Moving to a New City
Hey guys!
So my girlfriend and I have decided that we can't do the New England winters anymore. We're looking to move to Austin, TX once her lease is up in September. I was looking for any advice you guys might have for moving to a new city as this will be my first time living outside of Boston. My biggest questions are: -When do I start looking for an apartment and how do you go about it when you're half a country away? -The same questions, but for finding a new job. How does the interview/application process typically go being out of state? Any help is HUGELY appreciated. Thanks everyone! |
Re: Moving to a New City
My buddy just made that move from Boston to Austin and he is loving every second of it. I don't have any info to share, but good luck! Austin is amazing i spent about 6 months down there in 2005.
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Re: Moving to a New City
Hopefully you have the dollars saved up to be able to first move, then regularly go on interviews if you are truly starting from scratch job wise. Most employers won't even take your application seriously until you are down there and doing a face to face interview, assuming it is a job you physically go to every day. Really depends on your industry though.
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Re: Moving to a New City
I would definitely advise talking to Matthew (ExistenceNow). He is our resident Austin expert and can probably give you plenty of advice on getting situated there. I believe Lockman21 also moved there within the past couple of years. Good luck! Moving to a new city is super exciting.
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If you know you'll be moving in September, I'd start applying for jobs now. What is your background/industry? Depending on which, some may want you to be down there already before they'll consider your application.
However, others (in my experience), will take care of travel costs to bring you down if you indicate you are looking to relocate there. If you're hired there may be moving cost compensation/relocation packages. This will vary greatly from company to company and depends entirely on the type of job. You also may need to be flexible and move there sooner if they offer something |
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Be patient. Don't expect things to happen instantaneously. Don't get discouraged if you cannot find an apartment or job as soon as you like. If you rush you'll find yourself in a crappy apartment, working a job you hate, you're not able to enjoy your new surroundings, and your relationships will falter because of the stress and discomfort. Also, don't take I70 through Kansas.
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Love Austin, was looking to move there in 2012/2013, but as Tidu stated, employers won't look at your resume without Austin address. That was the issue I faced.
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I would seriously recommend coming to stay and visit for about 2 weeks in July/August. It gets brutally hot here. The last two summers have been unseasonably cool, but the summer before that I think we did like 27-30 straight days of temps over 100. I've lived here my whole life and I still dread that July/August brutality.
Rent in Austin proper is through the roof due to everyone moving here from the coasts. I don't know what your financial situation is like but if you're trying to do it on a budget then look outside of Austin in areas like Buda/Kyle. They are about 10-20 minutes away (depending on traffic) and are much much more rural, but they are also a little less expensive. |
Re: Moving to a New City
We moved to Cleveland a few years ago for a couple years for my wife's grad program and it was stressful. Difference is that you're actually making the choice to make the move. Also, she found our she got in two months before we got married, and we moved two weeks after the wedding. That said, I agree with above.
Finding a job was probably the worst part. With it being such a quick move and so much on our plate at the time I took the first thing that was offered to me, but it was only $16 an hour. However, that was after a month and a half of active job searching. I took it with the intention of finding something else once we got there...6 months later...and I actively searched almost every day. I don't know what you do for work though, and I don't know the job market in Austin. If you can nab something before then, great. But it might be easier to secure some kind of employment to hold you over for a few months until you can actually live in the area and be present for interviews. Either way, definitely start to save up beforehand. Luckily we got married and received a sizable amount in gift money, so we used that to help us in rough spots, as $16 an hour doesn't go too far for two people. But it's good to have some savings in line in case of emergency. To find a place to live I highly suggest you taking a trip or two out there. I made a quick trip out to OH the month before our wedding and got so lucky by finding our place in one day. It turned out to be a nice place in a nice neighborhood. That was after a month and a half of looking for places online. Do you have a dog? Those are a big factor. I did not get as lucky when we moved back out east last summer. I started searching for places in May for an August 1 move in date and I didn't find anything until the beginning of July. I did a lot of Craigslist searching as well as Trulia (they have a decent app). But go down there and scope the area to see where some good spots are. Start researching the area and cost of living. Unless you're buying a place, it might not be too easy to find an apartment this far out, unless you move into an apartment complex of some sort. Usually those have scheduled move out dates and what not. Good Luck! We're thinking about moving again ourselves. Maybe even back to Cleveland. Because Rhode Island SUCKS. This is the worst place I've ever lived in 35 years. |
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was it the 2 hours of shoveling that did you in? :lol http://antsmarching.org/forum/showpo...postcount=7602 |
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Getting out of Billerica, huh? Can't remember if I've mentioned before, but my parents grew up there and I still have family there. Small world. |
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ysmLA5TqbIY https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oZzgAjjuqZM |
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If those weren't the Hastily Made Cleveland Tourism vids I was going to post them myself. HA! Good stuff |
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(do you guys need a roommate?) :BANG |
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I think my favorite line is the flats look like a scooby-doo ghost town. Cracks me up.
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So you live in the outer suburbs of Baltimore? I'm just saying not the right citizenry to be making fun of Cleveland. |
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No, i dont live in the "outer suburbs" of Baltimore.there are three counties between me and baltimore city. Im also 50 miles north of DC, and 30 miles east of Loudon County, and grew up in Potomac MD, all some of the richest areas in the entire country. But nice try Lee!!! Keep it up! Either way, your logic makes zero sense. And the videos are F-U-N-N-Y |
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