Common Interview Questions – Part 1 – About You
Common interview questions are used throughout many different industries and its no different when it comes to 3D print and POS. The objective of this blog is to give you an overview of some of the questions you can expect during your interview and to help you prepare and get into the right frame of mind.
Common Interview Questions – About You
Tell me about yourself
Here you need to keep you answer interesting and personable, giving a brief overview of your career history to date, why you chose your chosen career path. Cover you academic background and wrap up with perhaps any professional / personal achievements. Your answer should be no longer than 3-4 minutes and remember you want to set the scene and highlight initially your transferable skills to be elaborated at a later stage when talking through your CV.
Can you give me three personal attributes?
Describe yourself. Remember you need to sell your technical skills and also you as a person. Are you hard working, upbeat, enjoy being kept busy and challenged? Objective , natural lead / team player? How effective are you at upward and downward management? Team it is very important, as is the ability to stay calm under pressure. Especially if working in a very busy, demanding environment such as 3d print and POS.
Have you any weaknesses?
Think of a genuine one and always finish up with how you have overcome it. and is you are tackling it. If you genuinely feel you do not have a weakness, perhaps explain key arrears you feel you have greatly improved throughout your career. Always turn a question like this around and focus on the positive, as opposed to the negative effect. Tell me about your ability to work under pressure. You may say that you thrive under certain types of pressure. Give an example that related to the type of position applied for.

What is your greatest strength? This is one of the most common interview questions.
Numerous answers are good. Just stay positive. A few good examples are
- Ability to prioritise
- Problem solving skills
- Ability to work under pressure
- Ability to focus on projects
- Professional expertise
- Leadership skills
- Positive attitude.
Remember, this is your chance to sell yourself. They may be common interview questions, but make your answers anything other than common!
What can you bring to our company?
This is a great question! It gives you a chance to highlight your best points as they relate to the position being discussed. This is your golden opportunity to finish off the interview in a positive, enthusiastic way. Drawing from all your previous answers you need to sum up how you feel you are best suited for the position job and what you can being to this team. Here are some examples –
- Client focus
- Ability to resolve problems
- Objectivity
- Resilience
- Technical skills
- Market knowledge
- Number of years experience
Be sure to have three or four well prepared points and examples. Maybe even relate your answers to a recent 3D print news story – show you are passionate about the industry!
Do you consider yourself successful?
You should always answer yes and briefly explain why. A good explanation is that you have set goals. And that you have met some and are on track to achieve the others. Also, this is your chance to highlight how you have progressed naturally in your career and how you got there.
What motivates and challenges you?
Think of genuine examples, be it project work outside of your roles to date, gaining added responsibility, pressurised time frames to work within, difficult goals etc. Prepare past and present examples to back up your views.
Describe yourself as a person. A common interview question that gives insight into your personality.
talk about your positive as well as negative qualities. You must justify each of your qualities with an example. And say how these qualities have let you grow in your professional life. When you are talking about your negative points, say that since humans are not perfect, you are also not perfect. Focus on how you have learned from your mislabels and how you tend to overcome situations with your negative qualities.
What are your activities and interest outside of work?
Say something about your interests and how they can help to in the job you are applying for. Like football can teach you team work or baking can teach you accuracy. If you are applying for a job that required you to be fir, you may mention physical activities that you do like swimming or any other sport. This is also a good opportunity to let your personality show. Remember, people buy into people!
Why should we hire you?
Point out how your assets meet what the organisation needs. Do not mention any other candidates to make a comparison. Are you willing to put the interests of the organisation ahead of your own? This is a straight loyalty and dedication question. Do not worry about the deep ethical and philosophical implications. Just say yes.
How do you handle criticism? Even though not exactly a common interview question, make sure you are prepared!
You can say something like, ‘I see criticism as an opportunity to improve my work.’ Then give an example where you were criticised and you handled it in a positive way like, ‘My manger once told me that the reports I gave him were unorganised so I tried to review my past reports and asked if he had any preferences. I followerd my manager’s suggestion and reconstructed my reports. My manager was happy with all the reported I handed him after that.’
What makes you different?
What makes you stand out from the other applicants? Portray your USP (unique selling points) in a clear concise manner. Put a but of though into this as we all have great experience and skills.
What motivates you to do your best on the job?
This is a personal trait that only you can say, but good examples are – Challenge, Achievement and Recognition.
The next instalment in our Common Interview Questions blog is focussing on About the Position.









