Many trades businesses in and around Hildesheim have full order books and one persistent worry: they cannot find the right people. Around 250,000 (ZDH) positions are currently open in the German trades, and every year roughly 20,000 (ZDH) apprenticeship places stay unfilled. Anyone who only runs a newspaper ad or posts a listing on a job board mainly reaches the few people who are actively searching. The much larger group, who would not rule out a change but are not looking, stays out of reach. This is exactly where a dedicated careers page comes in: a clear, honest area of your company website that shows what it is like to work for you, and that makes applying as easy as making a call. This article shows what belongs on a good careers page, which mistakes cost applications, and how it all works together with Google and social media.
Key takeaways
- The shortage is real and measurable: around 250,000 open jobs and roughly 20,000 unfilled apprenticeship positions in the trades (ZDH).
- A dedicated careers page also reaches passive seekers, not just the few who happen to be reading an ad.
- What works: a clear employer message, genuine team insights, concrete jobs and a short, mobile application form.
- Typical mistakes cost applications: hidden jobs, mandatory PDFs, slow loading and complicated forms.
- A fast reply keeps candidates warm. No one can promise a fixed number of applications, but solid fundamentals improve the chances in a traceable way.
Why the Careers Page Decides on Skilled Workers
The skills shortage has long stopped being a trades-only issue and now runs through the whole economy. In the IT sector, for example, a survey of 855 companies found around 109,000 (Bitkom) missing specialists, 85 percent (Bitkom) of companies complain about the shortage and 79 percent (Bitkom) expect it to worsen. In the trades the picture is similarly tense: on top of the roughly 250,000 (ZDH) open positions come the around 20,000 (ZDH) unfilled apprenticeship places that widen the talent gap year after year. Any business that wants to compete here has to be visible and appealing before anyone actively searches.
The decisive difference lies between active and passive seekers. Active seekers read job ads and comb through job boards, but they are the minority. The far larger group is basically content, yet open to a good reason to move. A newspaper ad or a plain job-board listing reaches almost only the first group. A careers page that is findable via Google and social media speaks to the second as well. And these people are increasingly on mobile: already around 40 percent (Statista) have searched for jobs on their smartphone while out and about, and the trend is rising. A careers page that stutters on a phone loses exactly these prospects.
On top of that comes demographic pressure. Over the next five years, up to 125,000 (ZDH) trades businesses face a change of ownership as many owners retire. At the same time it takes ever longer to fill a role. From IT it is known that an open specialist position stays vacant for 7.7 months (Bitkom) on average, and in the trades long vacancies are just as much a reality. Every month without the right person costs revenue and burdens the existing team. A good careers page shortens that path because it advertises around the clock without anyone having to place a new ad.
Active and passive seekers
What Belongs on a Good Careers Page
A careers page is more than a list of open jobs. It answers the one question every skilled worker asks: why should I work here of all places? Studies show that for many candidates the company website is the most important source of information about a potential employer, often ahead of the job board that first led them to the role (Statista). Those who take this page seriously gain an edge. The following building blocks belong on every good careers page for the trades.
Clear employer message
In a few sentences: what the business stands for, what makes the work meaningful, what new colleagues gain. A fair team, a secure future and short commutes are stronger than empty phrases.
Genuine team insights
Your own photos of the team, the workshop and completed projects. Real faces create closeness and show who stands behind the business, instead of interchangeable stock images.
Concrete jobs in plain words
Each open role with an understandable title, tasks, what is offered and the region. No jargon, no hidden PDF files, just clear details that instantly show whether it fits.
One-click application
A short form completed in a few minutes: name, contact and a brief message are enough for the first step. Everything else is clarified in a personal conversation.
Contact person and reply time
A face with a name and an honest note on how quickly a reply comes. Those who know someone will get back to them soon are more likely to apply rather than wait.
Mobile, fast, accessible
The page must run flawlessly on a smartphone, load quickly and be usable by everyone. That is where most spontaneous applications happen today.
These building blocks work together. The employer message sparks interest, the team insights build trust, the clear jobs deliver the facts and the short form makes the last step easy. Honesty matters: promises that daily life does not keep lead to disappointment and resignation. A careers page that shows how things really are attracts the people who also stay. How this content fits cleanly into an existing website is part of thoughtful web design for the trades that thinks technology, text and design together.
- A clear answer to why someone should work here
- Real photos of the team, workshop and projects instead of stock images
- Each role with title, tasks, offer and region in plain words
- A short application form with no mandatory cover letter
- A named contact person and an honest reply time
- Complete details on location, directions and service area
The Most Common Mistakes on Careers Pages
Many businesses have a careers page, yet it holds applications back instead of encouraging them. The causes are almost always the same. The most common mistake is the hidden job: if the open positions can only be found after several clicks in a deeply buried area, people leave beforehand. Just as widespread is the requirement to upload a complete application as a PDF. That is barely feasible on a smartphone, and around 40 percent (Statista) of job seekers are on exactly that device. Anyone who is supposed to write a cover letter at a computer first postpones the application, and postponing often becomes never.
The second big blocker is the technology. A slow page loses prospects before they even see the jobs: more than half of mobile users, specifically around 53 percent (Google), leave a page that takes longer than three seconds to load. Add to that unclear or overloaded forms. Every additional mandatory field is a small hurdle, and in sum these hurdles decide whether someone makes it to the submit button. Accessible, clean implementation is no luxury here: audits of the home pages of many websites find avoidable accessibility errors on the vast majority (WebAIM), errors that exclude some people from applying.
| Aspect | Holds applications back | Encourages applications |
|---|---|---|
| Findability | Jobs buried deep, several clicks needed | Open jobs directly visible and linked |
| Application path | PDF pack and cover letter mandatory | Short form, cover letter optional |
| Mobile use | Stutters on the phone, small fields | Runs flawlessly on mobile, large fields |
| Load time | Slow, visitors leave | Fast, visitors stay to the job |
| Employer image | Only job titles, no insights | Team, values and real photos |
| Reply | No note, long silence | Clear reply time, fast answer |
Mandatory PDFs block more than they protect
The One-Click Application: Short, Mobile, Fast
The application form is the last hurdle and at the same time one of the most common drop-off points. The more a form demands and the more cumbersome the path, the more people bail out beforehand. Since a large share of those interested are on mobile, around 40 percent (Statista) search on their smartphone on the go, the application has to work effortlessly on small screens. Large fields, the right keyboard per input and clear labels are essential. The idea of the one-click application is simple: interest should turn into a real application within a few minutes, with no media break and no computer.
In practice that means asking only for what you truly need for the first step: a name, a way to make contact and the desired role, plus an optional short message. Certificates and details are clarified in conversation. At least as important as brevity is the speed afterwards. Someone who gets in touch is warm, but that interest cools quickly. An instant confirmation that the application has arrived, and a real reply within a few days, make the difference. Local businesses in particular can score here, because their paths are short and the boss often replies personally. How a form can be implemented in a technically fast and at the same time spam-safe way is part of clean conversion rate optimisation.
Short form
Name, contact and desired role are enough for the first step. No mandatory cover letter, no forced PDF. Every field removed lowers the barrier and raises the number of submitted applications.
Fast reply
An instant confirmation after submitting and a real answer within a few days keep interest warm. Those who hear nothing for a long time are quickly in talks elsewhere.
Applying as easy as calling
Working Together with Google and Social Recruiting
A careers page only unfolds its effect once people find it. The first lever is Google. Anyone searching for occupations and places, such as electrician or HVAC technician in Hildesheim, should find your open jobs. Cleanly marked-up job pages with clear titles, location and tasks are better understood by search engines and can appear in the job results. The basis for this is a technically fast, well-structured website. How regional findability works in detail is explored in our article on improving website loading speed as well as through focused work on local SEO.
The second lever is the local environment. A well-kept Google business profile with current photos, opening hours and a pointer to open jobs makes you visible in the region and links directly to the careers page. How much sits in a well-run profile is shown in our article on how to optimise your Google business profile. The third lever is social media: a short video from the workshop or an honest glimpse of a working day reaches exactly the passive seekers who read no ads but are active online. Each of these paths ultimately leads to the same careers page and the same simple application.
Found on Google
Clearly marked-up job pages with occupation, place and tasks are better understood and can appear in the job results. That way seekers find your jobs exactly when they look.
Google business profile
A well-kept profile makes you visible regionally, shows photos and opening hours and links directly to open jobs. A strong trust signal for people nearby.
Social recruiting
Short, honest insights from daily work reach passive seekers where they already are. The click leads to the careers page and the simple application.
The best skilled workers rarely read job ads. You reach them where they already are and win them over with an honest look behind the scenes.
How to Get Started
You do not need a completely new website to start with a careers page. In most cases a dedicated, clearly linked area of your existing company website is enough. Begin with what works fastest: an honest employer message, a few real photos, the open jobs in plain words and a short form. Check whether the page loads quickly on a smartphone and whether an application is really possible in a few minutes. These fundamentals are quick to implement and often show their effect fast. An honest assessment of your website is provided by our overview of services.
In the second step you connect the page to Google and your profile, add a short insight for social media if useful, and make sure applications reliably land with the right person. Especially in combination with reliable online appointment booking for local businesses and ongoing website maintenance and security, you create a presence that not only advertises but keeps working over time. Anyone who wants to reliably turn website visitors into contacts will find the right levers in our article on how to win more enquiries through your website.
If you would rather not build it yourself, we take on the design and the copy for you. We implement the careers page as part of your trades website: technically fast, accessible to the applicable standards and easy to find regionally. Which steps bring the most for you is best clarified in a personal conversation. One honest expectation remains: a specific number of applications cannot be guaranteed, as it depends on occupation, region, competition and your offer. But those who implement the fundamentals cleanly improve their chances in a traceable way.
The careers page as a quiet recruiter
Sources and studies