Ho cercato di trovare un lavoro con cui potevo venire in Germania per stare vicino al mio vecchio per prendermi cura di lui. Ma continuo a essere respinto da lavori. E la persona che mi è piaciuta da un po ‘di tempo, ha detto che non mi metterò mai con te a causa della distanza.

Ho fatto domanda per 120 posti di lavoro negli ultimi due giorni, sono stato fantasma o rifiutato.
Studio in un’università remota tedesca usando l’inglese.

Inoltre, uno dei miei amici mi ha detto di usare Apollo.io Ma dopo aver registrato online, ho scoperto che è considerata e -mail fredda che è essenzialmente illegale qui. E non voglio infrangere la legge.
Ho trovato come contatti 24K delle startup in AI e da solo, il mio campo.

Qualcuno può dirmi un modo migliore per trovare lavoro, perché LinkedIn non funziona per me. E non ho abilità tedesche, mi sono appena iscritto al corso tedesco sulla mia università, ma attualmente non sono motivato per questo, perché continuo a essere respinto. E il corso non ha crediti da darmi, il che non mi ha ulteriormente motivato, perché preferirei finire i corsi con crediti.

I keep applying to jobs, but always getting a rejection.
byu/TipTopTapTik ingermany



di TipTopTapTik

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13 commenti

  1. OutlandishnessOk2304 on

    Sorry, but the state of the economy allows companies to be choosy about who they hire. People who don’t speak any German are at the bottom of the list.

    Given that you don’t speak any German, your journey will be a very long slog, if you want to pursue it.

    I’d suggest you try to get something in an English-speaking European country, so you’d at least be on the right continent.

  2. mal_de_ojo on

    The situation now in Germany is not good, unless you are applying for specific positions that are in high demand. For most of the cases, the companies do not want to deal with the delay in getting you to Germany and all your papers ready to start working. They will only do this if your profile is very specialised. Depending on your country of origin and the city where you plan to live, this can be anything between 3 months and one year delay.

  3. Diligent_Tangerine36 on

    It takes 3-6 months to find a job when you are in germany. Also expect 60% ghosting our no response in this current market

  4. user38835 on

    There are very few IT jobs, especially in English in Germany. It’s not gonna improve anytime soon.

  5. I personally use google advanced search, the most jobs i found are in personio.de and thelocal.de
    Use something like site:google.com berlin (INTEXT:”engineer”)
    And ask any AI to build you one to your exact needs, or make a prompt to find the best job outthere.
    I personally had about 15-20 job interviews in total aince march, I got rejected but still have hope, and trying to make my german better on the way

  6. sakasiru on

    If being able to move to with your father isn’t motivation enough to learn German, then you’ll probably won’t make it. IT is in the dump right now and if you don’t have a degree and don’t speak German your chances are basically zero. And if this remote university is a private one even a degree won’t really help.

  7. chippenpuepp on

    I hope your job applications are a bit clearer than your post here. Do you have a work permit for Germany?

  8. maskedluna on

    Had a look at your profile, I have to be honest that your chances are basically nonexistent. You don’t speak german, you don’t have any professional experience, you’re currently a student in an oversaturated field and you‘d need the company to sponsor your visa as you’re non-EU. Sorry, but even if we had a good job market, that would be utopian. Can’t your father relocate to you?

  9. DullInterest on

    Indeed and Stepstone were more helpful to me.

    I went through 700 applications, 50 interviews over 6 months to get one job. My advice is, platform is not the answer, it’s just a game of raw numbers. Keep applying EVERYWHERE.

    And cover letters are very important in Germany.

  10. whiteraven4 on

    You want to move here to take care of your dad but aren’t motivated to learn German because you keep getting rejected from jobs which is likely largely due to the fact that you know German?

  11. Emotional_Reason_421 on

    I applied for +800 (close to 815-830) job applications and could not even secure one single full-time contract in my field. It is insane but it is what it is.

    BTW, I am located inside country and hold a few degrees from #1 university in Germany.

  12. chewbonkaa on

    I see a lot of people commenting if you dont know german you are at the bottom of the pit and I do not agree with this.
    I got a job by applying from a third world country got here and has been working for 4years now only in English. two of my colleagues who are also immigrants started their job searches due to some reasons to switch about 2-3months ago and both of them gave their resignation this month AND the next jobs are also in full English with no restrictions of language, I myself have given about 5-10 interviews where i was assured no one cares about my german language skills because everybody understands and speaks English.

    Given that fact, I can also assure you that I still did B1 to Integrate and will continue at least till B2 and further given the chance along with my job, I can speak and understand almost everyone and hold basic conversations with ease, BUT this is still not enough for the companies that require german speaking developers so this is also a tip that don’t expect if you have a B1/B2 certificate it will help with such kind of jobs.

    Entry to the market with English is not that much of a problem , the problem is getting promotions and moving up the ladder, I am at senior level now and I know that at least in my current company if I want a chance to ever become a Lead I need to be really fluent in german.

    So dont loose your hope, it just takes time and always remember you need 1 YES, the other rejections will not matter then.

    Good luck to you!

  13. brennhill on

    German economy is in free fall due to high energy prices and a complete non-strategy for dealing with the collapse of the china market, competition from over-subsidized chinese manufacturers, and tarrifs from the USA market. Germany is haemorrhaging jobs in key sectors, which has downstream effects.

    Do you speak FLUENT German? If not, it’s now quite hard unless you are in very specific fields.

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