The Interview Preparation Playbook

Most candidates lose interviews not because of skill gaps, but because of preparation gaps. The good news: interviewing is a teachable skill. The framework below — research, stories, structure, questions, follow-up — works for any role from junior IC to senior executive.

1. Research Like a Consultant, Not a Tourist

Spend 60–90 minutes before any first-round interview. The goal is to walk in already understanding the company's strategy, recent moves, and the specific problem this role is meant to solve.

2. Master the STAR Method for Behavioral Questions

Behavioral questions ("Tell me about a time…") account for roughly 60% of every interview. STAR gives you a 90-second structure that signals seniority and clear thinking.

Prepare 6–8 STAR stories that cover the most common themes: leadership, conflict, failure, ambiguity, prioritization, deadline pressure, cross-functional collaboration. Each story should be reusable for multiple questions.

3. The 10 Questions You Will Almost Certainly Be Asked

1. "Tell me about yourself."
A 90-second present → past → future arc. Current role and headline achievement → 2–3 most relevant prior steps → why this exact role at this exact company is the logical next step. Do not recite your resume.
2. "Why this company?"
Reference something specific that you could only know after research — a product decision, a strategy quote from the CEO, a recent partnership. Then connect it to your skills.
3. "Why are you leaving your current role?"
Forward-looking, never negative. Frame it as "I have learned X and Y in my current role; I am now looking for Z, which this role offers." Never criticize a former employer.
4. "What is your greatest weakness?"
Pick a real, non-fatal weakness, describe a concrete system you built to manage it, and end with the result. Avoid the cliché "I work too hard."
5. "Tell me about a time you failed."
Pick a real failure with real stakes. Spend 70% of the answer on what you learned and how you applied that lesson later. Showing self-awareness wins more than the failure costs.
6. "Tell me about a conflict with a coworker."
Choose a conflict over ideas, not personality. Show you listened, found common ground, and arrived at an outcome better than either original position.
7. "Where do you see yourself in 5 years?"
Show ambition aligned with this company's growth path — not "I want your job in 18 months." Reference the kinds of problems you want to be solving, not titles.
8. "Why should we hire you?"
Pick the 3 most important requirements from the JD, give one quick proof point each, and close with: "That combination is rare, and it maps directly to what this role needs."
9. "Walk me through a project you are proud of."
STAR format. Choose a project that mirrors the work in the JD, has a quantified outcome, and required you to grow.
10. "What are your salary expectations?"
Deflect the first time: "I would like to learn more about the role first." If pushed, give a researched range with the bottom 10–15% above your true minimum. Never give a single number.

4. Technical & Case Interviews

For coding, system design, case, or analytical interviews — the process matters as much as the answer.

5. The Questions YOU Should Ask Them

Every interview ends with "Do you have any questions for us?" Saying "no" or asking only about benefits is the single most common reason strong candidates get downgraded. Have 5 ready, ask 2–3.

6. Body Language & Communication

7. Setting Up a Professional Virtual Interview

Roughly 80% of first-round interviews now happen over video. The setup is non-negotiable — it is part of the evaluation.

8. Salary Negotiation Without Burning Bridges

Most candidates leave 10–20% on the table by accepting the first offer. Companies expect a counter — not negotiating signals you do not value yourself.

9. The 24-Hour Follow-Up

Within 24 hours, send a personalized thank-you email to every person you spoke with. Three short paragraphs:

This step alone has flipped no-hire decisions to hire decisions. It is the cheapest, highest-leverage move in the entire process.

10. Day-Of Checklist

Land the Interview First

All of this only matters if you actually get the interview. Pair a sharp resume with a tailored cover letter using our free AI cover letter generator — and read our resume tips to make sure yours gets past the ATS.