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Make sure that your contact information and information related to your account are up to date.
The TE Office or the local government pilot will arrange an initial interview for you, if possible, within five working days of the start of your job search.
Initial interview
The initial interview is organised for all job seekers within five business days since the start of the job search. Interviews are mainly organised at the office of the TE Office or the local government pilot, but they can also be arranged in some other way due to a weighty reason, for example, an inordinately long trip to the relevant office.
Alternatively, the TE Office or the local government pilot will organise a supplementary job search discussion in which an employment plan will be drawn up for you. However, the initial interview must be arranged without delay thereafter.
In the initial interview your situation will be analysed, and an employment plan will be prepared for you. In the interview, you and your expert will discuss what kind of jobs you could apply for or whether you need to acquire training or change fields
Your service needs will also be assessed in the initial interview. The assessment of service needs is a key part of supporting your employment and directing you to services.
In the initial interview, you will also agree on the service use method and communication with the TE Office or the local government pilot.
A new initial interview will only be organised if at least six months have passed since the end of your job search and you are re-registered as a job seeker.
Read more
- Employment plan
- Assessment of service needs
- Services for job seekers during the local government pilots
More information
- Local TE Services (toimistot.te-palvelut.fi, in Finnish)
- Työ- ja elinkeinoministeriö: Työ- ja elinkeinoministeriön ohje julkisesta työvoima- ja yrityspalvelusta annetun lain ja asetuksen soveltamisesta (finlex.fi, in Finnish)
Job search discussions and supplementary job search discussions
The TE Office or the local government pilot will hold job search discussions and supplementary job search discussions with you.
Job search discussions
The TE Office or the local government pilot must organise a job search discussion with you every three months after the initial interview or the previous job search discussion. Between them, you apply for work independently or participate in services in accordance with the employment plan.
Job search discussions concern
- all unemployed job seekers and job seekers at risk of unemployment,
- those in part-time employment and those who have been laid off by reducing their working hours, and
- job seekers who are in subsidised employment, in labour market training, rehabilitation, or study at their own initiative while on an unemployment benefit for a maximum period of one month.
As a job seeker, you are in regular contact with your assigned expert at the TE Office or the local government pilot in the job search discussions.
Job search discussions are carried out in the way most appropriate way for the current situation. As a job seeker, you can express your wish for the way the discussion is organized. The discussion can be arranged in other locations than the premises of the TE Office or the local government pilot, for example in facilities offered by the workplace or educational institution, by telephone, or by video connection.
In the job search discussion, you will receive support for your job search. In addition to this, the effectiveness of your job search and the implementation of the employment plan will be assessed. In the job search discussion, the assessment of service needs will be reviewed, and you will be directed to services accordingly.
A job search discussion or supplementary job search discussion will not be organised if your unemployment ends within three months and the other conditions are met.
Your employment plan will be drawn up or revised in each job search discussion.
Supplementary job search discussions
After the initial interview, the TE Office or the local government pilot will organise five supplementary job search discussions for you in the next three months. The aim is to organise the discussions every two weeks. The supplementary job search discussions are organised according to your individual situation, especially taking your service needs into account.
A supplementary job search discussion may also be organised before the initial interview.
In addition to job search discussions organised every three months, two supplementary job search discussions are organised for an unemployed job seeker every six months after six months have elapsed from the initial interview or other supplementary job search discussion. These supplementary job search discussions only apply to you if you are an unemployed job seeker and not participating in services that support employment.
A job search discussion or supplementary job search discussion will not be organised if your unemployment ends within three months and the other conditions are met.
A job search discussion or a supplementary job search discussion will also not be organised if you start military or civilian service or family leave within three months and your service needs do not require discussions to be organised. However, discussions must always be organised at the request of the job seeker.
Other supplementary job search discussions can be organised according to your needs. Instead of a supplementary job search discussion, you can also be offered other personal services that support your job search or improve your chances of finding employment.
Job search discussions for laid-off employees
If you have been laid off, in addition to the initial interview, five supplementary job search discussions may be organised during the first three months, at your request. If your lay-off has lasted for three months, a job search discussion will be held with you. The job search discussion will not take place if your lay-off is about to end within a month of the discussion being held. Your job search obligation begins after a job search discussion has been organized for you and you have been laid off for three months.
If your lay-off has lasted for three months, the number of job opportunities to be applied for will be agreed upon with you in the job search discussion. If you are laid off full-time, you will have to apply for four job opportunities within the month as per the standard rule, because a person who is completely laid off is considered unemployed from the perspective of unemployment security.
If you have been laid off part-time, the same principles will apply to you as for job seekers working part-time, but your job search obligation will not start until three months after the first job search discussion.
Supplementary job search discussions for laid-off employees
If you are laid off, supplementary job search discussions can only be organised at your request in the beginning of the job search.
You will be provided with two supplementary job search discussions if your lay-off has lasted for six months and you are either
- laid off full-time or
- laid off part-time and your working time is less than four hours a week.
This website is part of the European Commission's Your Europe portal. Did you find what you were looking for? Give feedback! (europa.eu)
An expert at the TE Office or the local government pilot will prepare with you a personal employment plan with the aim of finding employment quickly. The employment plan specifies the goals of your job search, how you will promote your employment, what services you need, and how you will manage matters in the future with the TE Office or the local government pilot.
An employment plan is drawn up in an initial interview or a supplementary job search discussion held before the interview.
The implementation of the employment plan is monitored in job search discussions.
You can find your employment plan in the ‘E-services' section of Job Market Finland. You must report the completion of the tasks agreed in your employment plan within the agreed deadline. If you are unable to report these through Job Market Finland, you can also notify the TE Office, the local government pilot, or the telephone service directly about the completion of the tasks.
Read more
- Initial interview and job search discussions
- Guidance for personal customers
- Services for job seekers during the local government pilots
- Job seeker's customer service model
More information
- Local TE Services (toimistot.te-palvelut.fi, in Finnish)
- Työ- ja elinkeinoministeriö: Työ- ja elinkeinoministeriön ohje julkisesta työvoima- ja yrityspalvelusta annetun lain ja asetuksen soveltamisesta (finlex.fi, in Finnish)
Different plans
Depending on your situation, your plan is an employment plan, activation plan, integration plan, or a cross-sectoral employment plan. You draw up the plan together with an expert at the TE Office or the local government pilot.
If you have been unemployed for a long time and your goal is to improve your life management and likelihood of finding employment, you will draw up an activation plan or a cross-sectoral employment plan together with a TE Office or local government pilot expert.
If you are an immigrant, you will draw up an integration plan together with an expert at the TE Office.
Tasks agreed on in the employment plan
The number of job opportunities to be applied for, i.e. your job search obligation, is recorded in the employment plan. The aim is for you to find employment in the open labour market as quickly as possible.
To qualify for unemployment security, you must take part in the assessment of your service needs, in drawing up and reviewing your employment plan, and in services that support your job search and promote your employment. You must actively apply for work or training and, as a general rule, four job opportunities per month. The employment plan takes into account that the job opportunities to be applied for must be those in which you can find employment. For example, any disability or the labour market situation in your region will also be considered in your employment plan. If you do not have any job opportunities to apply for, you will not be given a job search obligation.
Fulfilling the job search obligation
There are many ways to fulfil your job search obligation. It is possible for you to for example
- apply for a job of your choice,
- request additional work from your employer,
- search for work opportunities as an entrepreneur,
- create and publish a job applicant profile at Job Market Finland, and
- apply for another job opportunity like these.
In addition to this, the TE Office or the local government pilot may submit job offers to you. The job offers are binding if your job search has lasted six months since the initial interview. The job offer is not obligatory if you have reported that you have applied for an agreed number of job opportunities before the job offer in the reference period.
Impact of the employment plan on unemployment security
As a job seeker applying for unemployment security, you must act in accordance with the employment plan and notify the TE Office or the local government pilot of the implementation of the plan in the manner specified in it. The implementation of the plan may have an impact on your unemployment security.
You accept the employment plan together with the expert at the TE Office or the local government pilot.
In the employment plan, you must agree on
- how the implementation of the plan is monitored,
- the deadlines for the agreed measures and how you report on their implementation, and
- the time limit within which you must notify of the implementation of the plan.
This website is part of the European Commission's Your Europe portal. Did you find what you were looking for? Give feedback! (europa.eu)
The aim of the new customer service model is to provide job seekers with more individualised and adequate support in job seeking.
The aim is for job seekers to find employment as quickly as possible. An initial interview and job search discussions are organised for job seekers to promote employment.
Lue lisää
This website is part of the European Commission's Your Europe portal. Did you find what you were looking for? Give feedback! (europa.eu)
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