Corporate Life



People fail interviews not because of what actually happened, but because of how they talk about it.

After interviewing thousands of candidates over 15 years, the fastest way to lose an offer has nothing to do with gaps in your CV or a less-than-perfect track record. It comes down to sounding bitter, blaming everyone else in the room, oversharing in ways that make the interviewer uncomfortable, or inadvertently making yourself sound like the problem, even when you genuinely weren't.

What most candidates don't realise is that interviewers aren't just listening to your story. They're quietly asking themselves whether this person would bring drama into the team. That single unspoken question shapes everything.

The strongest candidates know how to stay honest without sounding negative, take accountability without tearing themselves apart, explain difficult situations with real maturity, and steer the conversation back toward growth rather than grievance. None of that requires faking positivity or rehearsing a sanitised version of events. It requires emotional intelligence, and there is a meaningful difference between the two.

Your answer to "So, why did you leave?" can decide the entire outcome of an interview. Because under pressure, how you speak about hard things tells people exactly how you will behave when hard things happen at work.

Composure is read as a signal.
Framing is read as a signal.
Perception, whether you like it or not, matters enormously in that room.

Save this before your next interview, and pass it on to someone who's currently in the thick of a job search.

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