Most of the nerves my clients bring to interviews come from things they could have controlled and simply didn't. Not knowing what the company does. Fumbling a link at the start of a video call. Blanking when asked "Do you have any questions for us?" The interview itself is hard enough; the preparation around it shouldn't be left to chance. Good preparation doesn't just improve your answers — it lowers your anxiety, because you've removed the variables you can remove.
What follows is the routine I give clients, organized by when to do each piece. Work it top to bottom and you'll show up ready.
One week out: do your homework
Research is the part candidates most often skip, and interviewers notice immediately. You don't need to memorize a company's annual report, but you should be able to speak to what they do, who they serve, and why the role exists.
- Read the job description again, slowly. Highlight the three or four responsibilities that appear most emphasized. Those are what the interview will circle back to — prepare a story for each.
- Study the company. Their website, a recent news item or press release, and their main product or service. If they're public, skim what they say about their own priorities.
- Look up your interviewers. A quick check of their role and background on a professional network helps you understand who's asking and why. Don't be creepy about it — just get context.
- Re-read your own resume. You will be asked about things on it, sometimes from years ago. If you can't speak confidently to a bullet point, either refresh yourself on it or be ready to explain it plainly.
A few days out: rehearse and prepare questions
Preparation without rehearsal is just reading. You need to hear yourself answer out loud, ideally to another person or at least to a recording.
Practice your core answers
Have polished responses ready for the handful of questions that come up nearly every time: "Tell me about yourself," "Why this role," "Why are you leaving," and two or three behavioral prompts relevant to the job. Practicing out loud reveals the awkward phrasing and rambling that you'll never catch by rehearsing in your head.
Prepare questions to ask them
When an interviewer asks whether you have questions and you say no, it reads as disinterest. Come with four or five genuine ones — you'll likely only use two or three, but some may get answered during the conversation. Good questions include:
- What does success look like in this role in the first six months?
- What are the biggest challenges the team is facing right now?
- How would you describe the team's working style?
- What are the next steps in the process, and when might I expect to hear back?
Avoid leading with salary and benefits in a first-round conversation unless the interviewer opens that door. There's a time for it, and it's usually later.
The day before: logistics
This is the boring stuff that quietly wrecks interviews when ignored. Handle it the day before so it isn't a scramble.
- Confirm the details. Time (double-check the time zone), format (video, phone, or in person), and who you're meeting.
- For a video interview: test the meeting link, your camera, and your microphone. Check what's behind you and that your face is well lit — front light, not a bright window behind you. Close other apps that might ping mid-call.
- For an in-person interview: know the exact address, how you're getting there, and how long it takes. Plan to arrive about ten minutes early — not thirty, which just makes reception uncomfortable.
- Lay out what you'll wear. Aim one notch above the company's everyday dress code. When unsure, slightly overdressed beats underdressed.
- Prepare your materials. A couple of clean printed resume copies for an in-person meeting, or the file open and ready to share for a remote one. Have a notepad and pen within reach.
The hour before: settle yourself
By now the work is done. This last stretch is about arriving calm and present rather than cramming.
- Skim your notes and your prepared stories one final time, then set them aside. You're reviewing, not memorizing.
- Use the restroom, get a glass of water, and have it nearby.
- For video calls, log in five minutes early so a technical hiccup doesn't become a late arrival. If something does fail, a quick, composed message to your contact goes a long way.
- Take a few slow breaths. A little adrenaline sharpens you; let it work for you rather than reading it as dread.
After the interview: don't disappear
The interview isn't quite over when you log off. Within about a day, send a short thank-you note to each person you met. Two or three sentences is plenty: thank them for their time, reference one specific thing from the conversation, and restate your interest. It's a small gesture, most candidates skip it, and it keeps you memorable while a decision is being made.
It also helps to jot down, while it's fresh, which questions you were asked and where you felt shaky. That record is gold for your next interview, whether it's a later round with this company or a different opportunity entirely.
The practical takeaway
Turn this into a real checklist you actually tick off, not a vague intention. Block thirty minutes a week out for research, thirty a few days out to rehearse aloud and write your questions, and ten the day before for logistics. Preparation is the part of the interview fully within your control — spend that control where it counts, and you'll walk in composed, informed, and ready to have a genuine conversation instead of an interrogation.