Pages

Thursday 28 September 2017

How to find an english speaking job in Berlin

Because I lived and worked in Germany, many people assume that I must be fluent in that brilliant(ly difficult) language. The sad case of the matter is: I'm not. Even with my German background and having lived in Berlin for almost two years, I remain woefully inept at speaking Deutsch. Except perhaps to order a beer - I became pretty good at that!

Then how, you may ask, did I find an English speaking job in Germany?

Most people will tell you, many of whom are on the internet, that it is impossible to find a job without knowing at least a little bit of German. I am living proof that this is not the case. It took me a solid two months of applying, so here's a few tips and tricks I learnt along the way that may make it easier when it comes your time to join the job merry-go-round.

Job searches and aggregators

  1. Google is your friendStart off by Googling "english speaking jobs Berlin" - a lot of sites come up, many of which I've listed below.
  2. Monster: In my experience, Monster.de isn't the greatest search engine for jobs - I've never had a lot of luck with finding good jobs on it. However, it seems many recruiters use it to CV sift, so it's a good idea to put your CV up on it. Can't read German? No worries. Put your CV up on the UK site (monster.co.uk), fill in your details and then when you return to Monster.de, most of it will transfer into German. Another little tip is to re-upload your CV every week, as it seems to put it back to the top of the sifting pile again.
  3. Jobs in Berlin: A job aggregator, but it lists a lot of roles where English is required (either natively or not).
  4. LinkedInFacebook for grownups! I'm pretty sure I ended up finding my job here on LinkedIn in the end, but a lot of large name companies advertise here so don't rule it out.
  5. The LocalAs it says straight up on the home page, 8,360 English-language jobs in Germany.
  6. IndeedIndeed it is one of the largest growing job aggregators on the web at the moment. They even have a search dedicated to English jobs in Berlin.
  7. Berlin Startup JobsBerlin having had such a divided past, is not the home to many large name corporations. However, it is an absolutely booming hub for startups, many of which are English speaking. The pay may not be quite as good, but you'll get some warm fuzzies from being part of a breakthrough company's story.
  8. GlassdoorThis site is primarily an employer review site, and to be honest it's not that popular in Germany, with preference going to Kununu. However, you can still find a lot of jobs that have been aggregated here as they pull jobs from countless websites every day.

Big English only companies in Berlin


However, here are a couple of companies that I know of that hire a lot of people who speak English.
Note: I will keep updating to this as I find out more companies, and also feel free to let me know if you have some more to add!
  1. ZalandoHuge Europe-wide online fashion retailer. They hire an insane amount of people every 2 weeks (not sure if I'm at liberty to say how many exactly!) and at any one time there's about 500 jobs on their website (in Berlin alone) in any area from IT, to sales, to marketing. Also, you get pretty sweet staff benefits (discounts, anyone?)
  2. RocketYou can either work for Rocket or work for companies which Rocket recruit for.
  3. SoundcloudNot many jobs at one time, but their office language is English and Berlin Mitte is their headquarters.
  4. WoogaPretty cool industry, searching a lot of engineers and designers but other roles in there as well.
  5. AmazonDirect competitors to Zalando, Amazon have a big base here in Berlin and at any one time have a couple of hundred jobs available.

Helpful things to know

  1. 3 month notice period
    One thing that would have been nice to know in the beginning was that, in general, Germany has a 3 month notice period when people leave a company. Like wut. In Australia, it's 2-4 weeks and even then sometimes you're shown the door the moment you've put your resignation in. Due to this extended notice period, it can often take companies a very long time to get back to you.
  2. Put a photo on your resume (maybe)
    Another big no-no in Australia is putting your photo on your resume. However, here it is not only expected, but you get tax reductions for what you've paid for professional photos to put on your resume. This could be a two edged sword, though. In my case, my resume stood out to my employer because they were specifically looking for someone not from Germany. However I think in many other cases, my resume was overlooked. You decide and perhaps keep two copies of your resume, one with and one without a photo.
  3. 1st of the month
    Due to "insurance reasons" (everyone who tells me this just shakes their head), in many instances you can only start working on the 1st of every month (or in Zalando's case, the first and third week of every month). This can be mildly problematic if you get your job offer on the 2nd of the month and then have to wait a full month until you start, but that's German bureaucracy for you! Sit back and enjoy the ride.
  4. Not in IT?
    Don't worry - there are jobs out there for you. Berlin is known as a tech hub, specifically for systems engineers who won't have any problems finding a job. The list above is largely for those who are not tech-related, who still want to try to find a role in the field they studied/already work in.

And finally, good luck!


Just remember to hang in there and keep trying. I know it's demoralising, the lack of response, the rejections (although at least you've heard from them, right? Right?) I was reasonably picky about my roles because I wanted to stay in my field (Communications and Social Media) and it paid off in the end. 

You can do it. Stay positive. Get yourself a bier and start sending off those applications. Good luck!

Monday 29 May 2017

A(nother) year in the life: German edition

Pinching myself, I think "What crazy series of events led me to be living in Germany? I never saw this in the projection of my life path."

Because on this day, my friends, I have now been living in Germany for 1 year. By rights, I should be leaving today - but I am not.

You see, both Dan and I - with relative ease - managed to get sponsored by our employers. The virtually unattainable in the UK was a simple appointment with a trees worth of documentation and, €30's later, we each had a shiny new sticker in our passports.

Therefore we are staying on this side of the world for a fraction longer, but for now, let's look at the year that has passed. This, like the previous 2 years, has been crazy, incredible, stressful and exhilarating.



Berlin
Getting set up, has been challenging. We have continuously struggled to find somewhere to live for more than a couple of months at a time. I will be the first to admit that the sheen of seeing new areas of the city is starting to wear off. 

As a city, Berlin has been wonderful. Not London exhausting, but busy enough to never be bored. The bucket list is ever growing - with such a rich, varied and interesting history (oft times quite depressing).

Some of the things we have crossed off the bucket list and experienced in Berlin include:
  • Underground Bunker tour - Incredibly fascinating and moving tour. One rarely thinks of the civilians on the German side of WWII, so this was an amazing insight into what the innocents on this side did to survive when their city was razed.
  • DDR Museum
  • Visited lakes for a swim - Berlin has so much lake area, it's wonderful!
  • Went clubbing (not to Berghain, yet)
  • Drunk in public. Ok this happens quite a lot.
  • Eaten Schnitzel, currywurst, schweinhaxe (pork knuckle), flammkuchen, Berliners ;) (pfannkuchen) and other German cuisine
  • Drunk a lot of beer. A lot of beer. Occasionally a diesel. But mostly bier.
  • Toured the abandoned Tempelhof Airport, which is currently being used as housing for refugees and for big events. Very interesting history.
  • Wandered around Nikolaiviertel, the oldest part of Berlin
  • Celebrated May Day in Goerlitzer Park and managed to avoid the riots
  • Drunk my weight in glühwein (I'm pleased there's 10 months in between when there is no glühwein
  • Played in a frozen fountain and frolicked in Berlin when it was under snow
  • Lots of different Christmas markets around Berlin (and beyond)
  • Lange Nacht der Museen - the long night of the museums, where we managed to cram in 5 different museums
  • Deutsches Technik Museum
  • Bier festivals
  • Seen a play in German (with English Subtitles - still impossible to follow!)
  • Went to a Beards concert with terrifying bearded German people shouting Be-Ards! Be-Ards!
  • Show friends and family around the city
  • Wandered through a lot of markets and parks, stumbling across interesting statues and monuments
  • Underground Metro tour with bright yellow hardhats in an open top train
  • Berlin Botanic Gardens, which is very beautiful
  • Festival of Lights lighting up Berlin

The language
I have been extremely slack with learning German, I will wholeheartedly admit that. Slack, embarrassed, nervous and so forth. My favourite experience of trying to order 2 "festival beers" in German resulted in a wheat beer and a wine, so I'm not sure what went wrong there.

However, my work is now sending me to German classes. I had my first lesson last week, and it wasn't nearly as humiliating as I expected it to be. I know more than I thought, and now that I can see that I can progress - it is quite fun. I think the lessons we were taking previously were just not right for me - it was all spoken, and hardly written. I learn better from the written word than through listening, so these new classes might just work nicely! Maybe my next blog post will be in German...




Travel
The one country a month rule has generally held up for this past year as well. We have also visited many places within Germany, with many more still on the bucket list.
Here's where I have been during the last year living in Germany:
  • Spain for my Dirty 30 Funfest - Ibiza, Seville, Madrid and Barcelona
  • Croatia - Split, Plitvice Lakes, Hvar, Dubrovnik
  • Montengro, where Dan and I celebrated our 1 year anniversary
  • Poland - Stettin, Wroclaw - the Culture Capital of Europe for 2016, Wolsztyn
  • Edinburgh for Nat's birthday
  • Romania - Bucharest, Brasov
  • Czech Republic - Decin (yet to go together to Prague, soon though!)
  • Australia
  • New Zealand
  • Switzerland - Zurich, Lauterbrunnen, up to the top of the Jungfraujoch, Chur
  • Liechtenstein
  • Italy - Tirano (just for lunch!)
  • UK - London - Dan's birthday and work, Dimension Jump!, Nottingham, Coventry (for work) 
  • Netherlands - Amsterdam, Keukenhof Tulip Fields, Utrecht, Gouda
  • Denmark - Billund for LegoLand, Copenhagen, Nyhavn
  • Sweden - Malmo (we visited more of Sweden at the beginning of 2016)
  • Lithuania - Vilnius
  • Ukraine - Kiev for Eurovision 2017!!!!!, Pripyat to see the Chernobyl Reactor 4
  • Bulgaria - Sofia

In Germany:
  • Wenigerode - in the snow, to ride the steam train up the Broken.
  • Neuschwanstein - to see the Disney Castle under snow
  • Potsdam - multiple times, including spending a night there and visiting the Biospäre
  • Dresden - a couple of times, including Christmas markets
  • Munich - Oktoberfest
  • Füssen
  • Essen (for work, more times than I care to think about)
  • Meinigen
  • Hamburg


Just looking at that list makes me feel exhausted. And now we have the chance to visit more.


Work
I have to thank my employer for sponsoring me, although it hasn't all been smooth sailing. There have been a few developments in this area which I do not want to write publicly on the blog, so please feel free to send me a message if you are interested in knowing what's up :) It's reasonably exciting!

And thus, more adventure awaits. The bucketlist is every growing (it never seems to get smaller, somehow!) and now that we have been given the opportunity to stay a little longer, we are going to grasp it firmly with both hands.

Til next time,
xx

Monday 2 January 2017

To 2017 and beyond!

I wrote this sitting toasty warm in front of the gas heater in my apartment in Berlin on New Years Eve, having only disembarked from a plane from the Australian summer only a few hours before. I was back in Berlin after a short and whirlwind visit Downunder. It was a good time to reflect on the year that has passed, as I sat weighed down by jet lag but unable to sleep. So here goes. 

As we are all painfully aware, on the world stage, politically and in popular culture, 2016 was a pretty terrible year. Personally, however, it was full of adventures and opportunities to push myself to the limits to continue discovering what I am capable of. This year I haven't faced my challenges alone, however; I've had my partner in crime, Daniel, who I picked up somewhere along the way in 2015.

2016: a recap.

2016 consisted of a lot of movingI moved out of the home I had been living in since arriving in London in Hammersmith because the lease ended and the place, rightly so, required renovating. From here, I moved in with my boyfriend Daniel in Wimbledon. Then my UK visa ended and we made the crazy decision to move to Germany. Because yolo.

Travelling. The country a month rule still stood, with much more local travel included also:
  • Gibraltar
  • Spain x 2, including Ibiza for my 30th birthday for the Spanish Dirty 30 Funfest, with Dan, Al and Nat. We then went on to Seville, Madrid and Barcelona.
  • Sweden, where I saw the Northern Lights
  • Norway, where I caught a ferry cruise through the fjords 
  • Belgium, where I attended the Anzac Day ceremony in Passchendaele, the battle for the western front which saw some many Aussies and Kiwis lose their lives in World War One
  • Ireland
  • Germany - my new home
  • Croatia
  • Montenegro
  • Poland x 2, being so close to Germany, Dan and I literally pop across the border for day trips
  • Romania
  • Czech Republic
  • Australia
  • New Zealand
United Kingdom travelling included:
  • Northern Ireland
  • Wales
  • Scotland, for the Fringe festival and Nat's birthday
  • York, Scarborough and Whitby
  • Cambridge
  • Cornwall, including Penzance, St Ives, Lands End and the Eden Project
German travelling included:
  • Potsdam
  • Munich
  • Dresden
  • Hamburg
  • Berlin, of course
Being a nutcase. With the support of photographer Dan and my awesome team mates Al and Nat, I completed my 2nd Tough Mudder. Naturally, I insisted on going through the electrocution obstacle even though, as a Tough Mudder "Alumni" I didn't have to: I ended up getting shocked in the head.

Turned dirty thirty. With friends, I celebrated my 30th birthday at Pacha in Ibiza, as I wanted to have one last chance to party before I got too old for it. Turns out, there are plenty of old fogies on Ibiza island, and I didn't bring the average age up to 22!

Anniversaries. Dan and I made it to 1 year, and what a truly incredible year it had been! We were, of course, taking a day trip to Montenegro from Croatia on that day, which was a fitting way to spend our anniversary. May there be many more years and even more adventures to follow.

Work. I wound up at The Elders, where I learnt so very much about the state of the world. I became properly interested in world events and as a result can now have proper adult conversations with people. I was sad to leave the Ducklings but we have remained in touch. Arriving in Germany, I searched tirelessly - and demoralisingly - for a job. I eventually found an incredible role doing what I enjoy. It took Dan and I both 2 months to find jobs, and we were at the point of giving up. We later learnt that 6-7 months was the average, and realised how lucky we both had been to get such great jobs in 2 of the biggest English speaking organisations in Berlin.

The difficult times. I wallowed in my own self pity at how poorly (or so I thought) the job hunt was going. I panicked until I broke down about not being able to find somewhere to live, or how to get my bank card, or how to register to live in this strange country. In the end, Dan and I pulled through though and are making the most of the time we have here. 

I have become a beer drinker! After Germany and Belgium visits the year before, I decided the golden beverage was alright. Now living in Germany, we have discovered that beer is literally cheaper than soft drink, so the result is obvious. I've discovered that I enjoy the Erdinger dunkelweiss, amongst others.

I went home home for the first time since June 2014. I visited New Zealand and met Dan's wonderful family and friends for the first time, and they made me feel so very welcome. He showed me his beautiful country and I fell in love with it. We then flew across the pond and I hugged my mum for the first time in over 2 years. I cuddled my best friends' baby girls who I had never met yet. And I gave the biggest hugs to my beautiful nieces who literally pelted down the driveway on Christmas Day and wouldn't let go of Aunty Sasha all day (except when we played Crack the Egg on the trampoline, which could have easily ended in disaster). 

At home, I celebrated a joint milestone year for myself (30 years old), my brother (50) and my mum on her 70th birthday surrounded by friends, family, and ensuring I got myself painfully sunburnt. 

I caught up with countless friends to find out about their lives, loves, losses and laughs of the previous few years. I tried not to say things like "I can't decide if I'll be having my birthday in Paris or Portugal" and failed spectacularly. 

It was more difficult to return to Berlin than when I left in the first place, and the plane journey was an emotional one. I am back now though, and many more adventures await. I feel very fortunate that, with the support of my family and friends, this is the life I have been able to carve out for myself over the last couple of years. Travel has truly become an addiction. 

2017 has so much in store for it already, and it's only just begun.

So let's say Prost! to an amazing year ahead!