New Hires Archives - Uberchord App https://www.uberchord.com/blog/category/company-news/new-hires/ Learn Guitar Chords with our iPhone App Sat, 02 Oct 2021 08:13:17 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.1 How to Acquire a Work Permit for Americans in Berlin https://www.uberchord.com/blog/work-permit-berlin/ https://www.uberchord.com/blog/work-permit-berlin/#comments Wed, 22 Oct 2014 15:33:06 +0000 https://uberchord.com/?p=6395 [Warning: this is a long blog post on procuring work permit. If you’d like to jump right to the important information, see Chapter Four – Berlin Partner to the rescue] Preface – Work Permits in Germany Germany is said to be a very efficient country. We work long and hard hours and so do our authorities. Not exactly long hours because they are efficient after...

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[Warning: this is a long blog post on procuring work permit. If you’d like to jump right to the important information, see Chapter Four – Berlin Partner to the rescue]

Preface – Work Permits in Germany

Reichstag - Bundestag in Berlin Germany is said to be a very efficient country. We work long and hard hours and so do our authorities. Not exactly long hours because they are efficient after all, but all the more thorough. Our German authorities have efficient processes in place, just as you would expect, and there are no exceptions to the law for anyone. This could be the recipe for success and stability, if only a normal human being could understand those processes. I am a German lawyer by training, so I ought to understand, and yet, I often don’t. This is not to say that the processes are overly complicated (sometimes they are, though) — no, the problem is simply the abundance of accessible information.

This post will simplify the process for acquiring a work permit in Berlin.

We Germans are notorious in creating complex, convoluted and incomprehensible documents. Make no error, these documents describe everything perfectly down to the latest detail — if you manage to get this far. Usually you give up after the first paragraph of spaghetti sentences. To make matters worse, Germans continue down a similar path for websites, but we have developed a German style: since the Americans told us not to paste so much text on a single webpage, we simply split it up in as many as necessary to cope with the masses of text without bringing the server down to its knees. Who ends up being on his knees with this strategy, though, is the reader; although I think that the word ‘victim’ would be more suitable. This post will simplify the process for acquiring a work permit in Berlin.

Chapter One – The Research

At Uberchord, we had been looking for a suitable candidate to fill the Marketing Director position. It took us almost eight months to find someone who wasn’t afraid of our ambitious plans and had intimate knowledge of the U.S. market.  After much difficulty, we crossed paths with Lindsay Buescher and we decided to hire her. Lindsay had recently arrived from Los Angeles and was looking to join a startup. We immediately got on very well so the deal was settled in an instant. There was only the question of how to get a work permit for her. We knew that Germany offered a so called “Blue Card”, but we couldn’t quite figure out whether this was a separate process or just part of a normal application to obtain a work permit. Our research through the aforementioned plethora of webpages felt as efficient as swimming in knee-deep mud. Everyone on the web with no exception was complaining about the process. “They should feel ashamed” was one of the nicer statements I came across. Our law firm told us something to the effect of “uh oh, that’s not easy, we suggest you talk to the authorities directly”. Thus, after a week or so of futile research, we decided to do just that.

Chapter Two – Trying to Communicate

We obtained four diffvintage telephoneerent phone numbers to the immigration office that might have been applicable, but none of my calls were picked up, no matter how often I tried the following two weeks. I sent a few emails which would all be answered in due course of a few days with a nice gentlemen letting me know that I would find all necessary information under the following seven links, all of which we had already seen. In addition, I was directed to a website that enabled us to schedule an online appointment. We had no idea what documents would eventually be necessary, but we thought it would be a good idea to have the appointment already. Well, it would have been, had the first available appointment not been two months ahead and just a few days after Lindsay’s tourist visa would have expired. By now, more than two weeks had passed and there were less than 6 weeks to solve the matter. At this point, we could only foresee our future marketing director going on a long vacation to Croatia. Our hearts sank.

Chapter Three – Asking for Help

Asking for HelpIf I have learned one thing in life, it is to ask for help. I have a terrible sense of orientation, so unlike most men I always ask for directions, usually at every second corner. I ended up asking a friend of mine, who pointed me to some obscure agency that I had never heard of called Berlin Partner. I immediately did my research and as it turns out, Berlin Partner is a highly respectable institution financed by the Senate of Berlin to help companies get settled in Berlin. Thus, I found a department that claimed to be helpful in such cases. I immediately wrote them an email, leaving me hopeful for better times to come. Nothing happened. I even tried calling three days later, which resulted in listening to an answering machine. A week passed. Then, one morning, cleaning out my mailbox, I stumbled across an open email draft, nicely written and neatly formatted, all ready to be sent off to Berlin Partner. I bit myself twice and hit “send”. I received an answer the same day.

Chapter Four – Berlin Partner to the Rescue

Logo_Berlin_Partner_GmbH_skaliert (1)

A really kind Mr. Volbracht let me know that the process was straight forward in the case of a well educated foreigner, especially coming from the U.S. and suggested four simple steps involving a few documents to obtain:

  1. For the residence permit, you need
    1. The application for a visa or residence permit (to be filled out by the employee)
    2. CV
    3. Copy of university degree
    4. Copy of passport
  2. For the Work permit, you need
    1. Check whether the candidate has a recognized university degree in Germany. Head over to ‘Institutionen’, click “Suche”. Select the country, select the city of the educational institution, and select the relevant item in the resulting list. If there’s an “H+” in the status column, you are done. In case you cannot find it there, go to ‘Hochschulabschlüsse’ (again ‘Suche’) and look for the type of degree instead of the location.
    2. The application for a labour permit (with applicant’s signature).
    3. Job description (filled out by the employer)
    4. Attachment to the job description (precise description of the job posting in respect of the applicant; very important)
    5. Draft of work contract – (Requirements for Blue Card)
    6. Cover letter (explaining why the candidate is so important for the company etc.)
  3. Send it all to Mr. Volbracht at Berlin Partner. He will make sure it gets to the right person at the Immigration Office Berlin — they do have a special Business Service that no-one knows about.  If you have any questions, you’ll find Mr. Volbracht here.
  4. Wait for the immigration office to contact either you directly or through Mr. Volbracht. They will tell you if anything is missing and when your future employee should collect his work and residency permit.

Chapter Five – Happy End

We followed those steps and submitted everything to Mr. Volbracht within two days. He circled back to us requesting some minor changes and sent our documents off to the immigration office on our behalf. Only a few days later, we received a friendly email from Ms. Webel at the immigration office, informing us of the great news that Lindsay had an appointment scheduled in less than two weeks. She mentioned that I had a (severe) typo in the working contract and asked me to send the corrected version via email. Finally, on September 15th, Lindsay collected her work permit and officially became part of the Uberchord family.

THAT’S IT!

Conclusion

Germangermany and usay is an amazing country. We create processes so effective and thorough, and then we document them in a way that we have to create a publicly financed agency to help even ex-lawyers to understand them.

Thanks to:

  • Burkhard Volbracht of Berlin Partner for providing such invaluable service
  • Martina Webel of Immigration Office Berlin for making the process super easy
  • Manuel Gerres (@ManuelGerres) of SBB Switzerland for pointing me to Berlin Partners
  • Lindsay Buescher for bearing with us

Additional resources (thanks to Johanna Dorsay for pointing me to it):

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Uberchord Welcomes Lindsay Buescher to the Team! https://www.uberchord.com/blog/lindsay-buescher/ https://www.uberchord.com/blog/lindsay-buescher/#comments Mon, 15 Sep 2014 19:33:01 +0000 https://uberchord.com/?p=6351 Today we have some really good news to share. First, Lindsay Buescher, our marketing pro from Los Angeles received her Blue Card and finally joined our team and second, German bureaucracy is not as bad as everyone says. Both have an impressive track record, though, I have to admit, and both came as a surprise.We had posted a job ad on LinkedIn some two months...

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Lindsay-Buescher-Uberchord-Engineering-Portrait-Square

Today we have some really good news to share. First, Lindsay Buescher, our marketing pro from Los Angeles received her Blue Card and finally joined our team and second, German bureaucracy is not as bad as everyone says. Both have an impressive track record, though, I have to admit, and both came as a surprise.We had posted a job ad on LinkedIn some two months ago and I was thrilled when Lindsay responded. She had just moved from L.A. to Berlin, for no other reason than the love for the city. For me, who always has been dreaming of building a startup in the Valley, this was an impressive and somewhat surprising move. All the more I was excited to learn that Lindsay had been doing online marketing for more than eight years three of which she was responsible for the digital strategy and analytics for Red Bull in the U.S. Giving up that job to move to Berlin and turning down a job offer by Uber she struck me just crazy enough to take on Uberchord’s marketing. From Uber Technologies to Uberchord Engineering was just an Atlantic Ocean.

Lindsay grew up with classical music education and plays both piano and sax, which makes her ideally suited to understand our concepts but still experience first hand how it feels to learn the guitar.  So, we believe she’s exactly the person we needed. Welcome Lindsay! We are glad to have you on our team and are looking forward to the exciting times ahead.

The second topic is the aforementioned German bureaucracy. Trying to get some foreigner without work permit employed in Germany is a nightmare — according to everyone on the internet and even our law firm. However, it ain’t really, but that’s stuff for the next blog post, which will help Berlin startups in our situation a great deal, promised. Stay tuned.

As always, thanks for reading. There’s more to come, so sign-up for our newsletter and follow us on Facebook & Twitter!

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Jonas Schoen-Philbert Joins Uberchord Team https://www.uberchord.com/blog/jonas-schoen-philbert-joins-uberchord/ https://www.uberchord.com/blog/jonas-schoen-philbert-joins-uberchord/#respond Sun, 20 Jul 2014 14:48:23 +0000 https://uberchord.com/?p=6198 We are very proud and excited to announce that Jonas Schoen-Philbert, Professor for composition, music theory and sax at University of Music, Hannover joined us both as advisor and team member.

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Photo of Prof. Jonas Schoen-Philbert
Prof. Jonas Schoen-Philbert

We are very proud and excited to announce that Jonas Schoen-Philbert, professor for composition, music theory and sax at University of Music, Hannover joined us both as advisor and team member. Being not only a great musician but also a musical scientist, he will lead the development of Uberchord’s musical backend — that is, music didactics and theory put into code. What does this mean? Uberchord is going to teach you musical understanding through practical guitar lessons! Welcome, Jonas!

As always, thanks for reading. There’s more to come, so sign up for our newsletter and follow us on Facebook & Twitter!

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