"What makes you unique?" or "What sets you apart from other candidates?" is a question many people find uncomfortable because they don't want to sound arrogant. But this is not a question about being superior to other people. It's a question about what you bring that's specifically relevant and valuable for this role, and why hiring you rather than someone else is a good decision.

What the interviewer wants to know

The interviewer has seen several CVs with similar qualifications and experience. They want to understand: what is this specific person's edge? What combination of skills, background, perspective, or approach would add something the rest of the candidate pool doesn't have? Your answer should be specific enough to be memorable and honest enough to be credible.

How to find your unique combination

Most people's uniqueness comes not from one extraordinary skill but from an unusual combination of skills, perspectives, or experiences. Think about:

The answer formula

A good answer has three parts:

  1. Name the combination or quality that sets you apart
  2. Give one concrete evidence point that proves it (a result, a specific project, feedback you've received)
  3. Connect it to what makes it specifically valuable for this role

Sample answers

For a product manager role

Sample Answer

"I think what distinguishes me is that I came up through engineering before moving into product, so I sit unusually close to both the technical side and the customer side. Most PMs have one or the other. In practice, it means I can have a very different quality of conversation with an engineering lead about what's actually feasible, and I can also hold my own on the business case in a board presentation. In my last role, that combination meant I was often the person who resolved the gap between what the business wanted and what engineering said was possible. I think that's particularly relevant for this role given the technical complexity of the product you're building."

For a sales role

Sample Answer

"I spent four years in customer success before moving into sales, which is an unusual path. It gives me a very different approach to the sales conversation: I'm focused on long-term fit, not short-term close, because I've seen what happens when a customer buys something that isn't quite right for them. In practice, that's led to a higher-than-average renewal rate and a significant amount of revenue from customer referrals in both of my previous sales roles. For a business like this one where retention matters as much as acquisition, I think that approach is a genuine differentiator."

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Frequently asked questions

What if I don't feel like I have anything unique to offer?
You almost certainly do, but it may feel ordinary to you because you've lived it. Ask people who work with you: "What do you think I'm particularly good at that you don't see as often in others?" Their answers often surface things you've taken for granted. Your unique combination is often about the intersection of skills, not a single extraordinary skill.
How is this different from "what are your strengths?"
"What are your strengths?" asks about your best qualities in general. "What makes you unique?" asks specifically about what differentiates you from the other candidates being considered. The strengths question is broader; the uniqueness question is more competitive and comparative. For the uniqueness question, explicitly frame your answer as a differentiator: "Most candidates will have X, but I also bring Y."
Can my unique quality be a personal characteristic rather than a skill?
Yes, but back it with evidence. "I'm very persistent" without anything behind it is weak. "I'm unusually persistent: I've never dropped a deal that I thought was the right fit for the customer, and I've reopened cold conversations that eventually closed years later" is strong because it's specific.
How long should my answer be?
90 seconds to two minutes. One quality or combination, one evidence point, one connection to the role. Don't try to list everything that makes you a good candidate: this is one question in the interview, not your closing argument. Keep it tight and confident.