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Jerry Kasem
Jerry Kasem

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How to Stop Explaining Your Non-US Experience and Start Using It as Proof

A lot of strong developers outside the US hit a point where they feel they have to apologize for their background. They add disclaimers about time zones, they soften how they describe their work in case it sounds too foreign, and they try to come across more like the candidates a US company is already hiring.

It usually backfires. The moment you start defending your experience, you turn something solid into something that looks like it needs defending.

US remote teams are not really looking for people who can pass as local. What they want is someone who can deliver without adding process on their end, and the developers who win are usually the ones who treat a non-US background as direct evidence of the traits remote work rewards.

Working across different regulations, with different tooling limits, or through language and time barriers tends to force higher ownership and clearer communication out of you, whether you wanted it or not. That is not a soft skill. It shows up in how you write a project update, how you handle a vague requirement, and whether you keep momentum when the next sync is eight hours away.

The mistake a lot of CVs make is burying that under generic phrasing. Instead of showing that you owned delivery when context was thin, the bullet stays at "collaborated with international teams." Instead of naming the actual call you made when nobody was around to make it for you, the line stays vague, and the reader quietly assumes the work was simpler or more supported than it really was.

The stronger move is to make the constraint visible and then show what you did inside it. A project that shipped despite limited access to a tool or a stakeholder becomes proof of resourcefulness. A system you kept running across time zones becomes proof you can work async. Details like that answer the real worry without you ever having to write "I can work US hours" or "I am easy to manage."

Companies that hire contractors directly have already decided they want the overhead gone. They are not trying to slot you into an existing onsite routine. They are looking for someone who has already worked out how to create value with less hand holding, and your background can show that plainly the moment the CV stops hiding the differences and starts showing what those differences produced.

If you want to see how your current CV frames your experience, and where it is raising questions instead of answering them, paste it into the free Honest CV Check at https://cvcheck.czechdevusa.com. You get a clear view of which parts are already working as proof and which parts still read as something you are explaining away.

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