but if you are going to a place like Mexico it may be more difficult because they don't have as much money there.. and you would have an easier time finding a job once you move their
girdy_goo15 answered Monday July 17 2006, 8:16 pm: well if you don't have a job already lined up, then i would go and spend a little while in a hotel until you find a job, then get a house near the job, that way you don't have to move from the house if you can't find a job close. [ girdy_goo15's advice column | Ask girdy_goo15 A Question ]
x3candiigrl answered Monday July 17 2006, 8:03 pm: You should do it at the same time. Look for a house while your finding a job. And if you find one before the other, don`t make any deals until you find the other.
Caus if you find a job, but no house. Then the jobs worthless cuz u wont live there to go to work. same thing with the house. And if you find one and cant find the other then you can always back out of the deal till you find both =]
sassysara answered Monday July 17 2006, 7:50 pm: Hey,
I think it depends on where you want to move. I wanted to live in Ireland (I am from Canada) so I found a job in my field there that would sponser me. If you want to move countries and you don't have citizenship to work there then you need to find the job first so that you know where to look for a house. If you need any more help on how to find a job in a specific country let me know I can give you some tips, also let me know the field in which you work.
Lucky answered Monday July 17 2006, 7:14 pm: I think that's for you 2 decide. where do you want 2 live? what kind of job do you want? It all depends. I would go w/ a house then find a job tho.
SparkleAngel answered Monday July 17 2006, 7:13 pm: well you should try to find a house frist becuase if you find a job then you don't find a house your introuble but you should try to be looking for both at the same time but mostly houses then after you get one focus more on jobs [ SparkleAngel's advice column | Ask SparkleAngel A Question ]
Razhie answered Monday July 17 2006, 7:11 pm: I think it depends on the kind of work you are looking for.
If you want to work as a sales associate in a clothing store, you could live in nearly any decent sized city, but if you wanted to be the senior executive of a national widget distributing company (or some other very specific and highly qualified job) you would probably want to find work first, and then a home near by it.
If you know your industry is localized in one area, you might just move there, knowing there will be a lot of possibilities for you around.
So it really depends on the job you want and what you are comfortable with. I’d probably be too nervous to move to a foreign city without a job lined up, eating away at my savings until I found one, but other people wouldn’t be worried by that at all. [ Razhie's advice column | Ask Razhie A Question ]
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