Work Experience on a Swiss CV: A Practical Guide
The work experience section is where a Swiss recruiter decides, in roughly thirty seconds, whether you are worth a closer look. Get it right and the rest of your CV simply confirms a good impression. Get it wrong and even a strong candidate slips through the cracks. This guide walks you through how to structure, write and polish the section so it does the heavy lifting for you.
Use Reverse-Chronological Order
Swiss employers expect the reverse-chronological format: your most recent role first, then back through your career. It is the layout recruiters scan fastest, and it answers their first question instinctively β what are you doing right now, and how does it relate to the job you are applying for?
For each position, give four anchors: job title, employer, location (city is enough), and the dates in MM.YYYYβMM.YYYY form (for example 03.2021βpresent). Keep the formatting identical across every entry. If you list the company on the left and dates on the right in one role, do the same everywhere. Consistency signals the kind of precision Swiss workplaces value.
A short company descriptor helps when the employer is not a household name. "Mid-sized logistics firm, 250 employees" tells a recruiter in Zurich more than a brand they have never heard of.
Write Achievement-Focused Bullets
The single biggest upgrade you can make is to stop listing duties and start showing results. A duty describes what you were responsible for; an achievement describes what changed because you were there.
The reliable formula is action + result + metric. Start with a strong verb, state the outcome, and quantify it wherever you honestly can:
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- βLed the migration of three legacy systems to the cloud, cutting infrastructure costs by 22% within one year.
- βRestructured the supplier onboarding process, reducing average lead time from 14 to 6 days.
- βGrew a key account portfolio from CHF 1.2M to CHF 3.4M over two years.
Numbers do not have to be financial. Time saved, error rates reduced, team size managed, satisfaction scores, volumes handled β all of these make a bullet concrete. If a result genuinely cannot be measured, describe the scope and the stakes instead: "Owned client communications during a company-wide rebrand affecting 40 markets."
Aim for three to five bullets on recent, relevant roles and one or two on older or less relevant ones. Lead with your strongest point in each list β recruiters often read only the first line.
Get the Tense and Tone Right
Write your current role in the present tense and past roles in the past tense. Keep the voice active and the sentences tight: drop "I was responsible for" in favour of the verb itself. Swiss CVs lean factual and understated, so let the metrics carry the confidence rather than adjectives like "outstanding" or "world-class."
Write in the same language as the rest of your application, and use the terminology a Swiss reader will recognise. If your CV is in German, use Swiss spelling β "ss" never "ss."
Handle Gaps, Short Stints and Promotions
Gaps are far more common than candidates fear, and Swiss recruiters are pragmatic about them. The mistake is hiding a gap, because it tends to surface anyway. Instead, name it briefly and move on: parental leave, further study, a sabbatical, caring responsibilities or a deliberate job search. Using years rather than months can quietly smooth a short gap, and a productive break (a language course, a certification, volunteering) is worth one neutral line.
Short stints raise an eyebrow only when there are several in a row. A single brief role is rarely an issue β a one-line context note ("fixed-term project contract" or "company restructuring") removes any doubt. If you took temporary or agency work between permanent roles, group it under one heading so it reads as a deliberate choice rather than a string of false starts.
Promotions are a genuine selling point, so make the progression visible. List the employer once and nest the roles beneath it with their respective dates, so a recruiter immediately sees you were trusted with more. A line such as "Promoted to Team Lead after 18 months" turns tenure into a story of growth.
Tailor and Trim for Each Application
The work experience section is not a fixed record β it is an argument for one specific job. Before you send anything, reread the posting and mirror its priorities: if it stresses project management, surface your project achievements first. This is also what helps you pass the applicant tracking systems many larger Swiss companies use, since they scan for role-relevant keywords. You can pressure-test your draft with our free ATS check.
Older roles can shrink to a single line, and anything truly irrelevant can go. A focused two-page CV beats an exhaustive four-page one every time.
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A strong work experience section is mostly discipline: consistent formatting, active verbs, real numbers, honest framing. If you would rather not wrestle with the layout, create your Swiss CV with CVSwiss β it structures your experience in the format Swiss recruiters expect and helps you turn duties into achievements, so the most important section of your CV works as hard as you do.
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