I worked in a well respected large multinational firm for over 2 years but was made redundant because of the bad economy. I moved interstate for this job.
I moved back home to my city (other side of the country) and unfortunately my city has the worst unemployment rate in my country. I haven't been able to find work in 4 months.
I'm thinking of applying for jobs interstate in the bugger cities while living in my current city.
Do you think employers will take me seriously if I state on my resume I am willing to pay for all travel and relocation costs? Will my experience and business degree help me find a good job?
>>1455651
As someone who looks at resumes for 30 minutes a day and hires a person probably every two weeks:
It makes you sound desperate. Just apply to the jobs out of state and then see if they offer relocation compensation. If not, then you are where you would have been anyway.
What do you do?
>>1455654
I have a degree in commerce but major in accounting and finance. I have worked in accounting, contracts administration and business process improvement after graduation (the company I worked for moved me around to give me a wide range of skills).
I hope that if I say I can easily move interstate and live in my family members house it will increase my chances
>>1455651
Unless you have hard to find skills, you're resume will wind up in the trash if you aren't local.
>>1455651
Why did you go back to NEETsville?