What interviewers are testing
Interviewers ask about weaknesses for two reasons: to test self-awareness and to see how you handle a question designed to make you uncomfortable. The question is not about whether you have weaknesses, since everyone does, but about whether you have the maturity to identify them honestly and the initiative to work on them. Candidates who give a vague non-answer signal that they lack self-awareness or are too guarded to be trusted with feedback.
The ideal answer shows a genuine developmental area, evidence you have taken it seriously, and specific steps you are taking to improve. It should be real enough to be credible but not so fundamental to the role that it raises a flag about your fitness for the job.
Answers that backfire
"I work too hard" or "I am a perfectionist." Interviewers hear these constantly and they read as evasive. They do not demonstrate self-awareness; they demonstrate the opposite. These answers actively hurt your credibility with any experienced interviewer. A fatal flaw for the role. Saying you are bad with numbers when applying for a financial analyst role is genuinely disqualifying. Choose a weakness that is real but does not cut to the heart of what the role requires every day.
The structure that works
Name the weakness directly. Explain why it is a weakness and where it shows up. Describe what you have done about it. Show some evidence of improvement. This four-part structure takes 60 to 90 seconds and covers everything the interviewer needs.
Example: "I have historically found it difficult to push back when stakeholders change scope late in a project. I would absorb the change rather than having the conversation about what it meant for the timeline. I recognised this about two years ago. I now build a change impact note into my process and bring it to the stakeholder conversation rather than absorbing the work silently. It still does not feel comfortable, but I do it."
Real weakness examples that work
Public speaking: Genuine and common, improvable with practice. "I am less comfortable speaking in large group settings than one-on-one. I joined a presentation skills workshop earlier this year and now volunteer for internal presentations I would previously have avoided." Credible, specific, actively being addressed.
Delegating: Useful for candidates moving into management. "I tend to take on too much myself rather than delegating. I do it because I care about quality, but I have seen it create a bottleneck. I have been more deliberate about delegating whole problems rather than tasks and checking in rather than taking back control."
How to deliver your answer confidently
The tone matters as much as the content. Deliver it matter-of-factly, not apologetically. You are a professional who has noticed something about yourself and is working on it, not confessing a disqualifying secret. A candidate who answers this question calmly and specifically often comes across as more credible than one who answers every other question perfectly but squirms here.