Career & Resume Tools

Practice behavioral and technical interviews with STAR-format feedback — including strengths, gaps, reframes, and a final “weakness intercept” you’ll be glad they didn’t ask.
Difficulty: Intermediate → Advanced
Model: GPT-4 / Claude / Gemini
Use Case: Interview Preparation, Behavioral Questions, Mock Interviews
Updated: May 2026
Why This Prompt Exists
Most interview practice fails because it’s with a friend who won’t be honest.

You get:

  • answers that wander without structure
  • no feedback on what’s missing (metrics, ownership, learnings)
  • no practice for the questions you’re actually afraid of
  • rehearsed answers that sound rehearsed
  • no post-interview “impression” from the other side

But interview prep is not memorization.

It is structured storytelling under pressure.

  • STAR (Situation, Task, Action, Result) is not optional — it’s the skeleton
  • Every answer needs a metric or it didn’t happen
  • The “weakness intercept” prepares you for the question you dread
  • How you end an answer matters as much as how you start

Without simulation, you learn during the real interview — the worst time to learn.

This framework forces AI to be a hiring manager who gives honest, actionable feedback.

The Prompt
Assume the role of a hiring manager conducting a mock interview for a specific role.

Your task is to ask questions, provide feedback on each answer, and deliver a final impression.

PROCESS:

STEP 1 — WARM-UP
Ask: "Tell me about yourself." (User answers, 60 seconds max)
Feedback: What was strong, what was missing, one suggested reframe.

STEP 2 — FIVE BEHAVIORAL QUESTIONS
Based on the job's core competencies, ask 5 STAR-format questions such as:
- "Tell me about a time you failed and what you learned."
- "Describe a situation where you had to influence someone without authority."
- "Give me an example of a difficult stakeholder and how you managed them."
- "Tell me about a time you had to make a decision with incomplete information."
- "Describe a project you're most proud of and why."

After EACH user answer, provide:
- What was strong
- What was missing (metric? ownership? specific action?)
- A suggested reframe or additional detail

STEP 3 — FINAL IMPRESSION
One paragraph: "What the hiring manager would remember about you."

STEP 4 — WEAKNESS INTERCEPT
"The one question you're glad they didn't ask — and how to handle it if they do."

INPUTS:

Target Job Title:
[INSERT TITLE]

Years of Experience:
[INSERT NUMBER]

Core Competencies for the Role (from job description):
[LIST 3-5 COMPETENCIES]

Your Biggest Interview Fear (optional):
[THE QUESTION YOU DREAD]

RULES:
- The warm-up must be timed at 60 seconds
- Each behavioral question must target a specific competency
- Feedback must include both strengths AND gaps
- The "missing" section must be specific (e.g., "you didn't name the metric")
- The weakness intercept must be realistic, not catastrophic
How To Use It
  • Record your answers and listen back — what sounds confident vs. what sounds rehearsed?
  • Practice until the STAR structure feels automatic, then practice more.
  • The “weakness intercept” is your insurance policy; prepare that answer even if you’re not asked.
  • If you can’t name a metric, name a before/after state (“from chaotic to systematic”).
  • The final impression is what they’ll write on their notes; make it easy for them.
Example Input

Target Job Title: Customer Success Manager

Years of Experience: 5 years (3 in CS, 2 in sales support)

Core Competencies for the Role: Conflict resolution, proactive account management, data-driven decision making, cross-functional collaboration

Your Biggest Interview Fear: “Tell me about a time you lost a customer and what you learned.”

Why It Works
Most interview prep fails because it lacks honest, structured feedback.

This framework improves outcomes by forcing:

  • timed warm-up with specific feedback
  • competency-targeted behavioral questions
  • STAR evaluation after every answer
  • a final impression from the hiring manager’s perspective
  • a weakness intercept for the question you fear most

Great interview prep doesn’t eliminate anxiety — it gives you a structure that works despite it.

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