What should I answer when an interviewer asks to say something “about yourself� [duplicate]
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This question already has an answer here:
How should I respond to the classic “Introduce yourself†question in an interview?
5 answers
I am a software professional. I have attended many interviews, in 99.99 % of them started with a question like "Tell me about yourself"
I start with my name, where I'm from, what I've studied (personal info) etc., then talk about my hobbies, interests and sometimes about my current working environment.
As everybody knows the first impression is the best impression?
Which is the best way to impress an interviewer by telling "about oneself"?
interviewing
marked as duplicate by gnat, Joe Strazzere, Garrison Neely, Jan Doggen, jcmeloni Jul 31 '14 at 11:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How should I respond to the classic “Introduce yourself†question in an interview?
5 answers
I am a software professional. I have attended many interviews, in 99.99 % of them started with a question like "Tell me about yourself"
I start with my name, where I'm from, what I've studied (personal info) etc., then talk about my hobbies, interests and sometimes about my current working environment.
As everybody knows the first impression is the best impression?
Which is the best way to impress an interviewer by telling "about oneself"?
interviewing
marked as duplicate by gnat, Joe Strazzere, Garrison Neely, Jan Doggen, jcmeloni Jul 31 '14 at 11:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
1
One thing I try to figure out about myself is where I am a little bit different to everyone else I know. This is always a good starting point.
– Michael Lai
Jul 29 '14 at 23:55
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
This question already has an answer here:
How should I respond to the classic “Introduce yourself†question in an interview?
5 answers
I am a software professional. I have attended many interviews, in 99.99 % of them started with a question like "Tell me about yourself"
I start with my name, where I'm from, what I've studied (personal info) etc., then talk about my hobbies, interests and sometimes about my current working environment.
As everybody knows the first impression is the best impression?
Which is the best way to impress an interviewer by telling "about oneself"?
interviewing
This question already has an answer here:
How should I respond to the classic “Introduce yourself†question in an interview?
5 answers
I am a software professional. I have attended many interviews, in 99.99 % of them started with a question like "Tell me about yourself"
I start with my name, where I'm from, what I've studied (personal info) etc., then talk about my hobbies, interests and sometimes about my current working environment.
As everybody knows the first impression is the best impression?
Which is the best way to impress an interviewer by telling "about oneself"?
This question already has an answer here:
How should I respond to the classic “Introduce yourself†question in an interview?
5 answers
interviewing
edited Jul 29 '14 at 6:53
asked Jul 29 '14 at 6:35


wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
200211
200211
marked as duplicate by gnat, Joe Strazzere, Garrison Neely, Jan Doggen, jcmeloni Jul 31 '14 at 11:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
marked as duplicate by gnat, Joe Strazzere, Garrison Neely, Jan Doggen, jcmeloni Jul 31 '14 at 11:01
This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.
1
One thing I try to figure out about myself is where I am a little bit different to everyone else I know. This is always a good starting point.
– Michael Lai
Jul 29 '14 at 23:55
suggest improvements |Â
1
One thing I try to figure out about myself is where I am a little bit different to everyone else I know. This is always a good starting point.
– Michael Lai
Jul 29 '14 at 23:55
1
1
One thing I try to figure out about myself is where I am a little bit different to everyone else I know. This is always a good starting point.
– Michael Lai
Jul 29 '14 at 23:55
One thing I try to figure out about myself is where I am a little bit different to everyone else I know. This is always a good starting point.
– Michael Lai
Jul 29 '14 at 23:55
suggest improvements |Â
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
up vote
11
down vote
accepted
The "tell me about yourself" question is usually just used by interviewers to gauge your social/conversational skills. There really isn't a right or wrong answer for it, but since you are seeking a job at the company, use that question to your advantage. You can tell them about about what you studied in school, what skills you have, give them a brief summary of all of your previous jobs, and then tell them how your skills and experience are a good fit for the position. Remember what skills and other requirements they mentioned in the job ad, and if you have those skills, be sure to mention that.
I wouldn't bother with mentioning any personal hobbies or interests, unless they are relevant to the job. For example if you like to work on open-source software projects in your free time, then definitely mention that. But don't waste the interviewer's time by mentioning that you like to go horseback riding or anything that's not related to the job.
"Tell me about yourself" is such an open-ended question that it's a great opportunity to tell them your skills and experience and to sell yourself for the job. It's the best question you could ask for in an interview. I've interviewed many people and asked that question, and a few people seemed intimidated by the question and didn't know what to say. They really blew a golden opportunity to tell me why we should hire them.
seems good answer for me.Thanks a lot for sharing your experience
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 7:11
Note that 'gauging your social/conversational skills' also tests if you can be 'to the point': prepare to talk a few minutes, not a quarter of an hour.
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 7:46
Yes, your answer to this question shouldn't be more than a few minutes.
– pacoverflow
Jul 29 '14 at 7:50
7
I disagree about not telling them anything personal. If you have an unusual hobby, that can help them remember you. After interviewing a handful of applicants, if they can say "oh, the juggler" and remember which applicant you were, that can only help your case, IMO.
– PurpleVermont
Jul 29 '14 at 14:59
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
I usually resolve this for the candidate by saying "tell me about your self ,more on the technical side".
What i expect him is to provide me with information which might be of interest to me. Name qualification experience and projects.
According to me good approach is to start with your name, qualifications, experience and gradually move towards the information which will help the interviewer in evaluating you.Guide him towards the projects which you are most comfortable explaining.
Tell me about your self is the opportunity which should be used to take control of the flow of interview.
Note : I take care of the technical part only.
next time i'll keep your words in my mind
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 6:49
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
Before you answer a question in the interview, it may be good to think why it is being posed to you or what the interview might be expecting as an answer. Here are a few things they would want to hear for a "tell me about yourself" question.
- Your accomplishments which would be suitable to the current position
- Your work in the past that is relevant to the current position
- Your passion or interest: Is your interest aligned to this job?. If you say your interested in philately. It may not what the interviewer would be interested to hear in a tech interview.
- If you could you get things done?
- Your work values. What do you value most in your work environment. Does it align with the positional requirements?
Culture fit
Try to chip and blend in these aspects in your answers. So it would be a good answer for these kind of open ended questions. I hope this helps you. Good luck for your interviews.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
"Tell me about yourself" is one of the questions that show that you don't have 30 minutes to make an impression to the interviewer, or ten minutes or even five minutes but 30 seconds. In fact, you have to be credible the moment you open your mouth. They say you don't get a second chance to make an impression but often enough, the first impression you make could be the last impression you make. A question just as this one will allow you to set the tone of the interview going forward.
How does "I am an Infosec specialist. I do third level sys engineering in Linux and Windows Server. I know my way around routing and switching. And I am a full stack javascript demon and python fiend" sound? Four sentences. Fifteen seconds. Shock and awe :) You'll have to find your own formula.
suggest improvements |Â
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
11
down vote
accepted
The "tell me about yourself" question is usually just used by interviewers to gauge your social/conversational skills. There really isn't a right or wrong answer for it, but since you are seeking a job at the company, use that question to your advantage. You can tell them about about what you studied in school, what skills you have, give them a brief summary of all of your previous jobs, and then tell them how your skills and experience are a good fit for the position. Remember what skills and other requirements they mentioned in the job ad, and if you have those skills, be sure to mention that.
I wouldn't bother with mentioning any personal hobbies or interests, unless they are relevant to the job. For example if you like to work on open-source software projects in your free time, then definitely mention that. But don't waste the interviewer's time by mentioning that you like to go horseback riding or anything that's not related to the job.
"Tell me about yourself" is such an open-ended question that it's a great opportunity to tell them your skills and experience and to sell yourself for the job. It's the best question you could ask for in an interview. I've interviewed many people and asked that question, and a few people seemed intimidated by the question and didn't know what to say. They really blew a golden opportunity to tell me why we should hire them.
seems good answer for me.Thanks a lot for sharing your experience
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 7:11
Note that 'gauging your social/conversational skills' also tests if you can be 'to the point': prepare to talk a few minutes, not a quarter of an hour.
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 7:46
Yes, your answer to this question shouldn't be more than a few minutes.
– pacoverflow
Jul 29 '14 at 7:50
7
I disagree about not telling them anything personal. If you have an unusual hobby, that can help them remember you. After interviewing a handful of applicants, if they can say "oh, the juggler" and remember which applicant you were, that can only help your case, IMO.
– PurpleVermont
Jul 29 '14 at 14:59
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
11
down vote
accepted
The "tell me about yourself" question is usually just used by interviewers to gauge your social/conversational skills. There really isn't a right or wrong answer for it, but since you are seeking a job at the company, use that question to your advantage. You can tell them about about what you studied in school, what skills you have, give them a brief summary of all of your previous jobs, and then tell them how your skills and experience are a good fit for the position. Remember what skills and other requirements they mentioned in the job ad, and if you have those skills, be sure to mention that.
I wouldn't bother with mentioning any personal hobbies or interests, unless they are relevant to the job. For example if you like to work on open-source software projects in your free time, then definitely mention that. But don't waste the interviewer's time by mentioning that you like to go horseback riding or anything that's not related to the job.
"Tell me about yourself" is such an open-ended question that it's a great opportunity to tell them your skills and experience and to sell yourself for the job. It's the best question you could ask for in an interview. I've interviewed many people and asked that question, and a few people seemed intimidated by the question and didn't know what to say. They really blew a golden opportunity to tell me why we should hire them.
seems good answer for me.Thanks a lot for sharing your experience
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 7:11
Note that 'gauging your social/conversational skills' also tests if you can be 'to the point': prepare to talk a few minutes, not a quarter of an hour.
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 7:46
Yes, your answer to this question shouldn't be more than a few minutes.
– pacoverflow
Jul 29 '14 at 7:50
7
I disagree about not telling them anything personal. If you have an unusual hobby, that can help them remember you. After interviewing a handful of applicants, if they can say "oh, the juggler" and remember which applicant you were, that can only help your case, IMO.
– PurpleVermont
Jul 29 '14 at 14:59
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
11
down vote
accepted
up vote
11
down vote
accepted
The "tell me about yourself" question is usually just used by interviewers to gauge your social/conversational skills. There really isn't a right or wrong answer for it, but since you are seeking a job at the company, use that question to your advantage. You can tell them about about what you studied in school, what skills you have, give them a brief summary of all of your previous jobs, and then tell them how your skills and experience are a good fit for the position. Remember what skills and other requirements they mentioned in the job ad, and if you have those skills, be sure to mention that.
I wouldn't bother with mentioning any personal hobbies or interests, unless they are relevant to the job. For example if you like to work on open-source software projects in your free time, then definitely mention that. But don't waste the interviewer's time by mentioning that you like to go horseback riding or anything that's not related to the job.
"Tell me about yourself" is such an open-ended question that it's a great opportunity to tell them your skills and experience and to sell yourself for the job. It's the best question you could ask for in an interview. I've interviewed many people and asked that question, and a few people seemed intimidated by the question and didn't know what to say. They really blew a golden opportunity to tell me why we should hire them.
The "tell me about yourself" question is usually just used by interviewers to gauge your social/conversational skills. There really isn't a right or wrong answer for it, but since you are seeking a job at the company, use that question to your advantage. You can tell them about about what you studied in school, what skills you have, give them a brief summary of all of your previous jobs, and then tell them how your skills and experience are a good fit for the position. Remember what skills and other requirements they mentioned in the job ad, and if you have those skills, be sure to mention that.
I wouldn't bother with mentioning any personal hobbies or interests, unless they are relevant to the job. For example if you like to work on open-source software projects in your free time, then definitely mention that. But don't waste the interviewer's time by mentioning that you like to go horseback riding or anything that's not related to the job.
"Tell me about yourself" is such an open-ended question that it's a great opportunity to tell them your skills and experience and to sell yourself for the job. It's the best question you could ask for in an interview. I've interviewed many people and asked that question, and a few people seemed intimidated by the question and didn't know what to say. They really blew a golden opportunity to tell me why we should hire them.
answered Jul 29 '14 at 7:08


pacoverflow
644513
644513
seems good answer for me.Thanks a lot for sharing your experience
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 7:11
Note that 'gauging your social/conversational skills' also tests if you can be 'to the point': prepare to talk a few minutes, not a quarter of an hour.
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 7:46
Yes, your answer to this question shouldn't be more than a few minutes.
– pacoverflow
Jul 29 '14 at 7:50
7
I disagree about not telling them anything personal. If you have an unusual hobby, that can help them remember you. After interviewing a handful of applicants, if they can say "oh, the juggler" and remember which applicant you were, that can only help your case, IMO.
– PurpleVermont
Jul 29 '14 at 14:59
suggest improvements |Â
seems good answer for me.Thanks a lot for sharing your experience
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 7:11
Note that 'gauging your social/conversational skills' also tests if you can be 'to the point': prepare to talk a few minutes, not a quarter of an hour.
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 7:46
Yes, your answer to this question shouldn't be more than a few minutes.
– pacoverflow
Jul 29 '14 at 7:50
7
I disagree about not telling them anything personal. If you have an unusual hobby, that can help them remember you. After interviewing a handful of applicants, if they can say "oh, the juggler" and remember which applicant you were, that can only help your case, IMO.
– PurpleVermont
Jul 29 '14 at 14:59
seems good answer for me.Thanks a lot for sharing your experience
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 7:11
seems good answer for me.Thanks a lot for sharing your experience
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 7:11
Note that 'gauging your social/conversational skills' also tests if you can be 'to the point': prepare to talk a few minutes, not a quarter of an hour.
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 7:46
Note that 'gauging your social/conversational skills' also tests if you can be 'to the point': prepare to talk a few minutes, not a quarter of an hour.
– Jan Doggen
Jul 29 '14 at 7:46
Yes, your answer to this question shouldn't be more than a few minutes.
– pacoverflow
Jul 29 '14 at 7:50
Yes, your answer to this question shouldn't be more than a few minutes.
– pacoverflow
Jul 29 '14 at 7:50
7
7
I disagree about not telling them anything personal. If you have an unusual hobby, that can help them remember you. After interviewing a handful of applicants, if they can say "oh, the juggler" and remember which applicant you were, that can only help your case, IMO.
– PurpleVermont
Jul 29 '14 at 14:59
I disagree about not telling them anything personal. If you have an unusual hobby, that can help them remember you. After interviewing a handful of applicants, if they can say "oh, the juggler" and remember which applicant you were, that can only help your case, IMO.
– PurpleVermont
Jul 29 '14 at 14:59
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
I usually resolve this for the candidate by saying "tell me about your self ,more on the technical side".
What i expect him is to provide me with information which might be of interest to me. Name qualification experience and projects.
According to me good approach is to start with your name, qualifications, experience and gradually move towards the information which will help the interviewer in evaluating you.Guide him towards the projects which you are most comfortable explaining.
Tell me about your self is the opportunity which should be used to take control of the flow of interview.
Note : I take care of the technical part only.
next time i'll keep your words in my mind
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 6:49
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
I usually resolve this for the candidate by saying "tell me about your self ,more on the technical side".
What i expect him is to provide me with information which might be of interest to me. Name qualification experience and projects.
According to me good approach is to start with your name, qualifications, experience and gradually move towards the information which will help the interviewer in evaluating you.Guide him towards the projects which you are most comfortable explaining.
Tell me about your self is the opportunity which should be used to take control of the flow of interview.
Note : I take care of the technical part only.
next time i'll keep your words in my mind
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 6:49
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
I usually resolve this for the candidate by saying "tell me about your self ,more on the technical side".
What i expect him is to provide me with information which might be of interest to me. Name qualification experience and projects.
According to me good approach is to start with your name, qualifications, experience and gradually move towards the information which will help the interviewer in evaluating you.Guide him towards the projects which you are most comfortable explaining.
Tell me about your self is the opportunity which should be used to take control of the flow of interview.
Note : I take care of the technical part only.
I usually resolve this for the candidate by saying "tell me about your self ,more on the technical side".
What i expect him is to provide me with information which might be of interest to me. Name qualification experience and projects.
According to me good approach is to start with your name, qualifications, experience and gradually move towards the information which will help the interviewer in evaluating you.Guide him towards the projects which you are most comfortable explaining.
Tell me about your self is the opportunity which should be used to take control of the flow of interview.
Note : I take care of the technical part only.
edited Jul 29 '14 at 7:42
answered Jul 29 '14 at 6:48


amar
1,0801918
1,0801918
next time i'll keep your words in my mind
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 6:49
suggest improvements |Â
next time i'll keep your words in my mind
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 6:49
next time i'll keep your words in my mind
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 6:49
next time i'll keep your words in my mind
– wÃÂÌ¢in̡âgØ̕ed̨p̢ßaÞnÃÂÃÂtÜÃÂÌ¡he̸rÌ´
Jul 29 '14 at 6:49
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
Before you answer a question in the interview, it may be good to think why it is being posed to you or what the interview might be expecting as an answer. Here are a few things they would want to hear for a "tell me about yourself" question.
- Your accomplishments which would be suitable to the current position
- Your work in the past that is relevant to the current position
- Your passion or interest: Is your interest aligned to this job?. If you say your interested in philately. It may not what the interviewer would be interested to hear in a tech interview.
- If you could you get things done?
- Your work values. What do you value most in your work environment. Does it align with the positional requirements?
Culture fit
Try to chip and blend in these aspects in your answers. So it would be a good answer for these kind of open ended questions. I hope this helps you. Good luck for your interviews.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
Before you answer a question in the interview, it may be good to think why it is being posed to you or what the interview might be expecting as an answer. Here are a few things they would want to hear for a "tell me about yourself" question.
- Your accomplishments which would be suitable to the current position
- Your work in the past that is relevant to the current position
- Your passion or interest: Is your interest aligned to this job?. If you say your interested in philately. It may not what the interviewer would be interested to hear in a tech interview.
- If you could you get things done?
- Your work values. What do you value most in your work environment. Does it align with the positional requirements?
Culture fit
Try to chip and blend in these aspects in your answers. So it would be a good answer for these kind of open ended questions. I hope this helps you. Good luck for your interviews.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
Before you answer a question in the interview, it may be good to think why it is being posed to you or what the interview might be expecting as an answer. Here are a few things they would want to hear for a "tell me about yourself" question.
- Your accomplishments which would be suitable to the current position
- Your work in the past that is relevant to the current position
- Your passion or interest: Is your interest aligned to this job?. If you say your interested in philately. It may not what the interviewer would be interested to hear in a tech interview.
- If you could you get things done?
- Your work values. What do you value most in your work environment. Does it align with the positional requirements?
Culture fit
Try to chip and blend in these aspects in your answers. So it would be a good answer for these kind of open ended questions. I hope this helps you. Good luck for your interviews.
Before you answer a question in the interview, it may be good to think why it is being posed to you or what the interview might be expecting as an answer. Here are a few things they would want to hear for a "tell me about yourself" question.
- Your accomplishments which would be suitable to the current position
- Your work in the past that is relevant to the current position
- Your passion or interest: Is your interest aligned to this job?. If you say your interested in philately. It may not what the interviewer would be interested to hear in a tech interview.
- If you could you get things done?
- Your work values. What do you value most in your work environment. Does it align with the positional requirements?
Culture fit
Try to chip and blend in these aspects in your answers. So it would be a good answer for these kind of open ended questions. I hope this helps you. Good luck for your interviews.
answered Jul 29 '14 at 7:15
watercooler
2,34911022
2,34911022
suggest improvements |Â
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
"Tell me about yourself" is one of the questions that show that you don't have 30 minutes to make an impression to the interviewer, or ten minutes or even five minutes but 30 seconds. In fact, you have to be credible the moment you open your mouth. They say you don't get a second chance to make an impression but often enough, the first impression you make could be the last impression you make. A question just as this one will allow you to set the tone of the interview going forward.
How does "I am an Infosec specialist. I do third level sys engineering in Linux and Windows Server. I know my way around routing and switching. And I am a full stack javascript demon and python fiend" sound? Four sentences. Fifteen seconds. Shock and awe :) You'll have to find your own formula.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
"Tell me about yourself" is one of the questions that show that you don't have 30 minutes to make an impression to the interviewer, or ten minutes or even five minutes but 30 seconds. In fact, you have to be credible the moment you open your mouth. They say you don't get a second chance to make an impression but often enough, the first impression you make could be the last impression you make. A question just as this one will allow you to set the tone of the interview going forward.
How does "I am an Infosec specialist. I do third level sys engineering in Linux and Windows Server. I know my way around routing and switching. And I am a full stack javascript demon and python fiend" sound? Four sentences. Fifteen seconds. Shock and awe :) You'll have to find your own formula.
suggest improvements |Â
up vote
1
down vote
up vote
1
down vote
"Tell me about yourself" is one of the questions that show that you don't have 30 minutes to make an impression to the interviewer, or ten minutes or even five minutes but 30 seconds. In fact, you have to be credible the moment you open your mouth. They say you don't get a second chance to make an impression but often enough, the first impression you make could be the last impression you make. A question just as this one will allow you to set the tone of the interview going forward.
How does "I am an Infosec specialist. I do third level sys engineering in Linux and Windows Server. I know my way around routing and switching. And I am a full stack javascript demon and python fiend" sound? Four sentences. Fifteen seconds. Shock and awe :) You'll have to find your own formula.
"Tell me about yourself" is one of the questions that show that you don't have 30 minutes to make an impression to the interviewer, or ten minutes or even five minutes but 30 seconds. In fact, you have to be credible the moment you open your mouth. They say you don't get a second chance to make an impression but often enough, the first impression you make could be the last impression you make. A question just as this one will allow you to set the tone of the interview going forward.
How does "I am an Infosec specialist. I do third level sys engineering in Linux and Windows Server. I know my way around routing and switching. And I am a full stack javascript demon and python fiend" sound? Four sentences. Fifteen seconds. Shock and awe :) You'll have to find your own formula.
edited Jul 31 '14 at 5:20
answered Jul 29 '14 at 12:17
Vietnhi Phuvan
68.9k7118254
68.9k7118254
suggest improvements |Â
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1
One thing I try to figure out about myself is where I am a little bit different to everyone else I know. This is always a good starting point.
– Michael Lai
Jul 29 '14 at 23:55