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JIKOSHOKAI - 4 Examples of Japanese Self-Introductions
The jikoshokai-self-introduction- is one of the crucial parts of a Japanese job interview that you can be sure you will have to give every time. Here are four real examples from four members of our staff. See the accompanying article for full tips on how to give your best jikoshokai:
www.tsunagulocal.com/en/87165/
Looking for a job? Get free job search support at our website jobs.tsunagulocal.com/en
Переглядів: 13 918

Відео

How to FAIL a Japanese Online Job Interview (+ How To Succeed)
Переглядів 55 тис.3 роки тому
This video shows you how to fail an interview as a foreigner trying to get a job in Japan. Don't worry, though, Hagiwara-shacho also gives pointers on how to succeed and successfully answer some common questions. Check out our corresponding article:www.tsunagulocal.com/en/76374/ or Our foreign resident-specific job site tsunagu Local Jobs: jobs.tsunagulocal.com/

КОМЕНТАРІ

  • @thorodin1598
    @thorodin1598 4 місяці тому

    I just failed my japanese job interview man

  • @maximiliandmc
    @maximiliandmc 8 місяців тому

    Good video but is teh reason why IT company is complete garbage. Interviews that show 0 skill.

  • @weaj143
    @weaj143 9 місяців тому

    Dame da, 😅 these is very informative. Ganbatte kudasai

  • @MariaKucherova-w5e
    @MariaKucherova-w5e 10 місяців тому

    Thank you so much!

  • @namulondomadiina542
    @namulondomadiina542 Рік тому

    😅😅😅😅😅😅😅oh the beginning 😅😅😅😅😅😅

  • @stephenmontague6930
    @stephenmontague6930 Рік тому

    11:58 - What does this Kanji mean?

    • @WesTheWizard
      @WesTheWizard Рік тому

      適当=tekitou. Roughly translates to not putting enough thought or energy into something, maybe with the nuance that you could have done better but didn't care to bother and settled for something less than great.

    • @stephenmontague6930
      @stephenmontague6930 9 місяців тому

      @@WesTheWizard Thanks! Missed your reply earlier. Guess I was tekitou. Good to know...

  • @stephenmontague6930
    @stephenmontague6930 Рік тому

    Good Answers 2:46 - Self introduction 4:50 - Why you came to Japan 6:27 - Why work for our company 7:41 - Past job experience 9:08 - Greatest achievement 10:54 - Learning from a mistake 12:19 - Future career plans 12:47 - Questions for them (description only) Thanks very much. Suggestion - to help people study this - add chapter time stamps. Also, if not too much trouble, keep changing the scene color-filter or clothes to make it obvious which answers are good or bad, in the case viewers skip to a specific part. Finally, since viewers will probably only need to watch the bad answer & explanation once, but may need to watch the good answers several times to learn well, consider grouping all bad answers, then all explanations, and finally all good answers together.

    • @XC-Z-cv8qw
      @XC-Z-cv8qw 9 місяців тому

      Timestampers are always doing God's work. Bless

  • @ayeyunwe8404
    @ayeyunwe8404 Рік тому

    Thank you so much 🙂

  • @Bread-vk8fl
    @Bread-vk8fl Рік тому

    Thanks a lot, this will help me so much soon

  • @takeshmode
    @takeshmode Рік тому

    Yea I got an interview in like 39 min and my Japanese is no where near as advanced as this guy lol.. oh well here goes nothing

  • @RajKumar-ou5oq
    @RajKumar-ou5oq Рік тому

    I am from India and looking for job in japan,I think this channel is very helpful for us.Thanks a lot

    • @idiot8779
      @idiot8779 Рік тому

      I bro i am IND , how to search job in jpan bro?

  • @ajitbarai8008
    @ajitbarai8008 Рік тому

    さいようお願いします is it good to use this sentence in the interview. please おしえていただきます。

    • @OmarLivesUnderSpace
      @OmarLivesUnderSpace Рік тому

      👌🏻

    • @adam-nw5cn
      @adam-nw5cn Рік тому

      I think it's a little odd. because it's a little unusual to use the word 「お願いします」after a noun 「さいよう」。 instead you can say how he said it in the video,「ぜひ、採用してください。お願いします。」

  • @dodgyyoutuber9560
    @dodgyyoutuber9560 2 роки тому

    Thank you! I used these tips for the jet program. My original jikoshoukai was as short as you bad version and I was like EEEK!

  • @yulianalaksita8869
    @yulianalaksita8869 2 роки тому

    this video deserves more views! ive been looking for japanese interview guides, and this is so far one of the most detailed ones. this will surely help me a lot, thank you so much!

  • @hiimmike_r
    @hiimmike_r 2 роки тому

    I'm preparing for an online interview at a software company and used this video as well as a lot of others to help write practice questions and answers for the interview. But this one was one of the most helpful video's. Thanks for the tips.

    • @MariaKucherova-w5e
      @MariaKucherova-w5e 10 місяців тому

      Hi! May I ask you, were you able to land a job?

    • @hiimmike_r
      @hiimmike_r 10 місяців тому

      Sadly no, but I work fulltime at a Dutch IT company now. @@MariaKucherova-w5e

  • @nekonomikatadesu235
    @nekonomikatadesu235 2 роки тому

    Can i ask something!? I was recently in a site called YOLO JAPAN like is a site for people searching for a job in japan but i actually don’t have confidence because I can’t find nothing of information about this site and people how’s applied a job and got it. It’s secure this site???

  • @noraki643
    @noraki643 2 роки тому

    i think in that way you'll fail all your interviews in any country 😆. anyway, never overlook the obvious! good job! 👍

  • @iLikeGreenTea
    @iLikeGreenTea 2 роки тому

    the "what not to do" is PRETTY OBVIOUSLY BAD! 笑笑 The good examples are great. Thank you for making this video and congrats!

  • @pilieyang9667
    @pilieyang9667 3 роки тому

    Sensei, Is there the best way to make my communication skill to be fluently ?even without Native's interaction to?

  • @azukiaisuuuu
    @azukiaisuuuu 3 роки тому

    このビデオはとても面白かったです。ありがとうございます。🌸✨

  • @travelsuperyoutubechannel9474
    @travelsuperyoutubechannel9474 3 роки тому

    So nice

  • @rosalindacaadyang3659
    @rosalindacaadyang3659 3 роки тому

    Last interview part : do you have a question? What is the best answer

    • @tsunagulocaljobs8041
      @tsunagulocaljobs8041 3 роки тому

      Hi Rosalinda, thanks for the question. The best answer will be completely different for each interview, so it's impossible to give a definitive answer to your question. Make sure that you do good research about the company before the interview and figure out a few things related to the company or the position specifically that you want to know but that aren't explained anywhere on the company's website or in the job description.

    • @rosalindacaadyang3659
      @rosalindacaadyang3659 3 роки тому

      @@tsunagulocaljobs8041 i will ,thank you so much ☺️

  • @MrAtticLights
    @MrAtticLights 3 роки тому

    Would the level of Japanese spoken in this video be considered business level?

    • @tsunagulocaljobs8041
      @tsunagulocaljobs8041 3 роки тому

      Yes, this is considered business-level Japanese

    • @nerdyguy5287
      @nerdyguy5287 3 роки тому

      @@tsunagulocaljobs8041 I think his level is around N-3, right? Since I can speak better than him but I never took JLPT exam.

    • @tsunagulocaljobs8041
      @tsunagulocaljobs8041 3 роки тому

      @@nerdyguy5287 He actually passed N1, but as you can see the JLPT isn't necessarily a good way to gauge someone's speaking ability.

    • @timothypaul446
      @timothypaul446 2 роки тому

      @@tsunagulocaljobs8041 but passing JLPT like N1 is a good indicator of a good grasp of reading comprehension. Speaking and reading are different skills in Japanese since reading involves many kanji which makes it difficult also. And it is a very important skill also because you need to read technical documents, and make reports.

  • @ItzKamo
    @ItzKamo 3 роки тому

    dude speaks better japanese than me. even tho i am here since 7 years :D

  • @ソフィアソフィア-h3c
    @ソフィアソフィア-h3c 3 роки тому

    Great video. Thanks! 5 subscribers only for such good content? Best of luck