How to Prepare for a Phone Interview (And What Makes It Different)

By Personal Job Coach team

Phone interviews are not the easy version of a face-to-face interview. They are a different format with different failure modes. Because the interviewer cannot see you, everything depends on your words and your voice. Unclear answers, long silences, and a distracted-sounding delivery will cost you the next stage far more quickly than they would in person.

What phone interviews are usually for

Most phone interviews are screening calls. The recruiter or hiring manager wants to confirm you meet the basic requirements, that your expectations align with the role, and that you can hold a professional conversation. They are looking for reasons to move you forward or filter you out. Your goal is to clear the bar clearly without giving them a reason to stop.

Practical setup

Find a quiet room with no interruptions and stay there for the whole call. Do not take the call on the street, in a coffee shop, or anywhere with background noise. If your mobile signal is unreliable at home, consider using a landline or sitting near a window. Have a glass of water nearby since dry mouth is common during phone calls and it shows in your voice.

Notes and your CV in front of you

This is the main practical advantage over a face-to-face interview: you can have notes. Print your CV and have a few bullet points next to each role you might be asked about. Write down two or three achievements you want to mention. Have the job description open so you can connect your answers to the role. Do not read word for word, as it sounds scripted, but having reference points means you will not blank under pressure.

How to structure your answers

On the phone, structure matters even more than in person because the interviewer cannot use visual cues to follow your reasoning. Keep your answers focused and aim for 90 to 120 seconds for most questions. Signal clearly when you are wrapping up, rather than trailing off.

Common mistakes

  • Answering too briefly, which reads as disengaged
  • Over-talking, which is harder to recover from on the phone than in person
  • Not asking any questions at the end
  • Being somewhere noisy
  • Checking other screens during the call, which almost always shows in your voice

At the end of the call

Ask about the next steps and the timeline. Confirm you are interested in progressing. Thank them for their time. A clean, professional close leaves a better impression than an over-eager sign-off.

Take the Next Step

Prepare confident answers for the questions most likely to come up with the Mock Interview tool.

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