Job Hunting in Japan: What Foreign Candidates Should Know

Job hunting in Japan is very doable—but the process can feel different from other countries. Here’s what matters most if you’re applying as a foreign candidate.

Understand the Main Hiring Paths

Mid-career vs. new grad

  • Mid-career (中途 / chūto): faster hiring, skills-first, common for foreigners.
  • New grad (新卒 / shinsotsu): structured “recruiting season,” more standardized steps.

Japanese company vs. global company

  • Japanese firms may value fit, communication style, and teamwork heavily.
  • Global firms often prioritize experience and measurable outcomes.

Prepare a Japan-Ready Resume Set

You may need two versions

  • English resume (for global roles)
  • Japanese-style resume: Rirekisho (履歴書) + Shokumu keirekisho (職務経歴書) for many Japanese employers.

What recruiters expect

  • Clear timeline (months/years), job titles, responsibilities
  • Quantified results (numbers, impact, scope)
  • Simple formatting and no long paragraphs

Interviews: What’s Different

Communication style matters

Expect questions that test:

  • How you work in a team
  • How you handle pressure and feedback
  • Whether you can adapt to Japanese workplace norms

Common topics

  • Why Japan / why this company
  • Long-term plans (they want stability)
  • Language level and how you use Japanese at work

Visas and Work Eligibility

Be upfront and clear

Recruiters need to know:

  • Your current visa status (if any)
  • Whether you need sponsorship
  • Your start date and location flexibility

(You don’t need to overshare—just give a clean, confident summary.)

Where to Find Jobs

Strong channels in Japan

  • Recruiters (very common for mid-career)
  • LinkedIn (especially for tech/global firms)
  • Company career pages
  • Referrals (surprisingly powerful)

Quick Tips That Help a Lot

  • Tailor your “Why this role?” to the job description (not generic)
  • Use a short story to prove skills (problem → action → result)
  • Send a polite follow-up after interviews
  • If you’re not fluent, show how you communicate effectively anyway

Helpful Reference

If you’re looking for a job in Japan and want a step-by-step guide made for foreigners, check out this JoynTokyo article.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *