Your interview — make a good impression
Interviewers assess you from the first hello. Use these tips to show clear thinking, calm confidence, and job ready skills.
First minute checklist
- Arrive 10 minutes early and silence your phone
- Warm greeting, eye contact, natural smile, firm handshake if offered
- Use the interviewer name and thank them for their time
- Open posture, shoulders relaxed, hands still on your lap or notepad
If you get stuck, pause and take a sip of water. Short pauses feel confident when your posture is open and calm.
Prep that pays off
- Study the advert and pick three strengths that match the top criteria
- Research two facts about the company and one current initiative
- Plan one story for each strength using STAR so you can prove value
- Prepare two questions that show interest in goals, team, or success measures
Answer with STAR
Use STAR to turn experience into proof.
- Situation Short context
- Task What needed to change
- Action What you did
- Result The measurable outcome
Build one STAR answer
Keep it under 90 seconds. Lead with the result when time is tight.
Common questions and strong angles
- Tell us about yourself 1 minute work summary linked to the role
- Why this role Name two role tasks you enjoy and one skill you want to grow
- Strength Name it, prove it with a STAR result
- Weakness Pick a light one and show how you manage it
- Conflict or pressure Show calm steps and a measured result
- Success Numbers, time saved, quality, or customer impact
Avoid
- Long stories with no result
- Speaking poorly about past teams
- Guessing technical answers you do not know
- Filler words like just or only that shrink your impact
Body language and remote tips
- Sit tall with feet flat and hands still to reduce nerves
- Match energy. If the interviewer is warm and chatty, mirror lightly
- For video, raise the camera to eye level and look at the lens when you speak
- Test mic, light, and background before the call. Close apps that use bandwidth
Smart questions to ask
- What does success look like in the first 3 months
- What is the most useful skill a new starter can bring to this team
- Which tools or systems will I use most often
- How does the team give feedback and track progress
Talking salary
If asked early, keep it broad: I am open and interested in the right fit. I would consider a fair range for the role and level.
If asked at offer stage, give a range and a reason linked to impact: Based on my experience improving X by Y percent, my range is $X to $Y plus super.
After the interview
- Send a short thank you within 24 hours
- Note one thing you enjoyed and restate interest
- If you promised info, send it in the same email
Thank you email template
Hi [Name],
Thank you for the interview today for the [Role] position. I enjoyed learning more about the team and how you measure success.
I am confident I could help with [problem or goal discussed] and would be excited to contribute to the team.
Please let me know if you need any more information from me.
Kind regards,
[Your name]
Ready to feel confident at interview
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