Need of the Nominee Report – Why It’s Essential for Employer Sponsored Visas

Genuine Position Report (GPR) is one of the most important—but most underestimated—documents in an employer-sponsored visa application. Its job is simple in theory: prove that the role being nominated is real, necessary, and genuinely fits within the sponsoring business.

In practice, it’s often the make-or-break factor.


What is a Genuine Position Report?

A GPR is a written explanation from the employer that demonstrates:

  • The position actually exists

  • The role is necessary for the business to operate or grow

  • The duties align with the nominated ANZSCO occupation

  • The role makes commercial sense given the business’s size, structure, and revenue

It helps the Department answer one key question:
“Is this job genuine—or is it being created just to sponsor a visa holder?”


Why the Department cares so much

Employer-sponsored visas are meant to fill real skill shortages, not function as backdoor migration pathways. The GPR is how case officers assess intent.

They use it to test:

  • Whether the business genuinely needs this role right now

  • Whether the position fits logically within the organisation

  • Whether the duties have been inflated to match a skilled occupation

  • Whether the business can realistically afford the role long-term

If the story doesn’t add up, the nomination can be refused—even if everything else is perfect.


How the GPR differs from Labour Market Testing

This is where many employers get caught out.

  • Labour Market Testing proves you tried to hire locally

  • Genuine Position Report proves the job itself makes sense

You can pass LMT and still fail on genuineness if:

  • The business is too small for the seniority of the role

  • The duties don’t match what the business actually does

  • The position duplicates existing roles with no explanation

  • The role exists only on paper

They work together—but they are not interchangeable.


What a strong Genuine Position Report covers

A well-prepared GPR usually explains:

  • Business overview
    Nature of the business, services/products, growth stage

  • Organisational structure
    Where the role fits and who it reports to

  • Why the role is needed
    Increased workload, expansion, compliance needs, specialist skills

  • Daily duties (realistic and specific)
    Not copied from ANZSCO—tailored to the business

  • Why the role can’t be absorbed by existing staff
    This is a big one that’s often missed

  • Financial capacity
    Evidence the business can sustain the role at the nominated salary


Common reasons GPRs fail

Some of the most common refusal triggers include:

  • Generic, templated explanations

  • Duties copied word-for-word from ANZSCO

  • Roles that are too senior for a very small business

  • Inconsistent information across the nomination and LMT

  • No clear commercial rationale for the position

A weak GPR can undo an otherwise solid application.


Why it’s critical for visa success

The Genuine Position Report:

  • Protects the integrity of the visa program

  • Demonstrates employer credibility

  • Reduces the risk of refusal or further information requests

  • Strengthens the overall nomination narrative

From the Department’s perspective, if the job isn’t genuine, the visa shouldn’t exist—no matter how qualified the nominee is.

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