German CV screening for international technical candidates
Understand how to read international CVs without confusing unfamiliar formats with weak technical profiles. Screen for evidence, transferability and role fit — not only for German-style structure.
A German CV screen should not be only a formatting check
International candidates may not present experience, training, certificates or technical responsibilities in the same way German employers expect. Some CVs are genuinely weak. Others are simply unfamiliar.
The goal of screening is to separate real technical gaps from presentation gaps. For technical and industrial roles, employers should look for evidence of tasks, tools, machines, systems, responsibility, language fit and relocation feasibility.
Bad CV or unfamiliar CV?
The first screening mistake is treating every non-German CV as incomplete. The second mistake is accepting unclear information without verification.
The format is different, but the profile may be relevant
The CV may use non-German job titles, local education names, different certificate formats or less detailed task descriptions. This should trigger clarification, not automatic rejection.
The evidence is missing or too vague to evaluate
A CV is weak when it does not show relevant tasks, tools, industry context, responsibility, dates, training level or enough information to verify the candidate’s technical fit.
Five lenses for screening international technical CVs
Instead of asking whether the CV looks German, employers should ask whether the CV contains enough evidence to continue the process.
Technical fit
Has the candidate performed tasks that match the role: installation, maintenance, assembly, programming, testing, repairs or troubleshooting?
Transferability
Can the candidate’s experience transfer to the German workplace, machinery, industry environment or production context?
Verification
Can unclear information be verified through certificates, technical questions, references, work samples or a practical test?
Language and communication
Does the role require German from day one, or can the candidate start with a lower level and structured onboarding?
Relocation risk
Is the candidate realistically able to move, start on time and manage housing, documents, family situation and salary expectations?
What to look for in technical and industrial CVs
A strong international CV may not follow German conventions perfectly, but it should still give usable evidence of technical capability.
Tasks and responsibility
Look for what the candidate actually did: troubleshooting, maintenance, installation, assembly, wiring, welding, programming, documentation, inspection or customer service.
Tools, machines and systems
Search for specific technologies: Siemens S7, TIA Portal, CNC controls, electrical cabinets, hydraulic systems, CAD tools, welding methods, measuring devices or ERP/maintenance software.
Industry and workplace context
A candidate from automotive, food production, machinery, energy, shipbuilding, construction or field service may bring different but transferable experience.
Certificates and documentation
Do not only check whether the certificate name is familiar. Check training duration, issuing institution, practical content, validity and whether additional documents can be provided.
Dates, gaps and job changes
Gaps or short stays should be clarified, but international careers may include relocation, temporary projects, seasonal contracts or different employment structures.
Ask better questions before rejecting a CV
Many false negatives can be avoided with precise follow-up questions. The aim is not to lower standards, but to verify unclear information before excluding a candidate.
The CV does not show exact German job titles.
Which technical tasks did you perform, with which machines, tools or systems, and how independently?
PLC, CNC or electrical experience is unclear.
Have you worked with Siemens S7, TIA Portal, Fanuc, Heidenhain, electrical cabinets or other relevant systems? In which tasks?
The certificate name is unfamiliar.
Can you send the certificate, training duration, issuing institution and a short explanation of the practical content?
The German level is not clearly described.
Which work situations can you handle in German or English: safety instructions, team communication, documentation, customer contact or troubleshooting?
Relocation status is unclear.
When could you realistically start in Germany, and what support would you need regarding housing, documents, family or travel?
CV screening mistakes that reduce the international talent pool
International CV screening should be structured enough to protect quality, but flexible enough to avoid unnecessary false negatives.
Screening only for German format
A non-German CV structure can still contain relevant technical evidence.
Searching only for exact job titles
International candidates may use different titles for similar technical work.
Overvaluing layout
A clean design is useful, but technical tasks and verifiable experience matter more.
Confusing wording with competence
Weak English or German phrasing does not automatically mean weak technical ability.
Ignoring missing but recoverable documents
Some candidates can provide certificates, references or explanations if asked clearly.
Clarifying salary too late
CV fit is not enough if salary expectations and relocation economics do not match.
Connect CV screening with candidate evaluation
German CV screening works best when it is connected with profile evaluation, language expectations and salary clarity.
Screen international CVs by evidence, not only format
A stronger screening process helps employers identify suitable international technical candidates without lowering standards or rejecting profiles too early.
