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    3/7/2026motivation letter4 blog.minRead

    Email Job Application in Switzerland: Format That Works

    Most Swiss applications today arrive by email or through an online portal, yet the email itself is where many candidates lose points before a recruiter even opens the attachment. A sloppy subject line, a five-paragraph essay in the message body, or three separate files with random names all signal that you do not know how things are done here. This guide walks you through the Swiss email application from first line to follow-up so your dossier lands cleanly on the right desk.

    Write a subject line the recruiter can file in two seconds

    The subject line has one job: tell the reader exactly which position you mean. Swiss recruiters often handle dozens of openings at once, so always include the job title and, where the posting gives one, the reference number. A reliable pattern is Application: [Job title] โ€“ [Reference] โ€“ [Your name], for example Application: Marketing Manager 80% โ€“ Ref. 4521 โ€“ Anna Keller. Avoid vague subjects like "Job" or "My CV", and never leave the field empty. If the advert names a contact person, you may add nothing more; the clarity is the point.

    Keep the email body short โ€” it is a cover note, not the cover letter

    In Switzerland the email body is a brief, polite cover note, not your full motivation letter. Three short paragraphs are plenty. Open with a correct salutation โ€” Dear Ms Keller / Dear Mr Meier, or Dear Sir or Madam only if no name is given. State which role you are applying for and where you saw it, give one or two sentences on why you fit, then point to the attached dossier. Close with a courteous line such as "I would welcome the opportunity to discuss my application in person" and a formal sign-off (Kind regards). The detailed arguments belong in the motivation letter inside your PDF, not in the email โ€” recruiters should be able to read the body on a phone in under a minute.

    Attach one PDF dossier, never a pile of loose files

    This is the single most important rule. Swiss employers expect a complete application as one PDF, assembled in a fixed order: motivation letter first, then CV, then work references (Arbeitszeugnisse), then diplomas and certificates. A hiring manager who has to download and reorder five attachments will not thank you. Keep the file under roughly 5 MB so it passes mailbox limits, and make sure it opens correctly โ€” flatten it to PDF rather than sending an editable Word document, which can break formatting on the recipient's screen. If a portal asks for separate uploads, follow the portal; for email, combine.

    Name your file so it makes sense on someone else's computer

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    Imagine your PDF sitting in a folder with two hundred others. A file called document(2).pdf is useless; CV.pdf is barely better. Use a clear, professional name: Surname_Firstname_Application_Position.pdf, for example Keller_Anna_Application_MarketingManager.pdf. Avoid spaces, Swiss-German special characters, and dates that mean nothing to the reader. Good naming is a small courtesy that quietly signals you are organised.

    Set a professional signature and sender details

    Send from a serious address โ€” firstname.lastname@โ€ฆ, not a nickname account you made at sixteen. Add a simple email signature with your full name, phone number and, if relevant, a LinkedIn URL, so the recruiter can reach you without hunting through the body. Check that your display name shows your real name rather than "iPhone user". These details are invisible when right and glaring when wrong.

    Mind the etiquette: timing, tone and proofreading

    Write in the language of the advertisement โ€” if the posting is in German, your email is in German, even when the dossier may be in English. Keep the tone formal; Swiss professional culture errs on the side of Sie and surnames. Send during business hours where you can, double-check the recipient's name spelling, and read the whole message once aloud to catch the typo your eyes skip. Send a test to yourself first to confirm the attachment is actually there โ€” a "please find attached" with nothing attached is a classic, avoidable own goal.

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    Follow up โ€” once, politely

    If the advert states a deadline or a timeline, respect it and wait. When no timeframe is given, a single courteous follow-up after about ten to fourteen days is acceptable: a short reply on your original email confirming your continued interest and asking about the next steps. One reminder is professional; weekly chasing is not. If you hear nothing after a polite follow-up, move on โ€” your energy is better spent on the next application.

    Build a dossier worth attaching

    A clean email only helps if the PDF behind it is strong. Create your Swiss CV and motivation letter with CVSwiss and export a single, recruiter-ready PDF dossier in minutes โ€” correctly ordered, professionally formatted, and named the way Swiss hiring managers expect.

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    Related Topics:

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