How to Pass the
    First Interview With HR

    A Senior Recruiter's End-to-End Playbook

    By James Bugden, Career Coach · Senior Recruiter @ Uber

    ·
    25 min read

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    I've reviewed over 20,000 resumes. I've made 500+ hires at top international companies. I've done thousands of screening calls.

    Most candidates treat the recruiter screen like a warm-up. It isn't. It's the gate. You don't get to the hiring manager without getting through me first (well, you do sometimes, if you're smart about referrals).

    Here's the good news. The screening call is the most predictable part of the hiring process. The questions are mostly the same. The mistakes are mostly the same. The things that get people through are mostly the same.

    This guide covers the whole process end to end. What to do before the call. What I score during it. How to handle every question, including salary. What to do after we hang up. And how the screen changes at each career level.

    I've also included word-for-word examples for the questions that trip most people up. Read those sections carefully. Practice the answers out loud. Then make them your own.

    Do the work in this guide. You'll be better prepared than 90% of the people I talk to every week.

    How you ended up on my list

    Before we get into the call itself, it helps to understand how you got here.

    You're on my calendar for one of a few reasons. You applied and your resume made it through the ATS (applicant tracking system). Or you were already in our system from a previous application. Or I found your LinkedIn profile through a search. Or someone on the team referred you.

    The path matters because it changes my starting impression. A referral from a trusted employee gets extra attention. A cold application means your resume did the work on its own. A LinkedIn outreach means something in your profile matched what I was looking for. In all cases, the screening call is where I verify whether the signal I saw on paper holds up in a conversation.

    If you're not getting screening calls at all, the problem is upstream. Your resume or your LinkedIn profile isn't doing its job. Read the resume guide to fix that first.

    01

    What the Recruiter Is Actually Doing

    You're thinking about your answers. I'm filling out a scorecard.

    Every recruiter at a structured company uses one. It's a form with space for pros, cons, and a final decision.

    This is the format I've worked with. There is no "maybe" option. I pick one: Strong No, No, Yes, or Strong Yes. My job on the call is to answer one question: do I have enough confidence to put this person in front of my hiring manager?

    The Recruiter Scorecard

    (What I fill out after your call)

    Pros

    ___________________
    ___________________
    ___________________

    Cons

    ___________________
    ___________________
    ___________________

    Decision (pick one):

    STRONG NONOYESSTRONG YES

    There is no "maybe." I have to make a decision. Your job is to make that decision easy.

    Here's what I'm evaluating to fill out those boxes.

    Qualification match

    Do your skills match what the job needs? The screen confirms what the resume suggested. If your resume says "SQL expert" and you stumble when I ask about it, I note a trust problem. I'm not screening you out for the gap. I'm screening you out for the gap between what you claimed and what you showed.

    Motivation and genuine interest

    This is the most underrated factor on the scorecard. If you fit the qualifications and meet the other criteria below, I need to know one thing: do you have the right reasons for changing jobs?

    I'm asking myself a series of questions about you. If you change jobs often, will you do the same with this one? Are you seriously looking for a new role, or are you shopping around to see what's out there? How does this job fit your career goals and what you want long term?

    The more I see this role aligning with what you want, the higher the chance you'll accept when we make an offer. And the higher the chance you'll stay. I'm not filling a seat. I'm filling a role I need someone to succeed in for years.

    You don't need a speech. You need specifics. Show me you've thought about why this role, at this company, at this point in your career. That's what lands in the "pros" column.

    Communication

    Do you answer the question I asked? With a real example? Concisely? I'm not only evaluating your content. I'm thinking about how you'll come across with the hiring manager, in a panel, with clients. If you ramble on a screening call, I worry about what happens in the real interview.

    Salary alignment

    One of my top two disqualifiers is a comp mismatch. I'm not asking about salary to trap you. If you need $200k and the role tops out at $150k, I, you, and the hiring team don't want to waste time on an interview process if you're not going to accept an offer because the salary is too low.

    Red flags

    Gaps you can't explain. Resume claims you can't back up. Negativity about past employers. Late to the call. These get noted. So does their absence, which works in your favor.

    What most candidates don't realize

    When I advance you, I put my name behind that decision. If you bomb with the hiring manager, my judgment takes the hit. I'm not looking for reasons to reject you. I'm looking for enough confidence to take the risk. Your job is to give me that confidence.

    02

    Before the Call

    Candidates who advance aren't always more talented. They're more prepared. Here's the system.

    Research the Company (30-60 min)

    You need to answer "What do you know about us?" with specific detail. That means:

    • Read the company website. Mission, products, leadership team.
    • Search recent news. Funding, acquisitions, product launches, leadership changes.
    • Check Glassdoor. Look for patterns in reviews, not the score alone.
    • Look at their LinkedIn page. See what they post and who's joining.
    • If they have a product, use it. Even the free trial or onboarding flow.

    Come prepared with at least three specific things you know about the company. You won't always get asked directly. But when the conversation opens up, you want something real to say.

    I notice immediately when someone hasn't done this.

    ✕ Vague

    "I've heard great things about your culture."

    ✓ Specific

    "I read about your Series C last month and the push into Southeast Asia stood out to me."

    Research the Recruiter

    Look me up on LinkedIn before the call. I see when you've viewed my profile. I appreciate it. It tells me you're thorough. Look at my career path and how long I've been at the company. Use it to build rapport in the first minute of the call.

    Example opener

    "I saw on LinkedIn that you joined from [Company]. How has the transition been?"

    Enough to warm the conversation before we get into the formal questions.

    Decode the Job Description

    The job description is your cheat code. Most candidates skim it once. Go line by line.

    The first three bullet points almost always describe the must-haves. If a skill appears two or three times across different sections, it's required. Language like "familiarity with" or "a plus" signals nice-to-haves.

    Build a simple three-column document:

    Job Requirement

    Your Experience

    Specific Example

    This shows you exactly where your experience is strong and where there are gaps. It also gives you the raw material for most of your answers during the call.

    Prepare to Speak to Every Skill You've Listed

    Recruiters notice when a resume and a verbal conversation don't match. Go through every skill on your resume. Make sure you can speak to each one conversationally. Not technically. Not in depth. But be ready to answer "tell me about a time you used X" for anything you've claimed.

    If you listed a tool or technology you haven't used recently, be honest about your current level. Or remove it.

    Build Your Cheat Sheet

    One of the biggest advantages of a phone or video screen is that you can keep notes visible. Use that.

    Your cheat sheet should include:

    • Three specific things you know about the company
    • Your top three reasons you want this role
    • Job requirements matched to your experience
    • Bullet points for "Tell me about yourself" (not a full script)
    • Two or three prepared stories with results
    • Five questions to ask me
    • Your target salary range

    Keep it to one page. Keep it next to you on a phone call. Keep it open on another browser window for video. Don't read from it word for word.

    03

    Know Your Story

    The Present-Past-Future Formula

    "Tell me about yourself" is the most important question on the call. It sets the tone for everything that follows. The best candidates own this answer. The worst ones treat it like a surprise.

    Use Present-Past-Future. It takes 60 to 90 seconds and gives me exactly what I need.

    Keep this to two minutes max and let the interviewer ask follow-up questions. I see many candidates, even senior ones, ramble for five to ten minutes on their self-introduction. The longer you talk, the more control you lose over the conversation.

    Present → Past → Future

    PRESENT

    30-40%

    Current role + one big result with a number.

    PAST

    30-40%

    How you got here. Only what's relevant to this role.

    FUTURE

    20-30%

    Why THIS role is the natural next step.

    Total: 60-90 seconds. Then stop. Let the interviewer ask follow-ups.

    Present (30-40% of your answer). Start with your current role and one strong, quantified result.

    Past (30-40%). Cover the relevant background that shows how you got here. Keep it short and tied to this role.

    Future (20-30%). Connect your story to this specific opportunity.

    Leave out personal details, your full career history, and negative reasons for leaving past jobs. The goal is to make this role feel like the natural next step.

    Map Your Experience to the Role

    Don't make me connect your background to this job. Do it for me.

    Use specific examples with numbers. "Improved customer satisfaction" tells me nothing. "Increased satisfaction scores from 72% to 91% in six months by building a new feedback process" tells me you know how to move a number.

    For gaps between your experience and the requirements, address them directly. Don't hope I won't notice.

    ✕ Weak

    "I haven't really used Tableau but I'm a fast learner."

    ✓ Strong

    "I haven't used Tableau specifically, but I've built dashboards in Power BI and Looker for the past three years. I completed Tableau's online certification two weeks ago. The analytical thinking is the same. The tool is syntax."

    Your Top 3 Reasons You Want This Job

    When I ask why you want this role, I'm testing two things. Whether you've done your homework. And whether your reasons suggest you'll stay and succeed here.

    Before every screening call, prepare three specific reasons using this structure:

    1

    Why this company

    Reference something real. A mission you connect with, a recent move they made, something specific about their product or market position.

    2

    Why this role

    Connect the day-to-day work to what drives you professionally.

    3

    Why now

    Explain why this is the right next step for where you're heading.

    Check each reason against this test: is it specific to this company and role, or does it work for any job? If you could paste it into another application unchanged, it's not strong enough.

    ✕ What kills your answer

    • "I need a new challenge." (vague, applies to any job)
    • "The commute works for me." (not about the role)
    • "I've heard the benefits are good." (wrong priority at this stage)
    • "I've always admired your brand." (empty, no substance)

    The Broader Career Motivations Approach

    There's another way to answer the "why this job" question. Instead of going company-role-timing, you frame your answer around what you want from your career right now.

    I hear three motivations more than any others:

    Impact

    You want a role where your work matters more. Where you see the result of what you build, ship, or fix. Many candidates come from large companies where their contribution gets absorbed into a machine. They want to feel the difference they make.

    "I've spent four years at [Company]. The work is solid but I'm five layers from the customer. I want a role where I see the impact of what I build. Your team size and the way you ship directly to end users is exactly that."

    Culture

    You want a different environment. A different team dynamic. A different way of working. This is valid. The key is being specific about what you want, not vague about what you're leaving.

    "The biggest thing I'm looking for is a team that moves fast and gives people room to own their work. I've been in a heavily matrixed environment for three years. I do my best work when I have clear ownership and a short feedback loop. From what I've read about how your engineering team operates, that's how you work."

    Compensation

    You want to be paid what you're worth. This one is tricky to say out loud during a screen, but there's a way to frame it. Tie it to scope and growth rather than money alone.

    "I'm looking for a step up in both responsibility and compensation. I've outgrown my current role and the growth path is limited. This position is a level up in scope and I'm ready for it."

    You don't need to pick one. The strongest answers combine two or three. "I want more impact, I want to work in a faster-moving environment, and I want a role that matches the level I'm performing at." That's a complete, honest answer.

    04

    Answer Frameworks

    You need a structure for behavioral questions. Without one, answers get long, unfocused, and hard to follow.

    There are loads of frameworks out there on how to reply to interview questions. As long as you use one, you will be fine. The two I've picked here are STAR and CAR.

    STAR Method

    90-120 seconds total

    S

    Situation

    Set the scene. 1-2 sentences. Brief context only.

    T

    Task

    What were YOU responsible for? Your specific role.

    A

    Action

    What did you DO? This is the main part. Spend 60% of time here. Be specific. Use "I" not "we."

    R

    Result

    What happened? USE NUMBERS. Revenue. Percentage. Time.

    End every answer: "That's relevant here because..."

    CAR Method

    60-90 seconds. Good for phone screens where time moves fast.

    C

    Challenge

    What was the problem or situation?

    A

    Action

    What did you do?

    R

    Result

    What happened?

    Prepare 5-7 Stories Covering:

    1

    Overcoming a challenge

    2

    Leading or influencing others

    3

    Handling conflict

    4

    Learning something new quickly

    5

    Making a tough decision

    6

    Improving a process

    7

    Delivering results under pressure

    Practice each story out loud. Stories that only exist in your head come out disorganized. Aim to tell each one in under two minutes. When you finish, bridge it back to the role: "That experience is directly relevant here because [specific connection]."

    05

    Handle the Tough Questions

    "Why are you leaving your current job?"

    Focus on what you're moving toward. Not what you're running from. Keep it to one or two sentences. Then pivot to why this role interests you.

    Never badmouth a past employer. Even if the situation was genuinely bad. It signals poor judgment and makes me wonder what you'll say about us someday.

    "What is your biggest weakness?"

    "I'm a perfectionist" is not an answer. Neither is "I work too hard." I've heard both thousands of times. They tell me nothing.

    Name a real weakness. Show self-awareness. Describe what you're doing about it. Show evidence it's working.

    Formula: Behavior → Impact → Fix → Result

    The weakness should be real but not disqualifying. Don't say you struggle to meet deadlines if this role is deadline-heavy. Don't say you're not a people person if this is a customer-facing position.

    "Tell me about a time you failed."

    This question tests self-awareness and growth. The candidates who stumble either claim they've never failed, or they describe a failure without showing what they learned.

    "In my second year as a team lead, I pushed to launch a feature before we had enough user research. I was confident in my instincts and I wanted to hit our quarterly target. We shipped it, adoption was low, and we spent the next two months reworking it based on feedback we should have gathered upfront. The delay cost us more time than the research would have. Since then, I build a minimum research checkpoint into every feature plan before anything goes into development. We've shipped four major features since then. All four hit adoption targets within the first month."

    "Where do you see yourself in five years?"

    I'm not looking for a detailed career plan. I'm looking for ambition that makes sense for this role and signals you'll stay long enough to make an impact.

    If the role has a natural growth path, reference it. Many positions are designed with the expectation that the person will grow into a higher position over time. If the job description mentions "opportunity to grow into [senior title]" or the recruiter mentions team growth plans, use that information in your answer. It shows you've read between the lines and you see a future here.

    "Do you have other offers or interviews in progress?"

    Be honest. Having other options does not hurt you. It helps.

    If you're in late stages with other companies and the recruiter thinks you're a strong candidate, this information speeds the process up. Recruiters don't want to lose good candidates to slow timelines. I've personally escalated candidates through the pipeline because they told me they had a final round elsewhere next week.

    Remember: having competing offers is the strongest leverage when negotiating salary at the offer stage. Running two or three interview processes at the same time is not disloyal. It's smart.

    "I'm in process with two other companies. I'm being selective. This role is one I'm genuinely excited about, which is why I wanted to move forward with the conversation."

    If you don't have other offers: "I'm early in my search and being thoughtful about where I apply. This role is one I've specifically targeted."

    06

    Salary

    The salary question is one of the most misunderstood moments in the screening process.

    I'm not trying to trap you. I'm trying to avoid wasting everyone's time. If we're $40,000 apart on expectations, a three-round interview process helps no one.

    That said, you have more leverage here than most candidates realize. The first number in any negotiation tends to anchor the whole conversation. The goal is to get the company to show their range before you show yours.

    For the full salary strategy, including how to handle the offer stage and negotiate total compensation, read the salary guide.

    Don't Name the First Number

    Once you anchor low, you rarely recover. Once you anchor high without a basis, you risk screening yourself out early. Deflect first. Flip it second. Only give a number if you're pushed into a corner.

    The Salary Deflection Ladder

    Only climb if pushed

    Level 1Deflect

    "I'm looking for a role where I grow in both responsibility and compensation. I'd love to understand the full scope before settling on a number."

    Start here. Always.

    For current salary questions: "I'd prefer to keep the focus on what I bring to this role rather than what I earn now." In many states and localities, it's now illegal for employers to ask your current salary. You don't need to share it. Even where it's legal, volunteering it only limits you.

    Level 2Flip it

    "I'd be happy to discuss what the company has budgeted for this role. If we're in the same range, I'm confident we'll find something that works for both sides."

    The phrase "in the same range" is deliberate. It's non-committal. You're not agreeing to accept a number in that range. You're signaling openness while keeping your options open.

    In my experience, 80% of the time the recruiter will share a range once you ask this way. If the recruiter shares a range, don't react right away. Say "that's helpful, thank you" and move on. You'll negotiate the specifics at the offer stage.

    Level 3Anchor high

    "Based on my experience and current market rates for this type of role in [location], I'm targeting $140,000-$155,000. That said, I'm open depending on the full package including equity and bonus."

    Only if cornered. Anchor high. Frame as total comp (not base). Leave room for the full package.

    Before any screening call, research comp ranges on Levels.fyi, Glassdoor, Payscale, and LinkedIn Salary. Know the range for your role, level, and location. When you give a number backed by data, it carries more weight than a number pulled from thin air.

    ✕ What never to say about money

    • Never volunteer your current salary. Sharing it voluntarily only limits you.
    • Never say "I'll take whatever is fair." That signals you haven't researched the market.
    • Never say "I guess" or "I don't know" when comp comes up. Uncertainty about your own value signals you haven't done the work.
    • Never make it emotional. "I need X because my rent is..." is not a negotiation strategy. Use market data, not personal financial needs.
    • Never accept an offer on the spot without sleeping on it. Recruiters expect you to negotiate. Skipping it leaves money on the table every time.
    07

    Setup & Etiquette

    The call hasn't started and you're already being evaluated. Here's how not to lose points before you open your mouth.

    Phone

    • Stand up during the call. Your voice projects more energy.
    • Use a headset or earbuds. Find a quiet space.
    • Turn off all notifications before the call.
    • Smile while you talk. Warmth comes through in your voice.
    • Answer with your full name in an upbeat tone.

    Video

    • Camera at eye level. Stack laptop on books if needed.
    • Head and shoulders fill most of the screen.
    • Face a window or light source. Avoid overhead lighting.
    • Plain, uncluttered background.
    • Test your full setup 30 minutes before. Not five.

    In-Person

    • Arrive 10-15 minutes early. Not more.
    • Dress one level more formally than you think is needed.
    • Bring printed resumes, a notepad, a pen, and questions.
    • Firm handshake with eye contact. Full name.
    • Phone away before you walk in. Not face down on table. Away.

    For All Formats

    Screening calls run 15-30 minutes. Be aware of the time. Give answers that fit the pace. Before we hang up, always ask about next steps: "What does the rest of the process look like and what's your timeline?" This signals interest and tells you when to follow up.

    08

    Questions to Ask the Recruiter

    Most candidates treat this as an afterthought. It isn't.

    The questions you ask tell me as much about you as your answers do. Candidates who ask sharp, specific questions stand out. Candidates who ask nothing, or who ask about salary and benefits at this stage, leave a poor impression. Ask one or two questions. Not five. You have limited time and you want quality over quantity.

    About the Role

    • "What does success look like in the first 90 days?"
    • "What are the biggest challenges the person stepping into this role will face?"
    • "Why is this position open? Is it a backfill or a new headcount?"

    About the Team & Manager

    • "How would you describe the team's working style?"
    • "What's the hiring manager's approach to developing the people on their team?"

    About the Process

    "What are the next steps and what's your timeline for making a decision?"

    ✕ Questions to avoid at this stage

    Salary, benefits, vacation, remote work flexibility, and promotion timelines. These are important questions. But they belong at the offer stage. Asking them during a screening call signals the wrong priorities.

    09

    Red Flags to Watch For

    The screening call goes two ways. I'm evaluating you. You should be evaluating us.

    Most candidates are so focused on performing well that they forget to assess whether this is a place they want to work. Here are signals worth paying attention to.

    The recruiter can't explain the role clearly

    If I'm vague about what you'd do day to day, the role isn't well defined. That creates problems once you're in the seat. Ask: 'How does success get measured in this role at the 90-day mark?'

    The role has been open a long time or keeps getting refilled

    Ask directly: 'Is this a new position or a backfill?' If it's a backfill, ask what happened with the previous person. High turnover in a specific role usually signals something about the team, the manager, or the expectations.

    Compensation is vague or evasive

    A company that posts a role without a salary range and refuses to share one during the screen. That's worth noting.

    The process is disorganized

    Rescheduled calls without explanation. Slow follow-up. Conflicting information about the role. How a company runs its hiring process usually reflects how it runs everything else.

    Pressure to move fast or decide quickly

    Urgency is sometimes real. But if you're being pushed to commit before you've had time to evaluate properly, ask why. 'What's driving the timeline?' is a fair question.

    None of these are automatic reasons to walk away. But walk into any offer with clear eyes.

    10

    Common Mistakes That Eliminate Most Candidates

    I see the same patterns constantly.

    No preparation

    I notice within the first two minutes whether someone has spent any time on this call. 50% of candidates haven't visited the company website. That's one of the most common reasons I screen people out.

    Low energy

    I need to believe you want this job. If you sound like this role is one of thirty you've applied to this week, I'm going to assume it is. Energy signals interest. Flat tone signals indifference.

    Claiming skills you can't back up

    If your resume says 'expert' and the conversation reveals 'I've used it a bit,' that's a trust problem. Be honest about your level.

    Rambling

    Answer the question asked. Concisely. With a real example. Then stop. Candidates who lose control of their answers make me nervous.

    Badmouthing past employers

    Even if the situation was genuinely bad. This is not the time and place. It signals poor judgment and makes me wonder what you'll say about us.

    Asking about benefits too early

    Asking about vacation, remote flexibility, or bonuses before we've confirmed mutual interest signals the wrong priorities.

    Generic motivation

    'I've always admired your brand' tells me nothing. Be specific. If you can't tell me something specific about why you want to work here, I'll assume you can't tell the next person either.

    Poor logistics

    Late to a scheduled call without acknowledgment. Background noise on a phone screen. Camera off on video without explanation. Small things that suggest bigger habits.

    Not asking questions

    'No, I'm good' suggests you haven't thought seriously about whether this role is right for you. I want candidates who are evaluating me too.

    11

    After the Call

    What Happens on My Side

    Here's what most candidates don't see. After we hang up, I fill out the scorecard. Pros, cons, and my decision. I write internal notes summarizing the call. Then I submit everything to the hiring manager for review.

    What Happens After You Hang Up

    You

    Send follow-up email (2-4 hrs)

    Wait. Keep applying.

    Get the call (or silence) — 2-7 days

    Recruiter

    Fill out scorecard (pros, cons, decision)

    Write internal notes and summary

    Submit to HM → HM decides: advance or pass

    Timeline varies. It depends on HM availability, other candidates in pipeline, and internal approvals.

    The hiring manager reviews my notes and decides whether to advance you to the next round. This takes anywhere from two days to a week. Sometimes longer. You have zero control over this part. What you do control is the follow-up.

    Send a Follow-Up Within 24 Hours

    Send a short email within two to four hours of the call. Keep it to three or four sentences. Thank me for the time. Reference something specific from the conversation. Restate your interest. Confirm you're available for next steps.

    Follow-up email template

    "Hi [Name], thank you for the conversation today. I'm excited about the [role] opportunity, particularly the [specific thing we discussed]. I look forward to hearing about next steps. Let me know if there's anything else you need from me."

    If you gave a weak answer during the call, the follow-up email is your chance to address it. Keep it brief.

    A note on thank-you emails

    I'll be honest. I personally think thank-you emails are largely pointless. I get a lot of emails from candidates and a thank-you note has never changed my decision on whether to advance someone. The scorecard is filled out based on the call, not on what you send afterward.

    That said, some recruiters and hiring managers do appreciate them. There's no harm in sending one. If you're going to send it, make it specific and short. If you're not going to send one, don't lose sleep over it. The call itself is what matters.

    If You Don't Hear Back

    If I gave you a timeline and that date passes, wait two days and send a short check-in.

    Follow-up check-in template

    "Hi [Name], I wanted to follow up on our conversation from [date]. I'm still interested in the [role] and wanted to check in on timing. Happy to answer any additional questions if helpful."

    If no timeline was given, follow up one week after your thank-you email. A second follow-up is reasonable two to three weeks later. After two unanswered messages, move on.

    Silence doesn't always mean rejection. Hiring timelines get paused for reasons that have nothing to do with you. Priorities shift. Internal approvals slow down. Feedback from other interviewers takes time.

    Do not stop applying while you wait. Even if the screen went well. Even if I said I'd be in touch soon. Keep moving until you have a signed offer in your hand.

    12

    By Career Level

    The screening call covers the same ground at every level. But what I look for shifts based on where you are in your career.

    Entry Level

    At this stage, I'm hiring potential, not a track record. I look at willingness to learn, enthusiasm for the company and role, communication skills, and relevant projects or internships.

    The biggest mistake new graduates make is assuming they don't have examples. You do. Academic projects, internships, volunteer work, and student leadership all count. Build STAR stories from those experiences. Practice them out loud before the call.

    What stands out at this level: strong preparation, clear energy, and the ability to connect academic or internship experience to the role requirements. Being the most prepared person I talk to that week is achievable at any experience level.

    Mid-Level (3-10 years)

    At three to ten years of experience, I expect a proven track record with quantifiable results. I'm evaluating career progression, specific skill match, and your ability to work without close supervision.

    Tell your career story as a clear arc. Show how each role built on the last and led naturally to this one. Don't list what you did. Explain why each move made sense.

    This is also the level where competing offers become real negotiating leverage. Running two or three interview processes at the same time is not disloyal. It's smart. The best outcome for you is multiple offers. That changes the dynamic at the offer stage.

    What stands out at mid-level: quantified results, clear ownership of outcomes, and specific reasons for wanting this role at this company.

    Executive

    At the executive level, the conversation is different. I'm not checking whether you do the work. I'm assessing whether you're the right leader for this organization at this specific moment.

    Executive searches move slower. More stakeholders are involved. Expect three to five rounds over several weeks. The screening call at this level is more of a mutual exploration than a formal evaluation.

    One thing to know: at this level, the recruiter is often more junior than the candidate. Don't let that change how you treat the conversation. I've seen executives dismiss the screen because they think the "real" conversation is with the CEO. That attitude gets noted. The recruiter still controls the pipeline.

    Compensation goes well beyond base salary. Equity, performance bonuses, signing bonuses, deferred compensation, and severance protections are all part of the picture. Know your full number before you go into any conversation.

    Frame every story around decisions that affected the full organization. Teams built. Revenue influenced. Markets entered. Culture shaped. The scope of your examples should match the scope of the role.

    What stands out at the executive level: strategic clarity, the ability to speak about organizational impact, and composure in the conversation. Executives who seem eager or anxious signal insecurity. The best executive candidates treat the screen as a peer conversation.

    Quick Reference Cheat Sheet

    Before the Call

    • Research the company (30-60 minutes)
    • Look up the recruiter on LinkedIn
    • Decode the JD (must-haves vs nice-to-haves)
    • Map experience to each key requirement
    • Prepare your Present-Past-Future pitch
    • Prepare top 3 reasons you want this role
    • Build 5-7 STAR stories
    • Build your one-page cheat sheet
    • Be ready to speak to every skill on your resume

    During the Call

    Tough Questions Quick Ref

    • Why leaving: move toward, not away. One or two sentences. Stay positive.
    • Weakness: real, manageable, with a fix that's working. Use the behavior-impact-fix-result formula.
    • Salary: deflect first, flip it second, anchor high only if you must give a number.
    • 5-year plan: ambition that fits the role. Signal you want to grow here.

    After the Call

    • Follow-up email within two to four hours
    • Reference something specific from the conversation
    • Correct any weak answers briefly
    • Keep applying to other roles

    Additional Resources

    Keep levelling up your job search

    Full salary strategy

    Salary Starter Kit →

    Get more screening calls

    Resume Guide →

    Passed the screen? Win the interview.

    Interview Prep →

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