About 1-1.5 hours
Behavioral interview questions and technical experience are a chance to provide the audience with some insight based on your past behavior in certain situations. Consider your most important projects / features / initiatives that you worked on and identify the relevant talking points to answer the most common questions. Take the time to practice and prepare the narrative around each of your experiences so that you have them handy for a wide variety of questions. Ensure that you answer the question with the specific action you did, provide the context of your actions, and concretely describe the (positive) results or learnings from your actions.
Participants will be able to:
- frame their experiences and Techtonica to a variety of audiences
- answer questions about their work experience and how it will apply to future roles
- Preparing a "personal narrative"
- Framing experiences to prepare for different types of questions
- Action - Context - Result response
- Questions to ask interviewers
Your personal narrative is a prepared ~2min response to the question “tell me about yourself.” It should tell the audience who you are and why you are relevant to them. Specifically, it is the storyline of how you got to that exact conversation – why you are in that interview or at that event, speaking to that person.
Take some time to think about how you got to Techtonica and what you're interested in next. This guide can help you think about and format your response.
Use and adapt your personal narrative with your apprentices and/or at tech talks, conferences, and recruiting events.
- Focus on what is relevant to the recruiter or interviewer and their goals
- Provide context for your work experiences
Consider questions like:
- Tell me about a time you completed a challenge as a team.
- Tell me about a time you helped a client.
- Tell me about a project or feature you completed.
Think about what experiences come to mind to response to these questions. Pick a few significant projects you've done and frame them within Action - Context- Result format:
- Action - “Punchline” of the story, one-line answer to the question
- Context - describe the situation in which your actions took place
- Result - reiterate the initial answer to the original question, clearly defining the results you produced
Use this format to help focus your responses and ensure you answer the question. Once you have your major experiences outlined, you can map different questions to the experiences and prepare for a variety of questions.
- Greatest strength, weakness, accomplishment in past 12 months.
- Definitely prepare a weakness response and how you plan to fix it
- Tell me about a time you completed a challenge as a team.
- Tell me about a time you worked with someone difficult.
- Tell me about a time you helped a client (student, anything customer facing).
- Where do you see yourself five years from now?
- What was the toughest part of your last position?
- What are you looking forward to?
- What are your goals for your career? (frame as how this role will help you get there)
- Why are you leaving (or why did you leave) your previous position?
- How do you define success…and how do you measure up to your own definition?
- Tell me about a bug you fixed.
- Tell me about a project or feature you completed.
- What do you think the relationship is between product managers, designers and engineers?
- Tell me about a mistake you made.
- Draw out the architecture of your product.
Do some company research and prepare some questions for the recruiters and interviewers.
- What is an example of a client challenge you have recently faced?
- How do you on-board new hires?
- How do employees ask questions here?
- Where do you see the company going in the next year? 10 years?
- What impact would I have on the team if I get hired?
- What would make someone really successful in this role?
- What does "crunch time" for your team look like?
- What are the success metrics of your team
- What projects are in the pipeline? What projects are you excited about?
- How does code get to production at [company x]?
Take an hour think of answers to as many of the above questions as you can. Later on, as you prepare for more interviews, work towards having an answer to all of them.