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My German career: ‘Learning German should just be the side effect of a really fun activity.’

This Berlin-based programmer and entrepreneur was struggling to learn German. So he built a website to teach himself - and others - while having a few laughs in the process.

My German career: 'Learning German should just be the side effect of a really fun activity.'
Jeremy Smith holding up his website Seedlang. Photo courtesy of Jeremy Smith.

Jeremy Smith is used to mastering all sorts of challenges.

The Berlin-resident and native upstate New Yorker first went to university at the age of 26, acquiring a degree in computer science. In the years that followed, he founded a fantasy football startup, played professional poker for three years, and helped to manage the Brooklyn-based makerspace 3rd Ward.

But one of his biggest obstacles to overcome was learning German. Upon moving to Berlin, which he was drawn to for its creativity and lower cost of living, he made efforts to converse with his German flatmate based on the language-learning apps he had previously used.

Yet his initial confidence was deflated when his flatmate “would try to converse with me and I would just feel lost”. He turned to private tutoring, but said: “There were no building blocks, it was just reactive. It was like: here’s what’s wrong but not why it’s wrong.”

So Smith decided to found his own German-learning website, Seedlang, incorporating all of the methods he felt were lacking in other language-learning tools to which he had previously turned.

The website uses fun and original video to lead students through story-based learning exercises that emphasize speaking and listening.

It has a content tree of stories related to specific grammar topics as well as a vocab trainer with 4000 words that span the levels between A1 and B2.

“It should be that learning German is just the side-effect of a really fun activity,” says Smith of the user experience that he created.

Seedlang's 'content tree', which uses video clips from YouTube channel Easy German – and partners with its producers to create original ones – for interactive exercises. 

A homage to Berlin

On its homepage, Seedlang pays homage to Smith’s Stadt of choice Berlin, writing that the product is “Made with <3 in Berlin”.

“There’s access to a lot of talent here. There’s a lot of start-up oriented people, a lot of creativity, counterculture and it just seems to have the most in common with my own sensibilities,” says Smith.

Living in the German capital, he says, puts him “face to face” with his own struggles everyday of learning the language. He acknowledges that there are “aspects of the city that make it more difficult to learn German,” such as the prevalence of English speakers.

But, “It obviously can be done. There are a lot of resources,” he says. Berlin has also become the seat of other language learning websites and apps such as Lingoda, Babbel and Chatterbox.

And every November, the city hosts the sprawling Expolingua Berlin, a trade fair for anyone involved with teaching or learning languages.

Goofy yet grammatically correct

Especially since Smith started college later than usual in the U.S., he doesn’t define himself in one role.

“I’m using skills being a programmer with something hands on and creative,” he says. “I just see programming as a tool to build the types of experiences that I want to build.”

The type of experience with Seedlang boils down to using videos – now drawing from a library of over 8,000 – in order to create interactive exercises.

All of the clips are created in-house and he also partners with Easy German, which interviews people on the streets about a variety of topics from German culture (The Local co-hosted a video about the quirks of German supermarkets in October) to the intricacies of grammar.  

Smith and Cari Schmid from Easy German having fun in Berlin with German learning. Photo courtesy of Jeremy Smith.

In a recent video on “Je…desto”, for example, Seedlang uses Easy German video clips to illustrate a series of goofy yet grammatical points. For example, in one video of a student eagerly running across a lawn for his lunch, the subheads states: “Je schneller Andrew rennt, desto eher ist er beim Mittagsessen,” or “The quicker Andrew runs, the quicker he reaches his lunch”.

Soon Smith will launch a new site section which allows people to learn while playing a trivia game, head-to-head with other language learners, while building up vocabulary, listening comprehension, and knowledge about German culture. In May or June, Seedlang will also launch a mobile app.

As with the website, it will feature a series of fun activities for learning German – whether repeating the native speakers you hear in videos or drilling verb pronunciation, verb gender, and preposition pairs.

“We try to straddle line between very serious respect for grammar and understanding that grammar is necessary for correcting your own mistakes,” says Smith, “but then also having the presentations be so entertaining that it doesn’t feel so serious.”

Smith explains his new “Vocab trainer” in a video released last week. 

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EXPLAINED: How do you close down a freelance business in Germany?

Leaving the country? Got a steady job offer you can’t say no to? Winding down your self-employment activities in Germany still requires taking a few bureaucratic steps.

EXPLAINED: How do you close down a freelance business in Germany?

Striking out on your own as self-employed is one of the scariest – and potentially most rewarding things – you can do. In Germany, it also comes with its own set of rules around tax and social insurance.

But there are times when – for whatever reason – it may be time to move on.

Whether it’s because you have an exciting new opportunity or things haven’t quite worked out the way you hoped due to economic pressures – winding down self-employment the right way is crucial to avoid gaps in your health and social insurance coverage in Germany.

The steps you have to take are also a bit different depending on if you are new self-employed (Freiberufler) or have a trade licence (Gewerbe) – with some steps not being necessary for new self-employed.

Trade licences are automatically cancelled if the licenced person dies or the company ceases to have financial assets.

Resigning the trade licence or declaring it dormant

New self-employed people like writers or speakers don’t need to go through this step, as they don’t need a trade licence.

Those who have a trade licence will need to contact their competent local authority and resign it, or declare it dormant (withdrawing the licence). If you’re only winding down temporarily, declaring your trade licence dormant instead of de-registering completely may save you a few headaches later.

You may have to do this in person at your local trade office – or Gewerbeamt – depending on whether your local authority allows online de-registration or not. You’ll need to bring your official ID, trade licence, confirmation of registration and possibly an extract from the trade register. Fees are dependent on your local authority and can range from being free to €25.

You can declare the date you intend to resign the licence – which can be in the future. To ensure no gaps in your social insurance protections, including health insurance, set this date for the day before whatever comes next. For example, if you’re starting a new job on January 1st set the date for your trade licence to expire as December 31st.

The trade office will typically notify your local tax office, so you won’t need to do this yourself.

Notifying your tax office

If you’ve had to resign your trade licence, you can skip this step as your trade office will do it for you. If you’re a Freiberufler without a trade licence you need to resign, you’ll have to notify your local Finanzamt, or tax office, yourself.

Luckily, this is a pretty easy step.

First, you need to decide whether you’re ceasing operations completely or wanting to continue them part-time. If you’re ceasing completely, you’ll end up surrendering your self-employed tax number.

You don’t have to do this though. If you think you may still carry on some self-employed business as a side gig, you can inform the tax office that you intend to do so and keep your number.

At that point, the tax office should treat you as a Kleinunternehmer – or a small business making less than €22,000 a year. Having this status means that you will not need to pre-pay taxes or charge VAT on your invoices for freelance side projects.

If you derive any income from your side gig in the future though, you’ll still have to file a tax return.

READ ALSO: Can I have a freelance side gig as an employee in Germany?

Notifying your health insurance

While different private plans in Germany may have different notification requirements, if you have public health insurance in Germany, you should notify them that you’re winding up your self-employed business. Specifically, advise them exactly what date you’re wrapping up.

Again, this should be right before you start your new job or leave the country, to ensure no gaps in your coverage.

If ending your self-employment in Germany, take care to ensure that there’s no gaps in your health insurance coverage, by giving the right date for when you’re ceasing activity. You don’t want to be caught without coverage. Photo by Stephen Andrews on Unsplash

If you are in an artistic profession and thus pay pension, health, and nursing insurance through the Artist Social Insurance Fund (KSK), you should also advise them as well. If you’re leaving self-employment completely, you can typically give notice to KSK as to when it’s ending.

If you’re not, and intend to still make money freelancing as a side gig, they should know this as well. In this event, you’ll no longer pay health or care insurance through KSK, as this is covered through your main job.

You may need to continue to pay pension contributions through KSK based on the amount of money you still make from self-employed activities — depending on how much of them you continue.

KSK: How creative freelancers can pay less for German health insurance

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