There are 544 main offices countrywide that are responsible for administering unemployment benefits, providing job search support and placement to registered job seekers. As of October 2013 the offices employ 32 765 and serve over 6.6 million people. The core of employment services – placement and counseling – are publicly provided but many of the other services can be outsourced to the prefecture and local governments.
Services
Services for job-seekers
Hello Work provides job-seekers with two major services:
Other services include providing information on employment/work, required qualifications and experience for finding employment, information on vocational training courses, etc.
Services for young job-seekers
Young job seekers benefit from specialized services with dedicated resources through two additional types of front offices:
Hello Work for New Graduates was established in 2010 and provides job search support for student and young people who graduated from high school or higher education within the last three years and have little to no job experience. There are 57 offices as of 2017.
Hello Work for Youth was established in 2012 and provides intensified job search assistance, interview training and placement to job seekers with previous experience up to the age of 45. Psychologist consultations and aptitude tests are also offered. There are 28 offices as of 2017.
Services for foreign job-seekers
Hello Work recommends that foreign residents in Japan improve their Japanese language skills, and as a way to do this it suggests Japanese classes. Tokyo Hello Work suggests the "Tokyo Nihongo Volunteer Network", founded in 1993, which offers free Japanese lessons. Almost-free Japanese classes are also offered by many Japanese "International Society" NPOs funded by local governments throughout Japan. Not all offices offer services in languages other than Japanese. Those that do only offer them during limited hours and in limited languages. Usually English and Mandarin Chinese services are available, and some offices offer services in Spanish, Portuguese, or other languages. There are a number of centers that specialize in support for foreigners:
Shinjuku Foreigners' Employment Assistance and Guidance Center
Nagoya Employment Service Center for Foreigners
Osaka Employment Service Center for Foreigners
Hamamatsu Employment Service Center for Foreigners
Other services include employment management services and providing information.
Issues
Misleading job offers
An investigation had found that at least 41 percent of job advertisers were misleading job-seekers by listing exaggerated pay and conditions. Applicants reported being forced to work longer hours than described, and for less pay, and being told to sacrifice holidays they were entitled to by law.
Dangerous work overseas
In March 2005, a study published in the Japanese Communist Party’s agency newspaper Shimbun Akahata found that recruitment of Japanese workers working in Iraq as construction contractors with high salaries were undertaken in Japan and published as Job Openings on Hello Work. At the time, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had issued a recommendation for the evacuation of Japanese citizens in Iraq. According to Hello Work Nagasaki, although they had introduced two people, the company in question asked for a withdrawal of the job offer around March 10 of the same year.
A 40-year-old female part-time employee who was forced to take a temporary leave due to her boss at the Hello Work office in the Shimizu Ward of Shizuoka City on the 10th of August 2017 filed a suit against the Shizuoka District Court for about 6.3 million yen in reparations. According to the complaint, in January 2015 the plaintiff's boss hit her left arm three times. The woman was subsequently diagnosed with depression and anxiety, taking a total of about 5 months of work.