How to Answer Tell Me About Yourself
By Aaron Cao · Updated
Use a present-past-future structure: what you do now, the relevant experience that got you here, and why you are excited about this role. Keep it under two minutes, focus on what fits the job, and skip your life story.
Why interviewers open with it
Tell me about yourself is usually the first question, and it is not small talk. The interviewer is checking whether you can frame your background clearly and connect it to the role. A focused answer sets the tone; a rambling one makes the rest of the interview an uphill climb.
Because it is predictable, it is the single most worthwhile answer to prepare in advance. It is a natural anchor story to rehearse alongside the questions in the mock interview guides.
The present-past-future structure
The cleanest structure is three short beats.
- Present: your current role and what you focus on.
- Past: the experience and key wins that led here, chosen for relevance to this job.
- Future: why this role is the logical next step and why you are excited about it.
This keeps you from drifting into a chronological life story, which is the most common way this answer goes wrong. Aim for 60 to 90 seconds.
Tailor it and cut the rest
The same answer should not be reused for every company. Pick the parts of your past that match this job and leave out the rest, even if you are proud of them. If you are interviewing for a backend role, your frontend side projects can wait.
Keep it professional: a one-line personal touch is fine, but this is not the place for your hometown and hobbies unless they are genuinely relevant. The deeper principle of matching yourself to the role runs through honest interview preparation.
Draft it, then say it out loud
Write a draft, then cut it until every sentence earns its place. The goal is a confident, natural delivery, not a memorized script that sounds recited.
An AI tool can help you shape this from your real background; SubcueAI is built for honest preparation, not invention. The thing that actually makes it land is saying it aloud a few times, which a mock interview lets you practice until it feels like a conversation rather than a recital.
FAQ
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