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    4/1/2026cv structure4 blog.minRead

    Skills on a Swiss CV: Which Ones to Include in 2026

    In Switzerland, the skills section is rarely decorative. Recruiters often read it right after your headline to decide, in seconds, whether you fit the role. Chosen well, your skills sell you instantly; presented poorly, they weaken an otherwise strong application. Here is how to select, structure and phrase the skills on your Swiss CV so they actually work for you.

    Hard Skills vs Soft Skills: Know the Difference

    A good Swiss CV clearly separates two families. Hard skills are measurable and job-specific: SAP proficiency, accounting under Swiss GAAP FER, TIG welding, Python programming, certified project management. Soft skills describe how you work: organisation, communication, teamwork, reliability.

    Swiss recruiters value restraint and distrust endless lists of adjectives. The rule is simple: lead with verifiable hard skills, and only add a soft skill if you can prove it elsewhere in the CV. A skill you could not defend in an interview is better left off the page entirely.

    The Skills Section: Where to Place It and How to Structure It

    Place the section near the top of page one if skills are your main selling point (technical profiles, career changers, recent graduates), or directly after work experience for senior candidates. Keep it to six to ten genuinely relevant entries.

    Group skills into categories rather than dumping them in one block: "IT", "Languages", "Methods / industry tools". Avoid progress bars and five-star ratings; they mean nothing to a Swiss recruiter and waste valuable space. Use a clear proficiency word ("basic", "good", "expert") or, better, concrete context: "Excel: pivot tables, financial modelling".

    Languages: Use CEFR Levels, Not "Fluent"

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    In a country with four national languages, your language section is read closely. Drop vague terms such as "fluent" or "reading, speaking, writing". State each level on the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR), from A1 to C2.

    A readable example: "English: native / German: C1 / French: B2 / Italian: A2". If you hold a certificate (Goethe, DELF, TOEFL, IELTS), add it in brackets with the year. Be honest: overstating your German is exposed the moment an interview switches to Swiss German. Equally, do not undersell solid passive knowledge that may be enough for a given role.

    Digital and Technical Skills: Be Specific and Verifiable

    "Computer literate" no longer means anything. Name the software and environments you genuinely use: Microsoft 365, ERP systems (SAP, Abacus), CRM (Salesforce), BI tools (Power BI, Tableau), languages (SQL, Python), or sector tools (AutoCAD, SPSS, Adobe Creative Suite).

    List technical certifications with their exact title and year: Cisco CCNA, Scrum certification, a Swiss federal diploma. In 2026, one honest line on your considered use of artificial intelligence (assisted writing, data analysis, automation) is a real asset, provided you stay concrete. Always state the true level: knowing a tool exists is not the same as mastering it.

    Soft Skills: Prove, Don't Just Claim

    Writing "strong communicator" convinces no one. The winning habit is to anchor every quality in a result. Instead of "well organised" in a list, write in your experience section: "Coordinated three teams on a migration project delivered on schedule".

    Keep two or three soft skills that are genuinely decisive for the target role in your skills section, and let your achievements speak for the rest. The traits most valued on the Swiss market remain reliability, autonomy, precision, the ability to work in a multilingual environment, and a service mindset. Match them to the sector: a sales role rewards different traits than a quality-engineering role.

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    Tailoring Skills to the Advert and Applicant Tracking Systems

    A generic CV rarely clears the first filter. Many Swiss employers use applicant tracking systems (ATS) that scan for keywords taken from the advert. Mirror the exact wording of the job posting: if it asks for "customer relationship management", do not write only "client contact".

    Before each application, compare your skills section against the listed requirements and reorder it so the most relevant skills appear first. You can check how well your CV matches with our ATS analysis tool. This few-minute customisation often decides whether you land in the "call back" pile or the "rejected" one.

    Present Your Skills with Confidence

    Your skills deserve a clear, honest layout tailored to each role. To build a tidy skills section in minutes, calibrate your language levels to the CEFR scale and target every advert, create your Swiss CV with CVSwiss. In a few clicks you get a document ready to convince Swiss recruiters.

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    Related Topics:

    soft skills CVtechnical skills CVCEFR language levels CVdigital skills resumeskills section Swiss CVtailoring CV to job advert

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