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Introducing

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Pat de Boer-Polise, Cap Gemini. Tim Unsworth, Improve. Karen Prowse, ... in a roller coaster of extreme. ups and downs. Social/Cultural Issues: Culture Shock ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introducing


1
IBS 1ST INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS WEEK
WORKING AS AN EXPAT
Karen R. Prowse General Manager CONNECT
INTERNATIONAL
  • Paterswoldseweg 810
  • 9728 BM Groningen
  • Tel 050 521 45 41
  • Fax 050 521 45 43
  • Email connect_at_connect-int.org
  • Internet www.connect-int.org

2
Working as an Expat
  • 1. Intro to Connect International
  • 2. Procedural challenges for foreigners
  • Immigration work / residence permits
  • Establish new home Settling in
  • 3. Social/cultural issues
  • Culture shock
  • Cultural adaptation
  • 4. Preparing for an international move
  • Learning to BREATHE
  • Cross-cultural training

3
ONNECT INTERNATIONAL
4
Connect Relocation Services
5
Our Clients
6
Connecting Worlds Services
7
Connect Business Services
8
Information Centre
9
Our Network
Honorary Board
  • Mr. J.A. Jorritsma, CdK Fryslân
  • Mr. M.J. Van den Berg, CdK Groningen
  • Mr. S. Jansen, Director, N.V. NOM

Board of Directors
  • James Coombs, Philips
  • Theun Wijbenga, N.V. NOM
  • Miranda Seip, ABN AMRO Bank
  • Sieger Volkers, ATOS Origins
  • Charles Ruffolo, RIBS Network
  • Pat de Boer-Polise, Cap Gemini
  • Tim Unsworth, Improve
  • Karen Prowse, Connect International

Advisor to Board
  • John Ebbink, EZ gem Groningen

10
Connect Accomplishments
  • Successfully relocated hundreds of international
    employees and families
  • Offered information and support to thousands more
  • Organized hundreds of events and activities, both
  • business and social, on practical, cultural,
    economic
  • and educational matters
  • Produced thousands of information guides on the
    NNL
  • Maintained website to promote attractiveness
  • of the NNL and provide practical information
  • Published English-language Connections
  • magazine for 12 years
  • Offered dozens of practical courses
  • and workshops

11
Working as an Expat
  • 1. Intro to Connect International
  • 2. Procedural challenges for foreigners
  • Immigration work / residence permits
  • Establish new home Settling in
  • 3. Social/cultural issues
  • Culture shock
  • Cultural adaptation
  • 4. Preparing for an international move
  • Learning to BREATHE
  • Cross-cultural training

12
Immigration Work Residence Permits
  • Q Are they required?
  • A Rules differ depending on nationality
  • Distinction between EU/EER Non-EU/EER citizens
  • Differences within EU/EER countries
  • Differences between Non-EU countries
  • Q Who decides?
  • IND (Immigratie- en Natuuralisatie Dienst)
  • CWI (Centrum voor Werk en Inkomen)

13
Immigration Work Residence permits
  • Requirements for EU/EER citizens
  • Valid passport
  • Health insurance
  • Sufficient means of support (work contract, bank
    statements)
  • No work permit or residence permit required for
    citizens of EU/EER countries (exceptions Romania
    and Bulgaria)
  • Must register with municipality (Legalized birth
    and marriage certificates required)
  • May register for free with IND after 3 months
    (not required, except for Romanians and
    Bulgarians)

14
Immigration Work Residence permits
  • Requirements for Non-EU/EER
  • Labor Migrant
  • Work as employee
  • Must earn social minimum
  • Requires work permit from CWI
  • May require a temporary stay visa (MVV) from IND
  • Requires residence permit from IND
  • May need to take Civic Integration Exam
  • Highly-Skilled Migrant
  • Work as employee
  • Annual gross income of 47.565 (or 34.881, if
    under 30 years old)
  • Employer registers as user of this procedure
    assumes certain responsibilities
  • May require MVV
  • Combined work residence permit for employee
    partner
  • Is exempt from Civic Integration Exam

15
Immigration Work Residence permits
  • Requirements for Labor and Highly-Skilled
    Migrants
  • Valid passports
  • No criminal record
  • Health insurance
  • Undergo TB tests (variable)
  • Required documents (minimum)
  • Documents must be in Dutch, English, French or
    German.
  • If not, they must be translated into one of
    these languages by a translator sworn by a Dutch
    Court.
  • Legalized birth and marriage certificates,
  • less than six months old
  • Signed employment contract / transfer letter
  • Employers declaration
  • Passport photos

16
Immigration Work Residence permits
  • Procedure Labor Migrants
  • Apply for work permit from CWI
  • (decision time 4-5 weeks)
  • Apply for MVV (temporary stay visa) in NL
  • (decision time 4 weeks)
  • Collect MVV at Dutch consulate/embassy in home
    country
  • Enter NL
  • Submit application for Labor Migrant
  • (decision time 6 months)
  • Collect residence card at IND office when approved

17
Immigration Work Residence permits
  • Work Permit (TWV) requirements
  • Employers
  • Advertise minimally 5 weeks (3 months for
    difficult positions) using various media in NL
    rest of EU
  • Interview potential candidates from EU and be
    able to prove that they do not fulfill the
    requirements
  • Report vacancy to UWV WERKbedrijf 5 weeks before
    submitting TWV request
  • Supply information about job as well as special
    skills/education/experience of employee
  • Employees
  • Must earn minimum wage
  • Be 18 45 years old
  • Possess residence permit
  • Have accommodation in NL

18
Immigration Work Residence permits
  • Procedure Highly-Skilled Migrants
  • Company registers with the IND in NL
  • (2-4 weeks)
  • Apply for MVV (temporary stay visa) in NL
  • (decision time 2 weeks)
  • Collect MVV at Dutch consulate/embassy in home
    country
  • Enter NL
  • Submit application for Highly-Skilled Migrant
  • (decision time 2 weeks)
  • Collect residence card at IND office when
    approved

19
Immigration Work Residence permits
  • To summarize differences
  • EU/EER Citizen
  • No work permit or residence permit required
  • Non EU/EER Citizen
  • Labor Migrant
  • Separate work permit and residence permits
    required
  • More complicated process
  • Longer approval time
  • Highly-Skilled Migrant
  • Combined work/residence permit
  • More responsibilities assumed by employer
  • Shorter approval time

20
Immigration Registration at Municipality
  • Both EU/EER Non-EU/EER citizens must register
    at Municipality!
  • Required documents
  • Valid passport or EU/EER country ID card
  • Proof of address (rental contract)
  • Legalized birth and marriage certificates,
  • less than 6 months old
  • For Non-EU/EER citizens Residence permit,
    decision letter from IND, or sticker in passport
    placed by IND

21
Establish new home Settle in
  • Accommodation find temporary soft- or
    fully-furnished rental houses / apartments
  • Education register children at (international)
    primary and/or secondary schools
  • Medical care register for health insurance,
    family doctor, dentist, specialists
  • Financial issues open bank account, cc,
    investments, pension plans
  • Insurances establish property, house contents,
    auto, third party, legal aid
  • Utilities arrange gas, water, electricity,
    telephones, internet, cable TV

22
Establish new home settle in
  • Information on local services rubbish
    collection, post, regional taxes
  • Importing, buying, or registering a car
  • Obtain Dutch drivers license new or exchange
  • Information on Dutch income tax system
  • Build up a new social life and network
    religious and/or cultural organizations, sport
    clubs, music schools, social groups, etc.

23
Working as an Expat
  • 1. Intro to Connect International
  • 2. Procedural challenges for foreigners
  • Immigration work / residence permits
  • Establish new home Settling in
  • 3. Social/cultural issues
  • Culture shock
  • Cultural adaptation
  • 4. Preparing for an international move
  • Learning to BREATHE
  • Cross-cultural training

24
Social/Cultural Issues What is Culture?
  • American Heritage Dictionary
  • "The totality of socially transmitted behavior
    patterns, arts, beliefs, institutions, and all
    other products of human work and thought
    characteristic of a community or population.
  • Edward Hall, American Anthropologist
  • "Culture is a system for creating, sending,
    storing, and processing information. It is how
    we talk, behave, understand and act."

25
Social/Cultural Issues Culture Shock
  • Being in a foreign country means walking
  • a tightrope high above the ground without the
    net
  • afforded a person by the country where he has
  • his family, colleagues, and friends, and
  • where he can easily say what he has to say
  • in a language he has known from childhood.
  • The Unbearable Lightness of Being, by
    Milan Kundera

26
Social/Cultural Issues Culture Shock
  • "Culture shock can be defined as a sense of
    disorientation
  • and the resulting anxiety and stress when we are
    transplanted from one culture to another.
  • C. Gelderman-Curtis, Inside Information
  • Familiar cues (general behavior, customs and
    norms, word usage, facial expressions and body
    language) are gone and insecurity is the result
  • Normal reaction to adjusting to a culture other
    than the one they were raised in
  • The culture shock curve involves feelings of
    excitement
  • alternating with dread
  • in a roller coaster of extreme
  • ups and downs

27
Culture Shock Curve
  • First step Leaving familiar environment
  • Physical stresses of planning, organizing and
    executing move, and preparing for new environment
  • Psychological stresses of saying good-bye
  • to friends and family, leaving your job,
  • dealing with unsettled children
  • Time and energy spent researching new
    environment, taking language courses and cultural
    training lead to a detachment from familiar
    environment before moving

28
Culture Shock Curve
  • Second step Honeymoon or tourist phase
  • Period of time right after arrival in new culture
  • Mood and energy are high
  • Everything seems exciting,
  • charming and positive

29
Culture Shock Curve
  • Third step Culture Shock
  • Mood and energy drop
  • Physical ailments arise
  • (colds, rashes, tiredness)
  • Everything seems negative
  • feelings of depression, confusion,
  • isolation, and a sense of loss

30
Culture Shock Curve
  • Final step Enjoyment of new life
  • Swings in mood and energy levels stabilize
  • Sense of disorientation and insecurity are gone
  • See unique features to situation and able to view
    them realistically

31
Adapting to the new culture
  • Four types of cultural adaptation (J.W. Berry)
  • Assimilation Going Native
  • Ongoing process of total absorption into new
    culture to become socially accepted
  • Integration Feet in both worlds
  • Maintaining a positive relationship between two
    cultures, not choosing between them
  • Separation Keeping a distance
  • Maintains no substantial relationship with new
    culture and keeps traditional way of life
  • Marginalization Left out and alone
  • Loses cultural and psychological contact with
    both cultures and loses identity

32
Working as an Expat
  • 1. Intro to Connect International
  • 2. Procedural challenges for foreigners
  • Immigration work / residence permits
  • Establish new home Settling in
  • 3. Social/cultural issues
  • Culture shock
  • Cultural adaptation
  • 4. Preparing for an international move
  • Learning to BREATHE
  • Cross-cultural training

33
Preparing for international move
  • Learn to BREATHE
  • B Brainstorm
  • R Research
  • E Expectations
  • A Attitude
  • T Treats
  • H Humor
  • E Exercise

Lets learn to BREATHE
34
Preparing for international move
  • Maintain sense of identity and perspective, and
    set priorities in your life
  • Develop core identity that remains consistent
  • Make conscious realistic adaptation choices
  • Be flexible and patient and ask for support when
    needed
  • See both pluses and minuses of new culture
  • Try new things and give yourself credit for ways
    that you have grown
  • Acknowledge the time, energy, and effort spent
  • Value the benefits of a multicultural life

35
Cross-cultural training
  • Sources of cross-communication within "Corporate
    Culture"
  • Non-verbal communication
  • Dress code
  • Appointments
  • Acceptable small talk and slang
  • Informal vs. formal
  • Management style
  • Business meeting procedures
  • Decision-making style
  • Negotiating style
  • Setting goals and achievements
  • Gender and ethnic differences
  • Respect for authority and seniority

36
Cross-cultural training
  • Ways of negotiating the cultural divide
  • Polarize Separate the cultures, but don't judge
  • Adapt Acknowledge and accept the positive
  • Bridge Find common ground to build upon
  • Build Create a totally new outlook

37
Repatriation Going home
  • Repatriation requires just as much preparation as
    any other international move
  • People expect to fit right in again, BUT
  • Expats have changed considerably
  • Old environment acquaintances stayed the same
  • Local people seem provincial and uninterested in
    the rest of the world
  • Repats no longer have special status

38
Repatriation Going home
  • Many multinational companies lose employees upon
    repatriation
  • At the workplace
  • International experience may be undervalued
  • Status and responsibility may have changed
  • Career opportunities may have been missed
  • Work may seem less stimulating
  • Personal growth may slow

39
Benefits of nomadic life
  • Expanded world view more open minded, flexible,
    and understanding
  • Increased linguistic abilities
  • Achieved cross-cultural skills
  • Enjoyed new experiences
  • More curious and adventuresome
  • Created multiple social networks worldwide

40
Benefits of nomadic life
  • Relocating to a new country is much more than a
    case of simply changing jobs.
  • With proper preparation and management, the new
    expat can experience a smooth transition and a
    soft landing in their new environment.

41
Working as an Expat
  • 1. Intro to Connect International
  • 2. Procedural challenges for foreigners
  • Immigration work / residence permits
  • Establish new home Settling in
  • 3. Social/cultural issues
  • Culture shock
  • Cultural adaptation
  • 4. Preparing for an international move
  • Learning to BREATHE
  • Cross-cultural training

42
CONNECTING PEOPLE, BUSINESS, KNOWLEDGE
  • Paterswoldseweg 810
  • 9728 BM Groningen
  • Tel 050 521 45 41
  • Fax 050 521 45 43
  • Email connect_at_connect-int.org
  • Internet www.connect-int.org
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