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10-31-2008, 06:47 AM
http://www.japanforum.com/forum/gene...rs-rights.html
Nyororin is the expert. She lives in Japan and has a family there. AlphaDuck is not. He doesn't speak Japanese and has never been to Japan. This should help. |
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10-31-2008, 10:24 AM
ive work for the past 8.5 years in a Japanese company as a software design engineer.. what do you want to know specifically ? 4 years of which is in Japan..
first what kind of an engineer are you? |
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10-31-2008, 06:33 PM
Quote:
i'm doing mechanical engineering right now and when i enter the company next year, probably they are going to send me to PRODUCTION (生産) or perhaps DESIGN (設計). that depends of my training. what i want to know specifically is the working culture as an engineer in a japanese company located in japan. please do spend the time to share your experiences! additional note: i spend 1 year in tokyo to learn japanese, then another 3 years in nagano for my diploma (mechanical engineering) and now i'm in my final year of my 2-years program bachelor's degree (also in mechanical engineering) in akita. training will be in tokyo for a year and i requested to be transferred to one of their plants in nagoya after training. right now i'm focusing on finishing my thesis on time so that i could graduate without any problems |
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11-01-2008, 01:30 AM
I wouldn`t really say I`m an expert by any stretch. It`s not as if I`ve actually worked as an engineer in a Japanese company.
My husband, however, is a head SE so I do have a fairly good idea of the atmosphere. (Plus, when he can`t find anybody in house to do the work he brings stuff home and makes me do 入力 :P ) If you`ll be working in Nagoya, paths may cross as he`s sent all over the place. |
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11-01-2008, 03:21 AM
You will be fine. Gaijin in skilled trades get special treatment.
If you are a US citizen and intending to work for more than one year in Japan, I highly recommend Form 8802 in order to exempt yourself from Japanese taxes. Here is the link, Foreign Certification Requests - Form 6166 |
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11-01-2008, 04:02 AM
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nagoya is just perfect for me. still a big city but not too crowded for me Quote:
wow us citizens got tax exemption? how fortunate! i'm malaysian by the way and i don't think my government is strong enough to have such policy implemented. |
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11-01-2008, 04:50 AM
I haven't worked in a Japanese company, but for 6 months last year I worked with a Japanese company and their engineers. I'm a mechanical enginer and my company builds tooling and automation equipment. I worked with their mechanical and manufacturing engineers.
In general their work habits aren't any different than US engineers. If you have something that you need to do you work as long as you have to. If you don't you go home at 5 or 6. During an early design review we were a little behind in the agenda but we left at 6 because there was enough time the next day to cover everything. We actually finished that next day a little early. At several later design/schedule meetings and during the install process they were generally at work until 8pm or later. In this regard I didn't see any difference between US and Japanese engineers. The largest difference I saw was in the very regimented seniority and the way it was expressed. Their head engineer would occasionally ask one of us for some information. When we gathered that information we couldn't go back to him, we had to talk one of the younger engineers and they would relay the information. Additionally, senior engineers would often ask younger engineers to deal with menial or secretarial tasks. And because this is the first company you will work for, it doesn't matter what their culture is, you will consider it normal. It is that way for me where I work. |
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