

Team Trenkwalder
about 10 hours ago
•4 min read
Nearshoring & International Recruiting:
Why Europe is becoming more attractive for companies again
Global supply chains, geopolitical uncertainties and the ongoing shortage of skilled workers are changing the HR strategies of many companies. While offshoring to distant markets has dominated in recent years, another approach is becoming increasingly important: nearshoring within Europe.
Companies are increasingly turning their attention to Eastern and South-Eastern Europe – regions that combine skilled workers, geographical proximity and stable conditions. At the same time, international recruiting is opening up new opportunities to fill vacant positions more quickly and sustainably.
But why is Europe becoming more attractive again as a talent market – and what should companies bear in mind when deploying skilled workers internationally?
Why nearshoring is currently gaining in importance
The economic conditions have changed noticeably. Long delivery routes, different time zones and complex coordination processes are leading companies to re-evaluate their international structures. Nearshoring offers several advantages here:
Geographical proximity: Shorter travel times and similar time zones facilitate collaboration and project management.
Cultural compatibility: Working methods and business practices are often more comparable than in more distant regions.
Highly qualified: Many countries in Eastern and South-Eastern Europe have excellently trained skilled workers – especially in technical, industrial and IT-related fields.
More stable planning: European legal and labour standards create additional security for companies.
For many organisations, nearshoring is thus becoming a strategic alternative between local recruiting and global offshoring.
International skilled workers as a response to the shortage of skilled labour
In many industries, it is becoming increasingly difficult to fill vacant positions locally. International recruiting strategies significantly expand the talent pool and provide access to skills that are in short supply in the domestic market.
This is no longer just about cost advantages. Today, the decisive factors are:
Speed in filling critical positions
Access to specialised qualifications
Long-term stability of teams
Flexibility during growth or project peaks
Structured international recruitment helps companies identify suitable candidates in Europe and integrate them successfully.
Getting mobility and legal frameworks right
The international deployment of employees brings opportunities, but also organisational challenges. Labour law requirements, tax issues and social security systems vary significantly within Europe.
Among other things, companies need to clarify:
Where the legal employer is based
Which local labour laws apply
How payroll and taxes are organised
Which residence and work permits are required
Models such as Employer of Record (EOR) enable international specialists to be deployed without having to set up a separate company in the respective country. Administrative and legal tasks are taken over in a structured manner, while the company retains professional management.
Relocation and integration as a factor for success
International recruitment does not end with the signing of the contract. The key to long-term success is how well skilled workers settle into their new environment. Support with administrative procedures, finding accommodation or organisational issues makes the transition much easier and reduces the risk of staff turnover.
Professionally supported relocation and migration processes ensure that international employees become productive more quickly and remain loyal to the company in the long term.
How nearshoring succeeds in practice: operating model, governance and collaboration
Nearshoring is not just a location decision – it is above all a question of implementation. The decisive factor is how roles, responsibilities and collaboration are organised so that international teams do not work in parallel, but are truly integrated. In practice, three approaches in particular have proven successful:
Expansion of existing teams (‘distributed teams’): Specialists abroad are developed as part of the core team – with clear interfaces, shared tools and coordinated work routines.
Nearshore hub as a centre of excellence: Certain tasks or skills are bundled, e.g. for IT, engineering or shared services – including defined service levels and handover processes.
Project-based capacity models: Nearshore teams provide temporary support for rollouts, peaks or transformation projects – with clear project management and documented handover processes.
For these models to work, what is needed is less ‘big concepts’ and more reliable standards in everyday life: clear communication routines, clean handover processes, defined contact persons, uniform documentation and onboarding that quickly enables international employees to become operational. Companies that set up nearshoring in such a structured way avoid typical friction losses – and achieve the desired effect more quickly.
Conclusion: Nearshoring as a strategic component of modern personnel planning
International recruiting within Europe has long been more than just a short-term solution to personnel shortages. When implemented correctly, nearshoring becomes a strategic tool for attracting skilled workers in the long term, setting up flexible teams and securing growth.
Companies that consider international mobility, legal frameworks and integration at an early stage lay the foundation for stable and efficient teams – today and in the future.
Would you like to find out how international recruiting strategies and nearshoring can be used effectively in your personnel planning? Then get in touch for a no-obligation consultation and discover the right solutions for your international personnel needs.
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