Interview prep · Model answers
How to Prepare for a Job Interview: Common Questions & Model Answers 2026
You have an interview — congratulations. You got past the hardest part: your CV passed the automated filter and convinced a recruiter you might be the one. Now begins the most important phase.
The truth is that many strong candidates lose excellent offers simply because they did not prepare. An interview is not a chat — it is a structured assessment. Candidates who arrive prepared leave with an offer.
This guide gives you a practical plan, ten common questions with model answers in the tone large Saudi employers expect, the STAR technique for behavioural questions, salary-negotiation tips, and the questions you should ask the employer.
A week before the interview
Good prep starts well before, not the night before. Set aside 2–3 hours for the following:
- Research the company: founding, leadership, recent news, products, competitors.
- Look up your interviewers on LinkedIn and read their backgrounds.
- Reread the job ad and extract skills and requirements.
- Prepare 3–5 real stories from your experience that prove each required skill, structured as STAR.
- Practise out loud answering the most common questions.
- Lay out your professional attire the night before.
The ten most common questions
Regardless of company or sector, a set of questions appears in most interviews. Preparing real stories for each makes you look flexible and confident.
1. Tell me about yourself
Not a CV recital — a focus test. The ideal answer is two minutes covering three points: who you are professionally today, how you got here, and what you are looking for. Avoid retelling your full CV.
2. Why did you leave your last job?
Never criticise the previous employer. A respectful frame: "I learnt a lot at my previous company but reached a point where I am looking for bigger challenges around [skill tied to the new role]."
3. Why do you want to work here?
Use the research you did. Point to a specific project, a recent achievement, or a stated value of the company and tie it to your capabilities. Generic answers leave no mark.
4. What are your strengths?
Pick two or three skills directly relevant to the role, each backed by a short story. Avoid a flat list.
5. What is your biggest weakness?
The trap is either "I have none" (insincere) or naming a weakness that hurts you. A balanced answer is a real, moderate weakness plus what you do about it. Example: "I tend to over-immerse in detail, so I now set hard time-boxes per task to keep momentum."
6. Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
Not a specific title, but a kind of responsibility. Example: "Leading a team in my specialty, contributing to strategy decisions and growing new talent."
7. Tell me about a time you handled team conflict
A classic behavioural question. Use STAR: situation, task, action, result. Keep it short, specific, with a measurable outcome.
8. What are your salary expectations?
Defer if possible: "I am looking for a fair total package taking the full benefits into account — can you share the range for the role?" If pressed, give a range, not a single number, based on market research.
9. Why should we hire you?
Three points: a specific skill, transferable experience, and realistic enthusiasm for the company.
10. Do you have any questions for us?
Answering "No" is a major mistake. You always have questions (see the last section).
The STAR technique
Behavioural questions start with "Tell me about a time…" or "Give me an example of…". STAR is the best framework — it turns rambling into structured story:
- S — Situation: the context (company, period, challenge).
- T — Task: what was specifically asked of you.
- A — Action: what you (not the team) did.
- R — Result: what was achieved, ideally measured.
Example
Q: "Tell me about a tough deadline."
A: "At my last company I was launching an e-commerce platform (S). Leadership pulled the launch three weeks forward for Ramadan (T). I re-prioritised features, set a weekly cadence with the engineers, and deferred two non-critical features (A). We shipped on the new date and delivered SAR 1.8M revenue in week one (R)."
Salary negotiation
Many Saudi candidates accept the first offer untouched, afraid to spoil the relationship. In reality most companies expect a negotiation and leave room for it — those who do not negotiate usually settle for less than was on the table.
Golden rule: do not bring up salary first. And do not reveal your current number early.
- Research salary ranges on Bayt, Mihnati, LinkedIn.
- When asked, give a wide range and note flexibility based on the full package.
- Remember the package: base, housing, transport, medical, tickets, comms, bonus, equity.
- Negotiate beyond base. An extra week off or a training budget is worth real money.
- After a written offer, ask for a day or two. Do not accept on the spot.
Questions you should ask
When it is your turn to ask, use the chance to evaluate the company and to signal seriousness. Good questions show you think like an employee, not just a candidate.
- What are the biggest challenges in the first six months for whoever takes this role?
- How will performance in this role be measured? What does success look like?
- What does a typical day look like in this role?
- What are the development opportunities inside the company?
- How would you describe the culture of the team I would join?
- What are the next steps in the process, and when should I expect to hear back?
Questions to avoid early
In the first interview, avoid questions about leave, breaks, and remote-work policy. Legitimate questions — but raise them after the offer, not before.
After the interview
Within an hour to 24 hours, send a short thank-you email to your interviewers. Thank them, reaffirm interest, add a specific point from the conversation. That short note keeps you in mind alongside a positive moment.
If you have not heard back two weeks after the agreed timeline, send a polite follow-up. Do not push. Silence sometimes means no — and sometimes just means slow internal process.
FAQ
- What should I wear to an interview in Saudi Arabia?
- Saudi thobe for Saudi nationals; formal suit for expats. Conservative business attire for women. Early-stage tech startups can be less formal — but err on the side of over-dressing.
- How early should I arrive?
- 10–15 minutes early. Earlier annoys the interviewer; even a few minutes late wrecks the first impression.
- Should I bring a printed CV?
- Yes, two clean printed copies. Do not assume the interviewer printed or pulled it up.
- How do I handle a sensitive question like a CV gap?
- Be honest and brief. Example: "During that period I was caring for my father through his treatment, and I used the time to finish [certification]." Controlled honesty builds trust.
- Do I negotiate salary in the first interview?
- No. Defer real negotiation to the offer stage. In the first interview give a wide range if pressed, with no commitment.
Get the interview first
Wazifatuk matches your CV to LinkedIn jobs in Saudi Arabia and tailors it per role, lifting your chances of reaching the interview stage instead of stopping at the automated filter.