This tends to be the most common type of interview question. Questions asked are structured to reflect the competencies sought by an employer for a particular job. You should be able to find out which competencies the employer is most interested in by looking at the recruitment pages of their website. Another good place to look is the job description (often attached to the ad), which usually includes a 'person specification' or ‘essential selection criteria’. The job description will list the competencies required – the skills, experience, knowledge and other attributes for which the organisation is looking for that particular role.
For example, the employer may be looking for someone with organisational skills, and may choose to ask you a series of questions designed to probe not only your experience in this area, but your understanding of the skills involved. Make sure you use 'I' to talk about what you did, rather than 'we' to list what the team did: they are interviewing you not the rest of the team.
The questions may follow a pattern such as:
- Would you describe yourself as an organised person?
- How have you demonstrated organisational skills? What did you do? What would you do differently next time?
- What makes a good organiser?
- Why are organisational skills important?
- Surely … (the interviewer challenges something you say in order to find out more)…?
For more information on general graduate competencies see our information on developing your employability skills
When preparing for the interview, try to map out your experiences using your CV, and identify which ones best demonstrate each of the competencies the recruiter is looking for. During your interview try to talk about a range of situations (eg your degree, a part-time job, a volunteer position, a student society role, an internship) you have been in which demonstrate your breadth of experience and evidence different competencies. You might find the STAR acronym useful – Situation, Task, Action, Result – when you are answering questions. If you use the STAR structure, spend most of your answer on the 'A' of STAR (the actions) and don't worry if some of your actions are ordinary or even dull, eg 'I created a spreadsheet; I called weekly meetings; I made a to-do list; I analysed the data.' Ordinary tasks make the working world go round.
See our page on how to show you fit the job criteria for more information on the STAR technique. For instance, you might use your degree to show your ability to meet deadlines and motivate yourself; you might use your Saturday job in a supermarket when you were at school to demonstrate your teamwork skills; your student society role might be good for showing teamwork and early morning rowing training could illustrate how skillful you are at juggling different commitments and time management.
Some general questions to prepare for:
- Tell me about a time when you demonstrated strong leadership skills.
- Describe a project that you planned or organised. What did you do to make it a success?
- Tell me about a time when you worked as part of a team to deliver a goal.
- Give me an example of a change you have initiated yourself or an improvement you have identified.
- Describe a situation in which you had to persuade someone round to your way of thinking; how did you use your communication skills to convince them?
- When you were in a situation that tested your resilience, how did you persevere?
- Describe a difficult problem you have faced and how you resolved it.
If you find some of these questions tricky, try these tips from TARGETjobs and Bright Network.
Put this advice into practice: book a careers adviser appointment to do a mock interview or register for an interview workshop on our term-planner – we run at least three each term.