Apprenticeship
Also called: Ausbildung, duales Studium
How apprenticeships work in DACH
The German Ausbildung and Austrian/Swiss equivalents are the most developed apprenticeship systems in Europe:
- 2-3.5 years of duration.
- Work + school split: typically 60-70% workplace, 30-40% vocational school.
- Paid throughout: apprenticeship salary (Ausbildungsvergütung) rises year over year, ending below but approaching full junior salary.
- Federally certified qualification at the end. The apprentice exits as a qualified worker in their trade.
Most German SMBs hire apprentices because the system is the default pipeline for many roles. Banking, tech support, accounting, sales, logistics — all have apprenticeship paths.
France, Spain, and elsewhere
France’s contrat d’apprentissage is the closest analogue and has been heavily promoted in 2018-2024 reforms. Spain’s formación profesional dual is younger but growing. The UK has an apprenticeship-levy system.
For SMBs operating across countries, the apprenticeship instrument differs by country but the strategic shape is similar: long pipeline, low cost, high conversion.
Why SMBs underuse them outside DACH
Two reasons:
- Administrative load: more paperwork than a standard hire. Some countries have simplified this; others haven’t.
- Pattern unfamiliarity: companies that haven’t done apprenticeships before don’t have the mentor capacity or the curriculum framing.
The cost is real. The compounding payoff — qualified, loyal mid-tenure employees at year 3 — is substantial.
Where Join fits
Apprenticeship applications run through Join’s standard candidate flow, with the multi-year stage progression captured as additional fields. See the features page.