Use your contacts
It鈥檚 not what you know but who you know. Don鈥檛 be afraid to use old or new contacts, as these are the people who will know your capabilities and how they can be transferred to the UK industry.
Be prepared for a pay cut
Many expats have a distorted impression of UK salaries. You may have been earning 拢60 000 in Saudi Arabia, but in the UK, you are more likely to get about 拢25 000 for the same job. And remember, it鈥檚 not tax-free.
Architect Sharon Carpenter has recently returned to Britain after four years in Hong Kong with her structural engineer husband Simon Nesbitt. Carpenter says the couple found the drop in salary took a bit of getting used to: 鈥淣o matter how well prepared you are for the salary difference here, you can鈥檛 help but feel a bit short changed. If you鈥檙e in charge of a project, then you鈥檙e liable if things go wrong and that鈥檚 a lot of responsibility. I don鈥檛 feel salaries reflect this.鈥
Prove that you are back for good
The main stumbling block for returning job hunters is convincing employers that they are here to stay. Hays Montrose consultant Dave Choonucksing says: 鈥淢ost employers are sceptical about using people returning from overseas. There鈥檚 a feeling that they are here as a stopgap and will leave as soon as the economic situation improves. Stress your commitment.鈥
Know the rules
It鈥檚 more important than ever to be au fait with current health and safety rules and 黑洞社区 Regulations. Choonucksing says: 鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the first things employers will question you on.鈥
He says expats must be seen to be keeping up with new regulations, and adds that the best way to do this is to take a course. 鈥淕et a qualification,鈥 is his advice.
Transfer your skills
You may have found yourself managing airport projects in the Far East, but schemes of this scale simply do not exist in the UK. Look at the skills you鈥檝e got and work out how they can be used in smaller projects. You may see these projects as a bit of a comedown, but it can make a refreshing change to try something completely different. Nesbitt sees the benefits of this. Having worked on a huge airport project in Hong Kong, he is now working on a housebuilding project here.
鈥淎 change is as good as a rest 鈥 although I wouldn鈥檛 want to do it forever,鈥 he says.
Try contract work initially
Don鈥檛 expect to be offered a permanent job as soon as you step off the plane. In the meantime, go for contract work. As Choonucksing says: 鈥淭here鈥檚 no better way to expand your portfolio and find out what the state of play is in the UK market. Wider experience on varied projects will increase your marketability.鈥
Top tips
- Don鈥檛 be afraid to use old contacts
- Be prepared to take a pay cut
- Make sure interviewers know you are back for good
- Revise the 黑洞社区 Regulations and health and safety rules
- Get up to speed on new legislation 鈥 for example, the Working Time Directive or the Employment Relations Act
- Think about transferring your skills to different sizes and types of projects
- Try contract work as a way of expanding your range of skills and making new contacts
- Be prepared for some culture shock
- Don鈥檛 talk incessantly about your wonderful life abroad. You鈥檒l irritate colleagues and make bosses think you don鈥檛 really want to be here
- Don鈥檛 moan about the British weather