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Home » Internships abroad for trainees: How can HR organize this?

Internships abroad for trainees: How can HR organize this?

May 5, 20268 Mins Read Leadership
Internships abroad for trainees: How can HR organize this?
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“Why should trainees actually go abroad?” – this question is heard again and again in small and medium-sized companies (SMEs). She is entitled. Anyone who operates as a craft business in rural areas or works as a regionally rooted family business without international business relationships is right to consider what specific benefits an internship abroad will have for their business. Isn’t this more of a “luxury program” for large corporations with locations around the world? A nice extra, but hardly relevant to everyday business life?

This skepticism is understandable, but it ignores the great potential of stays abroad in training. These are no longer an elite additional offer, but are increasingly developing into a strategic instrument for securing young talent and skilled workers. This also applies to SMEs.

What trainees gain from their stay abroad

Let’s start with the trainees themselves. A stay abroad – be it a company internship lasting several weeks or a learning period at a vocational school – is for many young people the first long period of time away from family and familiar surroundings. “Get out of the comfort zone” describes an important development step. Anyone who has to find their way in a foreign country almost inevitably outgrows themselves. Everyday organization, intercultural communication, problem solving in unfamiliar situations – all of this strengthens independence and self-confidence. Studies on the European education program Erasmus+, for example, show that such experiences have lasting effects on personality development.

In addition, there is a need to think outside the box: work processes, dealing with customers, technologies, hierarchies – many things work differently abroad. These changes in perspective not only promote openness, but also the ability to innovate. Anyone who has learned that things can be done differently brings new ideas back into the company from which everyone can then benefit.

Language skills should also not be underestimated. Even if you already have knowledge of English, applying it in a professional context and in real work situations significantly raises the level. Other languages ​​are also very important – for example in border regions or in the European internal market.

Further effects are obvious. A stay abroad increases the motivation of the trainees and also their identification with their own training. Loyalty to the company grows and the result is often a clearer professional orientation for the period after training.

Internships abroad: advantages for the company

The benefits for companies are often underestimated. SMEs in particular can benefit from their trainees’ stays abroad in several ways. So what do companies gain from the offer?

  • Increase the attractiveness of training: In times when companies are competing for young talent, special offers as benefits are a crucial factor. A structured stay abroad signals: “We invest in your development.” This works – and not just for high-performing applicants.
  • Strengthen employer brand: Internationality is often equated with modernity and future orientation. Even if the company itself operates locally, such an offer shows openness and willingness to innovate.
  • Deepen bond: Anyone who gives their trainees a formative experience abroad creates an emotional bond. Many companies report that returnees are more motivated and identify more strongly with the company.
  • Promote skills: The skills acquired abroad – from language skills to social and communicative skills to new working methods – directly benefit the company. Small companies in particular benefit when employees bring in new ideas.
  • Prepare for the globalized world of work: Even companies without direct foreign relationships are part of global value chains. Supply chains, customer contacts, digital collaboration – all of this is becoming more international. Intercultural competence is therefore not a “nice-to-have”, but increasingly a key qualification.

Social added value of internships abroad

In addition to individual and operational effects, there is a third level: social relevance. Stays abroad for vocational training contribute to European integration and mutual understanding. This is both internationalization and democracy promotion in action. While student mobility has been promoted by the European Union for much longer (for example through the Erasmus program), vocational training has long been neglected. It is therefore good to further close this gap and support trainees and students alike.

In addition, the reputation of dual training in Europe is strengthened. When it becomes clear that trainees are also gaining international experience, vocational training becomes more attractive – an important aspect in competition with academic educational paths.

Challenges: selection, organization and coordination

As convincing as the advantages are, implementation is not a sure-fire success. There are a number of challenges that companies need to take seriously and address. One of the most sensitive questions is: Who is allowed to go abroad? Choosing only the “best” can lead to frustration for others. At the same time, a stay abroad requires a certain degree of independence and resilience, and the success of your training should not be jeopardized. Not all trainees have the same requirements (e.g. family obligations or health restrictions). Companies should be careful not to systematically exclude anyone. Transparent criteria and fair selection processes are therefore crucial.

Cooperation company, internship, travel planning, accommodation, support – all of this has to be organized. For small companies without their own human resources department, this can mean a lot of effort – and without support it can quickly become expensive. All of this makes cooperation, advice and support so important.

The stay must also be meaningfully integrated into the training. Absences at work and at vocational school must be coordinated and what is missed must be made up for. On the other hand, the experience gained abroad should be made transparent and usable for the company.

Support: Help is available here for organizing internships abroad

The good news is that companies don’t have to face these challenges alone. There are a number of support offers – financial and organizational.

  • Erasmus+ (vocational training): The EU’s best-known and largest funding program provides financial support for trainees’ stays abroad. It covers a large part of the travel and accommodation costs and offers structured framework conditions.
  • Network “Vocational training without borders”: This network is funded by the Federal Ministry of Economics. Over 50 advice centers nationwide advise companies individually on all questions relating to internships abroad and when looking for funding.
  • Bilateral and regional exchange programs: Federal states, chambers or vocational training centers often offer their own cross-border programs or cooperation with neighboring countries such as France, Poland, the Netherlands or Spain. But sectors such as mechanical engineering, nursing and IT are also involved here. The sponsors sometimes take over the entire organization and also offer financial support.

These support structures are a crucial lever, especially for SMEs: they significantly reduce the effort and make stays abroad practical.

Practical tip: This is how SMEs get started

Getting started doesn’t have to be perfect – but it should be structured. Here are a few tips for a pragmatic start.

  • Start small: A two to four week stay is often a good start and is enough to gain exciting impressions and experiences. This reduces the organizational effort and lowers the hurdles.
  • Use collaborations: Instead of looking for partners abroad yourself, existing networks can be used. International exchange programs (see above) often offer established structures.
  • Start pilot project: Start with one or two trainees so you can gain experience and then expand the concept.
  • Define clear goals: What should the trainees learn abroad, what experiences should they gain? Technical content, language or intercultural skills? Clear objectives make planning easier and give trainees orientation.
  • Ensure preparation and follow-up: Intercultural training and language preparation provide security for your time abroad. Structured reflection after returning increases the benefits for the trainees and the company.
  • Make experiences visible: Reports, presentations or social media posts from trainees can be used internally and externally – as motivation for others, as appreciation for the training in the company and as a component of employer communication in training marketing.

Conclusion: A change of perspective is worthwhile

Back to the original question: Why should trainees go abroad – especially in SMEs without an international orientation and intensive business contacts abroad? The answer lies less in the short-term operational benefit than in the long-term added value, in the innovation potential through new ideas and in improving the image as an attractive training company. It’s about the personal development of young talent, securing skilled workers and providing new impetus for the company – and not least about the overall attractiveness of dual training.

Stays abroad are not an end in themselves, nor are they an instrument that works equally everywhere and for everyone. But when embedded sensibly, they can make a real difference – for trainees, for companies and for the training system as a whole. Above all, this requires the right perspective: away from the question of whether international experience is absolutely necessary and towards an orientation towards potential. This also applies to companies that have so far been purely local.

Info

The column “How training works”

Authors of the column are Miriam SchöppSenior Consultant for Vocational Training at the KOFA Competence Center for Securing Skilled Workers at the Institute of German Economy Cologne eV, and

Dirk Wernerhead of the topic cluster for professional qualifications and skilled workers at KOFA.

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