Europe’s blue economy—shipbuilding, port logistics, offshore renewables, coastal engineering….—relies on talent that can innovate fast. Yet many job-seekers still spray CVs at every vacancy they see. Research and recruiter feedback show that the smartest candidates apply only when they meet roughly 70-80 % of a role’s key requirements. Below, we explain why that benchmark matters for maritime careers, the risks of blanket applications, and how to use a cover letter to close any skill gaps—backed by trusted sources in the sector.
● 78% of workers admit they apply even when lacking some qualifications[1]
● Managers routinely shortlist applicants who satisfy about 70 % of requirements—proof that perfection is not expected[2]
Applying to every job you see might feel productive — but in the maritime and blue sectors, it can actually work against you. Here’s why a strategic, focused approach will take you further:
1. Applicant Tracking Systems (ATS) Will Flag You
Mass applications with low match scores are often flagged as spam by automated systems. Repetitive, generic CVs may never even reach human eyes — especially in highly filtered systems used by major employers.
2. Damaged Reputation in a Small Sector
Some recruiters often exchange insights informally. If you’re seen as applying indiscriminately, it may signal desperation or lack of direction — and harm your chances when a role finally aligns with your skills.
3. Missed Opportunities Due to Poor Focus
Every low-fit application takes time away from tailoring the one that truly matters. Instead of spreading yourself thin, invest in creating a CV and cover letter that directly target the role you’re best suited for — the one where your experience will stand out.
4. Long-Term Consequences Across the Network
Hiring managers move between marine consultancies, offshore companies and marine research centres. A scatter-gun approach today might lead to being remembered (and filtered out) tomorrow. Reputation travels fast in the blue economy — make yours count.
Focus on roles where you meet at least 70–80% of the requirements. Demonstrate clarity, intent, and professionalism. It’s not about how many applications you send — it’s about how well you match and how clearly you show it.
If you meet the core requirements but fall short in a few areas, your cover letter is your chance to turn that gap into an advantage. Use it to:
● Highlight Transferable Skills
Show how your past experience in related roles or sectors equips you to succeed, even if it’s not a perfect one-to-one match.
● Demonstrate Learning Agility
Share examples of how you’ve quickly picked up new tools, adapted to changing environments, or mastered unfamiliar tasks.
● Quantify Your Impact
Use metrics to prove the value you’ve delivered — especially when those results relate to what the new role is aiming to achieve.
● Cover Letter – 5 Key Areas to Mastering the Art of Writing a Cover Letter for the Marine Field (https://www.blue-jobs.com/blog/5-key-areas-to-mastering-the-art-of-writing-a-cover-letter-for-the-marine-field/ )
● Career Resilience & CV Refinement – Building Resilience in the Face of Job Rejections (https://www.blue-jobs.com/blog/building-resilience-in-the-face-of-job-rejections/ )
Upload your CV for instant visibility to maritime recruiters:
Submit Your CV to Blue-jobs
Apply with precision, connect with experts, and power the sustainable maritime future.