Do’s and don’ts in a job interview
A job interview is not an exam, and it is not a sales pitch. Yet we see the same mistakes every week, even from strong candidates.
Below we covered (in Dutch) the key do’s and don’ts during an interview, followed by three practical tips for after the conversation. Don’t understand Dutch? Just keep reading!
1. Do not exaggerate your experience
This is the most common mistake.
Especially for candidates under 25, hiring managers care less about perfect experience and more about potential. They want to understand:
How quickly you learn
Whether you are open to feedback
Whether you understand what you still need to improve
Overselling yourself almost always backfires.
A much stronger approach is to position yourself as coachable. Be open about:
Your weaker areas
What you find challenging
How you plan to improve
That shows maturity, not weakness.
2. Do not speak negatively about your previous employer
Even if the job was bad. Even if the situation was unfair. Even if you are right.
Speaking negatively about a former employer creates immediate doubt:
Will you talk about us like this later?
Do you take responsibility?
Is everything always someone else’s fault?
You do not need to lie. Keep it factual and neutral. Focus on what you are looking for next, not on what went wrong.
3. Do not be passive
Showing up unprepared, asking no questions, or sitting back disengaged. These signals matter.
An interview is a two-way conversation. If you show little interest, do not expect enthusiasm in return.
The key do’s during a job interview
1. Maintain eye contact and be present
It sounds basic, but it makes a real difference.
Eye contact shows confidence, attention, and engagement. This is especially important in commercial and client-facing roles.
2. Prepare questions in advance
Good questions show that you are thinking about the role, the team, and the business.
Examples:
What does success look like in the first six months?
What challenges is the team facing right now?
What separates top performers from average performers here?
Not asking questions is often seen as a red flag.
3. Send a short follow-up message
Keep it brief. No long emails. No repetition of your CV.
Thank them for their time, mention one thing you found interesting, and confirm your interest in the role.
Bonus: reflect honestly on your performance
Ask yourself:
What went well?
Where was I unclear?
Which questions caught me off guard?
This reflection will help you significantly in the next round.
To summarize:
Interviews are not about being perfect. They are about being credible.
Be honest about your level, professional about your past, and sharp in your questions. That is what hiring managers remember.