How to Find a PhD Supervisor in Germany (What Worked for Me)

PhD Supervisor Search

Searching for a PhD supervisor can feel like a daunting task — but with a clear approach and a simple tracking system, you can dramatically increase your chances and avoid repeating the same mistakes. Shortly after my graduation ceremony from the University of Southampton on 3rd December 2019, I contacted about five professors and got accepted to one only. I then continued to look for funding opportunities until 13 August 2022, when I was shortlisted for the PTDF/DAAD joint funding scholarship. This time, I needed another supervisor to match what my new research entails.

Notification of the PTDF PhD award
Click the image to view the official notice (opens in a new tab).
Key mindset: Professors are busy. Your advantage is being clear, relevant, and organized.

Email template to professors (copy & edit)

Keep it short, specific, and tied to the professor’s recent work. Here’s a strong generic version:

Email Template (Copy & Edit)
Subject: Prospective PhD Student – [Research Area]

Dear Prof. Dr. [Last Name],

I hope this message finds you well.

My name is [Your Name], and I am exploring PhD opportunities in [Research Field]. I came across your work on [specific topic / paper title], and I’m very interested in your research direction.

I would appreciate your guidance on whether you may be open to supervising a PhD candidate whose interests align with your group. If appropriate, I would be happy to share a short research idea and discuss potential fit.

Attached: CV + 1-page research summary.

Thank you for your time.

Kind regards,
[Your Name]
[LinkedIn (optional)]
[Website (optional)]

Why the tracker template is important

  • Stay organized: you’ll track who you contacted, when, and the outcome.
  • Avoid duplicate emails: prevents sending the same request twice to the same professor.
  • Follow up professionally: set reminders for 10–14 days instead of chasing too early.
  • Use multiple devices: Google Sheets works best across phone + laptop.
  • Safety: if your device is lost, cloud storage keeps your contacts and notes safe.
  • Pipeline thinking: helps you contact many professors without losing track.
  • Improves your strategy: you’ll notice patterns (which emails work, which don’t).

What to track (simple but effective)

Use these columns (this is what the Excel tracker is built on):

Field What to write Why it matters Example
Professor Full name + title Avoid duplicates Prof. Dr. Jane Doe
University Institution name Compare options later TU Munich
Research group Lab/group name Make emails relevant Secure Systems Lab
Email Official contact Correct follow-ups jane.doe@uni.de
Date contacted First email date Control timing 2025-01-10
Status No reply / Rejected / Interested At-a-glance progress Interested
Remarks Notes (proposal request, interview) Prevents confusion Asked for 2-page proposal

Tip: update your tracker immediately after any reply. That habit alone makes your process 10x easier.

Download the tracker template

Upload it to Google Drive and open with Google Sheets if you want cloud access across devices.

Extra tips most applicants miss

  • Don’t mass-email: customize 2–3 lines per professor based on their recent publications.
  • Keep attachments light: CV (1–2 pages) + research summary (1 page max).
  • Use a clear subject: “Prospective PhD – [Area] – [Your Name]”.
  • Follow-up rule: one follow-up after 10–14 days is enough.
  • Pipeline matters: contact multiple professors — don’t wait for one reply before sending others.

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2 thoughts on “How to Find a PhD Supervisor in Germany (What Worked for Me)”

  1. These tip are very helpful. Initiating the first email to a potential supervisor can be quite daunting. This guidance here, provides a clear and practical direction. Well done!!

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