Sales interviews are different from most. You're being evaluated not just on what you say, but on how you say it. The interviewer is watching your energy, your listening, your ability to handle pushback. Everything you've ever been told about interviewing still applies, but in a sales interview, presence and confidence carry extra weight.
That said, specific numbers and structured stories still matter more than energy alone.
What sales interviews actually test
Hiring managers for sales roles are asking: Can this person hit quota? Are they coachable? Do they have a repeatable process, or do they wing it? Will they stick around?
They'll try to surface these through questions about your track record, your process, and how you handle pressure. Generic answers about being "motivated by results" don't differentiate you. Specifics do.
Questions about your numbers and track record
"What was your quota and what percentage did you hit?" is almost always the first real question. Know your numbers cold before you walk in: quota, attainment %, average deal size, average sales cycle length, your rank on the team, and your best quarter or year.
- Annual or quarterly quota and your % attainment
- Average deal size (and your largest deal)
- Average sales cycle length
- Win rate
- Your rank relative to peers (top 10%, top 25%, etc.)
"Tell me about your biggest deal" is common. Walk through how you found it, how you ran the deal, who was involved on both sides, how you handled objections, and how you closed it. This is a full STAR answer.
Questions about your sales process
"Walk me through how you prospect" is asked to see whether you have a system or just spray and pray. Describe your ICP, your outreach channels, your messaging approach, and how you qualify early.
"How do you handle a stalled deal?" is testing whether you know how to re-engage or cut your losses. A good answer: re-qualify the business case, find a new champion or expand the buying committee, or create urgency with a mutual action plan tied to their deadline.
"How do you handle a price objection?" is almost always asked. The answer isn't to immediately discount. Show that you first understand what's driving the objection (budget, value perception, competitor comparison), then address the root cause.
Behavioral questions
"Tell me about a time you lost a deal you thought you had"
S/T: "I was 90% through a six-figure deal. The champion had been driving it internally, and I thought we were closing in two weeks."
A: "My champion left the company suddenly. I had never built relationships at the CXO level because he'd told me he had it covered. When he left, there was no internal sponsor. I reached out directly to the CFO but hadn't built enough trust to restart the conversation. I ran a post-deal review with my manager and identified that my single-threaded approach was the root cause."
R: "We lost the deal. But every deal I've run since has had at least two executive sponsors. My multi-threading practice has helped me save two deals that would have died the same way."
"Tell me about a time you exceeded quota"
Don't just say "I hit 130%." Walk through what you did differently that quarter: a new prospecting channel you opened, a segment you double-downed on, or a pipeline build strategy that paid off. Show it was intentional, not luck.
The role-play round
Many sales interviews include a role-play where the interviewer plays a prospect and you cold call or demo them. Tips: ask discovery questions before pitching, acknowledge objections before answering them, and tie your close to a specific next step with a date, not an open-ended "let me know."