Your first job interview is different from every one that comes after it. You don't have war stories, you don't have a track record, and you're being evaluated by people with 10 or 20 years of experience. But the gap between a strong fresher candidate and a weak one has almost nothing to do with experience. It has to do with preparation, self-awareness, and how you talk about yourself.

The real disadvantage freshers have, and don't have

The genuine disadvantage: you can't point to measurable professional impact. No "I delivered X that resulted in Y." This limits the credibility of some answers, particularly to behavioural questions.

What you don't lack: preparation ability, learning agility, communication skills, and the ability to demonstrate how you think. Hiring managers who interview freshers know they're not getting a proven track record. They're looking for aptitude, attitude, and the potential to grow. Your job is to make those things visible.

What you actually have to offer

More than you think. Work experience isn't the only source of examples:

The principle: any experience where you made a decision, worked with others, faced a problem, or had to deliver something is interview material. You just need to know how to present it.

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The questions freshers always get asked

Freshers get a version of the same handful of questions in almost every first interview. Preparing these well will cover 70% of what comes up.

Questions Freshers Get Most Often
  • "Tell me about yourself."
  • "Why do you want to work here?"
  • "What are your strengths and weaknesses?"
  • "Where do you see yourself in 5 years?"
  • "Tell me about a time you worked in a team."
  • "Tell me about a challenge you faced."
  • "Why did you study [your subject]?"
  • "What do you know about our company?"

On "tell me about yourself", don't recite your CV. Frame it as a narrative: where you started, what drew you to this field, what you've done that's relevant, and why you're here. Two minutes, practised until it sounds natural. See our full guide: How to Answer Tell Me About Yourself.

On "what are your strengths and weaknesses", the weakness question is a classic fresher stumble. Don't say "I work too hard" or "I'm a perfectionist." Pick a real limitation with a genuine improvement story. "I used to struggle with public speaking, which I noticed in group presentations. I've been working on it by volunteering to present in every class setting I could, I'm still building the skill but I can see the progress." Honest, self-aware, growth-oriented.

How to use academic and college examples

The frame matters. "For my final year project I built X" sounds undergraduate. "In my dissertation project I led a 4-person team to design and build X, which involved managing conflicting views on architecture and ultimately presenting our results to a panel of 5 academics" sounds like someone who took their work seriously and can reflect on it.

The same experience, framed two different ways. The second version uses professional language, mentions leadership (even if informal), mentions a decision point, and ends with a deliverable and an audience.

Use the STAR framework even for academic examples: Situation (the project context), Task (your specific responsibility), Action (what you did, what you decided), Result (the outcome, mark, feedback, what was built). See the full guide: STAR method for behavioural questions.

How to come across well in the room (or on screen)

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Frequently asked questions

What should I wear to a first interview?
Research the company's culture and dress one step above it. For a corporate finance firm, business formal. For a tech startup, smart casual. When in doubt, err on the side of more formal, it's easier to dress down than to be underdressed. For video interviews, wear what you would in-person from the waist up.
Is it okay to admit I don't know something?
Yes, and it's better than guessing and getting it wrong. "I don't know the exact answer to that, but here's how I'd think through it" is an honest and intelligent response. What you want to avoid is giving a confident wrong answer, that's a worse signal than admitting a gap.
What if I get asked a question I wasn't prepared for?
Pause, think, and answer as best you can. You don't need to have a perfect answer, the interviewer knows you haven't heard every possible question. What they're watching is how you handle something unexpected: calmly, thoughtfully, with some structure. That itself is a positive signal.
Should I follow up after the interview?
Yes. A brief email thank-you within 24 hours is appropriate and often appreciated. Keep it short: express appreciation for the time, mention one specific thing from the conversation that stood out, and confirm your interest. Don't ask about the decision timeline in the same message.