Top 10 Interview Questions & Best Answers (2026)
Whether you’re a fresher attending your first interview or a senior professional switching jobs, these are the questions every interviewer asks β and exactly how to answer them with confidence.
Walking into a job interview without preparation is like sitting a board exam without opening the textbook. You might get lucky β but why take the chance?
The good news: most interviewers ask a remarkably predictable set of questions. Across thousands of placements in Mumbai and India over 25 years, the team at Ace Corporate Services has seen the same core questions come up again and again β in IT, FMCG, Finance, Pharma, Manufacturing and beyond. Master these 10, and you walk into any interview room with a genuine edge.
This guide gives you the question, the strategy behind it, a sample answer framework, and what to absolutely avoid saying. Let’s get into it.
π Table of Contents
- Q1: Tell me about yourself
- Q2: Why do you want to work here?
- Q3: What are your strengths?
- Q4: What is your biggest weakness?
- Q5: Why are you leaving your current job?
- Q6: Where do you see yourself in 5 years?
- Q7: Tell me about a challenge you overcame
- Q8: What is your salary expectation?
- Q9: Why should we hire you?
- Q10: Do you have any questions for us?
- The STAR Method Explained
- Interview Do’s & Don’ts
- Quick Answer Cheat Sheet
- Frequently Asked Questions
1. “Tell Me About Yourself”
This is almost always the first question β and most candidates blow it by either rambling for five minutes or giving a stiff recitation of their CV. The interviewer doesn’t want your life story. They want a confident, structured snapshot that tells them you’re the right fit for this role.
Why they ask it: To assess your communication skills, self-awareness, and how you frame your experience. It’s also a warm-up that sets the tone for the entire interview.
Strategy β Use the Present β Past β Future formula:
- Present: Your current role and 1β2 key achievements
- Past: How you got here β briefly and relevantly
- Future: Why this role excites you and where you want to go
2. “Why Do You Want to Work Here?”
This question separates candidates who did their homework from those who didn’t. Vague answers like “it’s a great company” or “good growth opportunities” are the fastest way to signal that you haven’t thought seriously about the role.
Why they ask it: To assess genuine interest, cultural fit, and whether you’ve done your research. Companies want people who chose them β not people who applied everywhere.
Strategy: Reference something specific β a product, a campaign, a recent company achievement, or a value from their website. Show you’ve done more than a quick Google search.
3. “What Are Your Strengths?”
Most candidates either give generic, unverifiable answers (“I’m a hard worker, a good team player”) or list every skill on their CV. Neither lands well. The strongest answers pair a specific strength with a specific proof point.
Why they ask it: To see if your strengths match the role requirements β and whether you can communicate them clearly and credibly.
Strategy: Choose 2β3 strengths that are directly relevant to the role. For each one, give a one-sentence example that proves it. Strength + Evidence = Credibility.
4. “What Is Your Biggest Weakness?”
This is the question candidates dread most β and handle worst. “I’m a perfectionist” is the most over-used, most transparent non-answer in interview history. Experienced interviewers roll their eyes every time they hear it.
Why they ask it: To test self-awareness, honesty, and growth mindset. They want to see that you know yourself and actively work on your limitations.
Strategy: Choose a genuine weakness that is NOT a core requirement of the role. Then immediately follow it with concrete steps you’ve taken to address it. Weakness β Action β Progress.
5. “Why Are You Leaving Your Current Job?”
This question has one clear rule: never speak negatively about your current employer. Even if your boss is terrible and the culture is toxic, the interview room is not the place to say so. It signals disloyalty and raises immediate red flags about how you’d talk about this company someday.
Why they ask it: To understand your motivations, check for red flags, and assess whether you’re running away from something or running towards something. “Towards” is always stronger.
Strategy: Frame your answer around growth, not grievance. Even if you’re leaving because of a bad manager, reframe it as seeking greater challenges, ownership, or impact.
6. “Where Do You See Yourself in 5 Years?”
This isn’t a trick question β but it is a revealing one. Interviewers want to understand your ambition, your self-awareness, and whether your goals align with what this role can actually offer. Saying “I want your job” is bold but rarely lands well. Saying “I have no idea” is worse.
Why they ask it: To assess ambition, stability, and whether your goals align with what this role offers. Companies don’t want to hire someone who’ll leave in 8 months.
Strategy: Be specific about the type of growth you want β skills, scope, leadership β without naming a specific title. Connect your vision to what this role genuinely offers.
7. “Tell Me About a Challenge You Overcame”
This is a behavioural question β and the best framework for answering it is the STAR method. Vague, story-less answers like “I always find a way to handle challenges” tell an interviewer nothing. Specific, structured stories with real outcomes tell them everything.
Why they ask it: To understand how you handle adversity, solve problems, and operate under pressure. Past behaviour is the best predictor of future behaviour.
Strategy: Use the STAR method β Situation, Task, Action, Result. Make it specific, make it real, and make sure it ends with a measurable outcome.
The STAR Method β Your Secret Weapon for Behavioural Questions
Any time an interviewer says “Tell me about a time when⦔ or “Give me an example of⦔ β that’s a behavioural question. The STAR method is the gold standard for answering them.
8. “What Is Your Salary Expectation?”
This is a negotiation question disguised as an information question. How you answer it will directly shape your offer. Go in without a researched number and you’ll either undersell yourself or price yourself out.
Why they ask it: To check budget alignment and to anchor the compensation conversation early. The first number spoken tends to anchor the final offer.
Strategy: Research the market rate for this role in your city before the interview. Give a specific number (or tight range) based on that research β never based on personal need. If you’re not ready to name a number, redirect to market standards first.
9. “Why Should We Hire You?”
This is your closing argument. It’s your one chance to connect all your strengths, experience and enthusiasm directly to what the company needs. Most candidates answer this too generically. The best answers are specific, confident and clearly tailored to this role.
Why they ask it: To hear you make your own case. They want confidence, clarity, and a direct connection between your skills and their needs.
Strategy: Structure your answer in three parts: your unique skills for this specific role, evidence that you’ve delivered results in similar situations, and your genuine enthusiasm for this company specifically.
10. “Do You Have Any Questions for Us?”
Saying “No, I think we covered everything” is one of the biggest missed opportunities in any interview. This question is your chance to show genuine curiosity, strategic thinking, and that you’re evaluating them as much as they’re evaluating you.
Why they ask it: To assess genuine interest, preparation, and how thoughtfully you approach decisions. Great questions leave a lasting impression.
Strategy: Prepare at least 3β4 questions in advance. Focus on role expectations, team dynamics, growth paths, and company direction. Avoid questions about salary, leave policy, or WFH in the first round.
- “What does success look like in this role in the first 90 days?”
- “What are the biggest challenges the person in this role will face?”
- “How would you describe the team culture and working style?”
- “What does the career growth path look like from here?”
- “What made the last person in this role successful β or what held them back?”
Interview Do’s & Don’ts β The Complete List
- Research the company thoroughly before going in
- Prepare STAR stories for behavioural questions
- Arrive 10 minutes early (or log in 2 mins early for virtual)
- Maintain confident, natural eye contact
- Ask 3β4 thoughtful questions at the end
- Send a thank-you email within 24 hours
- Dress one level above the company’s stated dress code
- Bring extra printed copies of your CV
- Be specific β use numbers and examples wherever possible
- Listen carefully before answering β it’s okay to pause and think
- Speak negatively about your current or past employer
- Interrupt the interviewer mid-question
- Use vague, unverifiable claims (“I’m a team player”)
- Check your phone during the interview
- Lie about experience, skills or salary
- Say “I don’t have any questions” at the end
- Give one-word or one-sentence answers
- Ramble without structure β time your answers
- Negotiate salary aggressively in the first round
- Forget to follow up after the interview
Quick Answer Cheat Sheet β All 10 Questions
Use this table as your last-minute review before any interview. Each row summarises the ideal approach in one line.
| # | Question | Formula | Time Limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Tell me about yourself | Present β Past β Future | 90 seconds |
| 2 | Why do you want to work here? | Specific research + personal connection | 60β90 seconds |
| 3 | What are your strengths? | Strength + Proof (x2) | 90 seconds |
| 4 | What is your biggest weakness? | Real weakness + Action taken + Progress | 60 seconds |
| 5 | Why are you leaving your current job? | Towards growth, never away from problems | 60 seconds |
| 6 | Where do you see yourself in 5 years? | Skills + Scope + Connected to this role | 60 seconds |
| 7 | Tell me about a challenge you overcame | STAR method with measurable result | 2β3 minutes |
| 8 | What is your salary expectation? | Market-anchored specific number or range | 30β45 seconds |
| 9 | Why should we hire you? | Skills + Evidence + Enthusiasm (x3) | 90 seconds |
| 10 | Do you have any questions? | 3β4 prepared strategic questions | Ongoing |
Frequently Asked Questions
π― Final Thoughts
Interviews are not designed to catch you out β they’re designed to give you a chance to prove you’re the right person for the job. The candidates who win them aren’t always the most talented in the room. They’re the ones who prepared, who told their story clearly, and who showed genuine interest in the opportunity.
Master these 10 questions, build your STAR library, and walk in knowing that preparation is the most powerful competitive advantage you have.
If you’re actively looking for your next opportunity in Mumbai or across India, Ace Corporate Services has been connecting exceptional talent with leading companies for over 25 years β across IT, FMCG, Finance, Pharma, Telecom and more. Get in touch today β
This article was produced by the career guidance team at Ace Corporate Services β Mumbai’s trusted recruitment consultancy since 2001. Statistics cited are sourced from publicly available HR research reports and industry surveys.
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