Guys, in my profile I put the different job titles in my work history. They all belong to same NOC and they are all continuous and in same company. My question is whether cic considers same job being same title or same noc is enough? And in work experience should I mention all titles or only one? This confuses me.
Should be enough, as long as your supporting documents state that in all those designations your duties stayed the same and corresponded to the NOC you've chosen.
I had three job titles, none of which correspond to what I actually do and to my NOC, and while I haven't gotten a PPR yet, I think it'll be okay, since my reference letter states my job duties to be the same throughout my employment.
Should be enough, as long as your supporting documents state that in all those designations your duties stayed the same and corresponded to the NOC you've chosen.
I had three job titles, none of which correspond to what I actually do and to my NOC, and while I haven't gotten a PPR yet, I think it'll be okay, since my reference letter states my job duties to be the same throughout my employment.
Well duties have changed since a change in title leads to a change in duties but in the same domain. I am a systems developer. So as a senior developer I have more duties. As a head section I lead teams of it developers. But they are all same NOC. What do you think?
I think you're okay, what I meant by duties not changing is them still corresponding to the same NOC.
As for how many job titles to mention, that somewhat depends on what format your reference letter will be. I you have a separate letter for every job title, create a separate entry for each of them. I had one reference letter for my three job titles, so I made only one entry in my work history under my latest job title.
Though there was a guy who in a similar situation created separate entries for each job title and uploaded the same reference letter into each of them, so I think the format doesn't really matter as long as you have the experience and can prove it.