I'm 23 and I want to leave my country to start fresh.
What can I do to start in France/Belgium/Russia ?
I'm still living with my parents and I have a well paying job in Romania.
>>18634633
No one ever moved to another country ? Please help.
>>18634689
This may be /adv/, but I think it'd help you a lot more if you took your question over to >>>/int/
>>18634711
thanks
>>18634711
lel no, if anything, go to >>>/trv/, /int/ is pretty shitty when it comes to "serious" conversation
Anyway, EU regulations are your friend, it's easy both for you and your employer.
If you have experience in a specialised field, it's a big plus as you won't be starting out as some cleaning lady or whatever.
Depending on the company though, you'll probably be looked down upon as some eastern european, at least initially.
What's your job?
>>18634727
I work in a service desk helping retards install remotely their office 365
>>18634633
why France/Belgium/Russia?
I live in Belgium, and keep wondering why so many people seem to think it's a good place to move to..
I have never traveled to another country. But I think you'd want to learn a new language. You'd do fine with a skill or two or more.
>>18634745
I want to move out live solo and I know there are better salaries in the west
>>18634739
Ah, that doesn't seem like a highly qualified position, but at least it's a good starting point.
My advice is to create a finely crafted Europass CV. And make it quality over quantity, don't shove in that 3 weeks you worked as a pool guard or a dishwasher or whatever. Emphasise your IT experience. Then personalise the adressing text for each company you send it to.
After that, it's all about sending >9000 CVs each day. Don't just look for companies that have work offers out, find any company that interests you and send the CV directly to their HR, info mail or even their director, if the company is small enough.
Don't dispair, you'll probably need to send out hundreds of CVs to get a few replies.
In the meantime, find an IT field your really interested in and study about it on the internet.
An alternate option, since you're still young, is to get some sort of exchange, maybe through erasmus or AIESTE, although that depends on your college status, then try to squeeze into a more regular employment through that.