Blueprint Japan with Oğuzhan
*disclaimer: this is just based on personal experience and is by no means an encouragement to do the process without a lawyer. Please consult thoroughly with any scrivener or lawyer. A year ago, Blueprint Japan host Oğuzhan got a LinkedIn DM from a young Dutch content creator. They started collaborating. He made a promise: work hard, and I'll bring you to Japan.In January, he filed for a Certificate of Eligibility (COE). It came back approved in just over five weeks, with no lawyer, no immigration agent, and no shortcuts.In this episode, Oğuzhan walks through all 9 documents submitted for a 技術・人文知識・国際業務 visa (Gijinkoku / Engineer, Specialist in Humanities, International Services) — the most common Japan work visa category for professional roles — and explains exactly what each document was doing in the file.Documents covered:1. COE application form (在留資格認定証明書交付申請書)2. Degree certificate & education history3. 職務経歴書 — professional background statement4. Explanation letter to immigration (理由書)5. Work experience statement (職務経験について)6. Certificate of affiliation (在籍証明書)7. Outsourcing / service agreement (業務委託契約書)8. Company registry certificate (履歴事項全部証明書)9. Mailing instruction letterWhether you're a company in Japan looking to hire from overseas, or a professional hoping to make the move — this episode gives you a clear, practical picture of how the COE process actually works, what immigration is looking for, and how to build a file that moves fast.Topics: Japan work visa | certificate of eligibility Japan | COE application | Gijinkoku visa | 技術・人文知識・国際業務 | hiring foreigners in Japan | Japan immigration | work permit Japan | Japan visa documents | living and working in JapanThis episode is sponsored by RealEstate.jp [realestate.jp] — Japan property guidance for international clients. Also, for tasty honey, check out beebrazil.jp [beebrazil.jp]
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