How to Answer “Tell Me About Yourself” in an Interview
People usually assume the “tell me about yourself” interview question is one of the easier questions in an interview. It’s actually the one we have candidates stumble on more than you’d think.
Even some of the most skilled and experienced candidates can lose the interviewer in the first 60 seconds if they over-explain or focus on the wrong things.
What most candidates think they should say:
❌ Their whole life story
❌ Explain every job they’ve ever had
❌ Long-winded explanations of experience and education
What hiring managers actually want to hear:
✅ What value can you bring?
✅ What problems can you solve?
✅ Why should we hire you?
The key is relevance, not a full biography.
Follow this 3-step formula on how to structure your answer, and you’ll position yourself as a strong candidate within the first couple of minutes.
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1. Your most relevant results 📊
What have you done in the past that is relevant to what they require? Keep it short, sharp and impactful.
How to structure it:
“I have been working as an ___ for ___ years.”
“I specialise in ___.”
“In the last _ years I’ve worked on ___.”
“This helped me to ___.”
💡 Bonus extra: Offer to share a list of recent projects and outcomes separately. There’s no time to be going on about everything you’ve done, so you can offer to provide more examples after the interview.
Example:
“I have been working as a front-end developer for 3 years and specialise in building responsive, user-focused web applications using React, TypeScript, and modern CSS frameworks.
In the last 3 years, I’ve worked on improving page load speeds and enhancing user engagement across multiple projects.
This helped me to deliver faster, more intuitive user experiences, contributing to an average reduction in page load time of up to 30% and improved user engagement metrics such as time on page and interaction rates.”
2. Highlight your biggest strength 💪
Now follow up on the above with your key strength, followed by something you like to do that adds extra value.
Again, this should align with the job description and show depth.
How to structure it:
“My main strength is___”
“I like to___”
Example:
“My main strength is building performant, scalable front-end applications with clean and maintainable code.
I like to refactor and structure components for reusability, optimise rendering performance, and improve overall code quality and developer experience.”
3. Tell them what you’re looking for in your next role 🔎
Wrapping it up with this shows your motivation and your cultural and technical alignment. Touch on your values, growth aspirations and ideal working environment.
How to structure it:
“I’m looking for___”
Example:
“I’m looking for a team where I can work on meaningful products, collaborate closely with designers and engineers, and keep developing my skills in modern UI frameworks and performance optimisation.”
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Final Tips!
🧠 Memorise your answer. This answer should be prepared before your interview, once you know what the role requires of you.
⏱️ Keep it short: 1.5 – 2 mins max. Go on any longer, and you’ll likely lose the attention of your interviewer.
In that time, the interviewer should clearly understand:
✔ What you do
✔ What you’re good at
✔ Why you’re a strong fit for the role
This turns a simple interview question into a powerful elevator pitch.
Need help refining your interview answers? 🤝
If you’re struggling to structure your experience or communicate your impact clearly, you’re not alone.
We work with candidates every day to:
- Map experience to role requirements
- Identify key strengths and achievements
- Build clear, confident interview answers
- Match talent with the right opportunities
If you want help nailing your interview pitch, get in touch. We’d love to help!



























