How do I get a government job with no connects in current year I’m 27
>>34715407Which country are you from? Because the pipeline from loser to comfy government job differes wildly from place to place.In Brazil and India they have national and local exams and you have to score good in it. Without a degree it's basically impossible because a 1000 people will apply for the same mediocre position.In Japan there's a national test that is hard but it doesn't guarantee you a job, just certificates that you can apply for one, then a series of invasive interviews they do to make sure you will slave for them for the rest of your life, because they really don't want to give you a job and let you quit after a few years. All that toxic company=family japanese bullshit.I don't know much about the rest of the world, but believe you need the certifications and experience if possible to even have a chance of landing some opportunity.Aim for a position and turn it into a long project, breaking it into smaller goals and doing the things you need in order to get it.
>>34715421In the US you simply apply. But there is no one-fits-all application - you have to apply separately to each agency or department you want.
>no contacts Get contacts?
>>34715720Canada is the same way. I got my job by just applying. No outside connections or anything either, I’d actually just moved provinces.
Find any job first then build a resume from that. Then apply for a position in the government that matches the skills from the jobs you had.
>>34715421>In Brazil [...] they have national and local exams and you have to score good in it.There are tons of positions open for those with just a high school certificate.It's just that the tests are insanely hard and you're looking to compete with a almost ~35,000 people for one spot.Still, it's not impossible. 2-4 years of consistent study (>4+hrs a day) will do it. The hard part is going to be reading comprehension, essay writing, logic and mathematics.Anything specific you can pick up in a couple months of study.The real prize is of course, higher public positions requiring a law degree. Yeah, these will be insanely hard.But if you do it, you're set for life. I mean, for life.