this with a pinch of salt, but at least we came to know about the ground reality. Lastly, calling something as too broad is always debatable, I think.

    – J. Doe
    Apr 15 at 2:49








3




3





I'm voting to close this for many reasons. It is unbelievably broad to ask how to improve ones career, your question on country immigration is phrased as an opinion poll, the phrase eccentric skills is a bit unclear, and even if you mean soft-skills (which seems likely), that too is an incredibly broad question. We like to focus on questions with a concrete goal to address. What is your goal? Maybe you can come up with a question or questions to address particular problems.

– bruglesco
Apr 14 at 23:46





I'm voting to close this for many reasons. It is unbelievably broad to ask how to improve ones career, your question on country immigration is phrased as an opinion poll, the phrase eccentric skills is a bit unclear, and even if you mean soft-skills (which seems likely), that too is an incredibly broad question. We like to focus on questions with a concrete goal to address. What is your goal? Maybe you can come up with a question or questions to address particular problems.

– bruglesco
Apr 14 at 23:46













@JoeStrazzere, yes, you are right.

– J. Doe
Apr 14 at 23:48





@JoeStrazzere, yes, you are right.

– J. Doe
Apr 14 at 23:48













@bruglesco, if that is how you think you can help, then please do. Thank you.

– J. Doe
Apr 14 at 23:49





@bruglesco, if that is how you think you can help, then please do. Thank you.

– J. Doe
Apr 14 at 23:49













Information about every factor you mentioned, including how necessary learning the local language is, is readily available online in some form or another for many countries. There are also plenty of resources available on improving interpersonal skills, in general and for specific countries. I do not, however, think you'll find this in a nicely summarised form according to your preferences, because every person will see and weight different things differently (a few of the factors you listed are highly subjective, and even the objective ones might only be important within some bounds).

– Dukeling
Apr 15 at 2:42







Information about every factor you mentioned, including how necessary learning the local language is, is readily available online in some form or another for many countries. There are also plenty of resources available on improving interpersonal skills, in general and for specific countries. I do not, however, think you'll find this in a nicely summarised form according to your preferences, because every person will see and weight different things differently (a few of the factors you listed are highly subjective, and even the objective ones might only be important within some bounds).

– Dukeling
Apr 15 at 2:42















@Dukeling, if you refer this, he mentions a point about the SWE industry in France. This is the kind of guidance I was looking for. Not statistical graphs/charts showing the growth, etc., but how the situation looks for a common man - in his words, leaving your job can lead to several months of job hunting. Of course, I will take this with a pinch of salt, but at least we came to know about the ground reality. Lastly, calling something as too broad is always debatable, I think.

– J. Doe
Apr 15 at 2:49





@Dukeling, if you refer this, he mentions a point about the SWE industry in France. This is the kind of guidance I was looking for. Not statistical graphs/charts showing the growth, etc., but how the situation looks for a common man - in his words, leaving your job can lead to several months of job hunting. Of course, I will take this with a pinch of salt, but at least we came to know about the ground reality. Lastly, calling something as too broad is always debatable, I think.

– J. Doe
Apr 15 at 2:49










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