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Ask HN: Do US engineering skills translate well to European companies?

10 pointsby dandrew5about 2 months ago
I currently reside in the US and am looking to move to Europe (most likely Germany) some time in the next three years. Has anybody made this journey and have some insights to share?<p>I&#x27;m particularly wondering if there are any technical skills I should hone to give me leverage in the job market when the time comes. Or opposite, any &quot;bad habits&quot; I may have picked up from US companies that simply don&#x27;t exist in European engineering culture or decision making. Are the interview processes similar to the US?

7 comments

SambaSambaSambaabout 2 months ago
Skills will more or less be the same. Communication skills may be slightly more important depending on people&#x27;s understanding of whatever language is used.<p>The biggest issue will be cultural. Don&#x27;t be a workaholic. Don&#x27;t live to work. Don&#x27;t bring that culture here. It is fine if you like to work, but don&#x27;t project that as expectations on others.<p>Source: I&#x27;m US person who moved to Europe. I&#x27;ve worked for US companies as well as global and European companies.
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thiago_fmabout 2 months ago
The issue won&#x27;t be your technical skills. The german engineering quality only applies to hardware and physical goods.<p>It&#x27;s a different culture. That you&#x27;ll need to spend a lot of energy to understand.<p>Also german is a hard language to learn. Typically US people got it easy and don&#x27;t understand such complexities, but this can be a time consuming endeavor.<p>Typically Americans have a very naive understanding of how the world works because American imperialism made it easy for them. So you&#x27;ll need to get over this obstacle when you move here.<p>I believe it&#x27;s worth it, it will open your eyes for many things and will make you a more complete human being.<p>BUT beware, all Americans I know moved back to US to make more money. Often they move here because they believe they are more left-leaning and like the idea about social democracy...<p>But then go back to the US because everything is easier there, salaries are higher (as long as you are a white-collar worker).<p>Feel free to mail me, I&#x27;ve been living here for 10 years and can help you understand what you are getting into :-)
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bobnarizesabout 2 months ago
Living and working in Germany for the last 13 years. Critical thinking. Be always honest even if your coworkers don’t like the output, they value a lot when someone standout and say why things aren’t working. Being punctual is the default.
toomuchtodoabout 2 months ago
<a href="https:&#x2F;&#x2F;reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;AmerExit&#x2F;" rel="nofollow">https:&#x2F;&#x2F;reddit.com&#x2F;r&#x2F;AmerExit&#x2F;</a> will be helpful for your inquiry.
mvcatsifmaabout 2 months ago
Learn (some) German. Admittedly not an engineering skill - but it will be greatly appreciated by your German colleagues. Background: Dutch engineer who lived in Germany for 3 years, and worked for one of their largest engineering orgs.
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alberts614about 2 months ago
I am an Asian living in Taiwan and I want to apply for a job in Europe or the United States. But my application was always rejected. why is that?
ferguess_kabout 2 months ago
Judging by past experience, culture gap is more of a problem.
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