Document · Interview Prep Pack
Version · 1.0 · For candidates
Issued by · Shout
Audience · You. The candidate.
Read time · 12 minutes
00The interview is the audition. Walk in prepared.

Interview Prep
Pack.

Frameworks, scripts, and a checklist. Read it once. Use it every time.

Shout.
© Shout 2026 · Recruitment, said out loud.
Plain English · Reciprocal · Governed
00At a glance

Six things every good interview answer has.

If you only fix six things before your next interview, fix these. The rest of this document explains how.

01
Researched. You know more about them than the website tells you.
02
Structured. Every answer has a shape. None of them ramble.
03
Specific. You say “I” not “we.” You name numbers.
04
Reciprocal. You ask back. You finish on a high.
05
Plain. No jargon. No filler. No “passionate about people.”
06
Closed. Every answer ends. None of them trail off.
01The mindset shift

It isn't a chat. It's a one-person show.

Most candidates rehearse the questions. Few rehearse the answers. Even fewer rehearse the shape of the answers. Treat the interview like stand-up: prepared material, a clear structure, and rehearsal out loud. Otherwise you drift, and drift loses points.

WHAT MOST PEOPLE DO

Research the company. Stop.

They learn what the company does. They turn up. They hope a good conversation breaks out. It rarely does, and when it doesn't, they blame the panel.

WHAT THIS PACK DOES

Builds you a script. Then makes you rehearse it.

Five frameworks. Four question types. One video checklist. One pre-interview checklist. The brief is simple: walk in with answers ready, walk out remembered.

The missing question
01.1Ask yourself this, not them

How do I sell myself clearly and consistently, without going off track.

Company research answers what do they do. This pack answers what do I say. The two are not the same job, and most candidates only do the first one. Do both.

[REHEARSE OUT LOUD] [TIME EACH ANSWER]
02Company research

Know more about them than their website tells you.

When they ask “what do you know about us,” they're not testing trivia. They're testing intent. A blank answer reads as a blank interest. Aim for the look on the interviewer's face that says: they know more about us than I do.

01. WEBSITE

What they do. What they sell. Who they serve.

The basics. If you don't have these in one sentence each, you haven't read enough of it.

02. LINKEDIN

Their messaging, their tone, what they repeat.

Read the company page. Read the last three posts from the hiring manager. Notice the themes.

03. SOCIAL

Positioning. Thought leadership. Campaigns.

Who they want to be seen as. What they're saying out loud right now. What they've gone quiet about.

04. REVIEWS

Clients, Google, Glassdoor.

The praise tells you the positioning. The complaints tell you where the gaps are. Both are useful.

05. COMPETITORS

Who else does this. How are they different.

You can't talk about why they're interesting until you know what they're being compared to.

06. THEIR USP

What makes them not “just another provider.”

One sentence. If you can't write it for them, you can't sell yourself to them.

The wow test
RULEThe reaction you're aiming for

They should think: “They know more about us than I do.”

If you've named a campaign they've run, a client they've won, a stat from their last report, or a competitor they're outpacing. You're in wow territory. Anything less is generic. Generic blends in. Specifics get remembered.

03The job description

The JD is the marking scheme. Treat it like one.

Every box they'll tick is in the job description. Read it like an exam paper. For each requirement, prepare three things. Proof, action, result. Walk in with a list. Don't improvise the things you could have prepared.

01
Proof

The single best example you have for this requirement. The one you'd put under oath.

02
Actions

What you specifically did. Not what the team did. Say “I,” not “we.”

03
Results

Numbers. Outcomes. Measurable impact. If you can quantify it, quantify it.

GOT A GAP

Don't hide it. Add a cherry on top.

Where the JD names something you can't fully evidence, name the gap and name what you're already doing about it. A course you've started. A book you've finished. A person you've asked. Honesty with initiative reads as a stronger signal than evidence alone. Hidden gaps read as missing self-awareness.

Per-requirement template
Fill one of these in for every line of the JD that gets scored.
Requirement [paste from JD]
My proof [one specific example]
What I did [the steps. “I” not “we”]
The result [number / outcome / change]
If it's a gap [proactive action you've already taken]
04Framework 1 of 4

The Pitch Sandwich.

For when they say
Tell me about yourself.

Not a warm-up. An invitation to pitch. Build it in three layers and the rest of the interview gets easier. Because you've set the tone yourself.

Bread 01 · Connect
10 to 15 seconds of the human.

A detail that builds rapport. Where you're from. What you're into outside work. Specific, not generic.

Filling · Fit
Top-line skills, plus proof.

Matched to the job description. Two pieces of evidence. Numbers if you have them.

Bread 02 · Values
Two values. What they look like in how you work.

Not the values themselves. The behaviour they produce. Make it observable.

Script you can adapt
The Pitch Sandwich · spoken version
Bread 01 A bit about me. I'm [X], based in [Y], and outside work I'm into [interest].
Filling Professionally, I've spent [X years] in [sector], focused on [skills]. Most relevant here, I've delivered [impact 1] and [impact 2].
Bread 02 In how I work, I value [value 1] and [value 2]. Which means you'll get someone who [observable behaviour].
05Framework 2 of 4

Why us. Answer in two halves.

For when they say
Why do you want to work for us.

First half: play to their ego, with evidence. Second half: explain why the role fits you and what you've already started thinking about. Two halves. Not one.

01

Their side. Specifics, not flattery.

Name two things that appeal. A niche they own, a campaign they ran, a review you read, a client they won. Then say because and give the evidence. “I love your culture” without proof is noise.

[BELLY RUB]
02

Your side. Fit, value, ideas.

Why the role fits you. How you'll add value, with proof. One or two early ideas you've already had. Even half-formed. Half-formed beats absent.

[YOUR VALUE]
Script you can adapt
Why us · spoken version
Part 01 What appeals to me about you is [1 to 2 things], and I say that because [evidence].
Part 02 What excites me about the role is [role elements]. I can add value because I've done [proof]. I've already got a couple of ideas around [area 1] and [area 2].
06Framework 3 of 4

The weakness question. Don't waste it.

For when they say
What's your weakness.

Most people either dress a strength up as a weakness. “I'm a perfectionist”. Or shoot themselves in the foot. Neither scores. Use the Cake and Cherry: three steps that turn a trap into a positive signal.

01
Reframe.

Drop the word “weakness.” Replace with: where do I need to develop to do this job better.

02
Pick from the JD.

Use the job description to choose a real, role-relevant gap. Not a manufactured one. They can tell.

03
Add the cherry.

Your proactive solution. Course, book, mentor, plan. Initiative beats invention every time.

Script you can adapt
Weakness · spoken version
Frame This question comes up a lot, so I applied it to this role. I reviewed the job description, and one development area for me is [specific area].
The cherry What I've already done is [specific action]. If I progress, I'll [next step]. So I'm fully up to speed quickly.
WHY THIS LANDS

Honesty plus initiative reads as the same trait twice.

You've shown self-awareness. You've shown you do something about it without being asked. That's the same trait a hiring manager is buying. The trap question becomes a positive signal about how you'll behave in the role.

07Framework 4 of 4

Competency questions. Tell them in four parts.

For when they say
Tell me about a time when…

Predict the likely questions from the JD. Prepare two or three versatile stories that can cover most of them. Tell each one in four parts. STAR.

S
Situation

Set the context. One or two sentences. No more.

T
Task

What you specifically were responsible for delivering.

A
Action

The actual steps. This is the money bit. Walk them through it.

R
Result

The outcome. With numbers where you have them.

Two upgrades
UPGRADE 01. OWN IT

Say “I,” not “we.”

The team did things. The panel is hiring you. Your specific actions need to be visible. “We delivered” is unfalsifiable; “I did X, Y, and Z” is testable. They want the second one.

UPGRADE 02. ACTION IS THE MONEY

Don't rabbit-hole on the situation.

Most candidates over-cook the setup and skim the action. Reverse it. Set the scene in 20 seconds. Spend the rest on what you did and how you did it. The A is where they score you.

PRO MOVE

One good story can answer three questions.

Build your two or three stories around the competencies the JD names most often. Leadership, problem-solving, conflict, pressure. Re-angle the same story for each. You're not lying; you're framing.

08Your questions

Always ask back. Always finish on a high.

No questions at the end reads as low interest, even when it isn't. Prepare four. One from each type below. Ask the two best ones based on how the conversation went.

Type 01

About the company.

Origins. Niche. Market changes. Client base. Where they're heading next.

Type 02

About the job.

90-day expectations. Biggest challenges. Tools and systems you'd be using.

Type 03

About the interviewers.

Their roles. What's changed for them. The biggest business challenge they see.

Type 04

About you, in this role.

Transferability of your experience. Anything they'd like clarified about fit.

Six questions you can lift from this page
Read these out loud. The ones that sound like you are the ones to take in.
  • What would I find most challenging in the first three months.
  • What are your expectations of me in the first 90 days.
  • Where do you see the biggest opportunity in this team right now.
  • Which systems matter most day-to-day. CRM, email, design tools.
  • How long have you been here, and how has the business evolved in that time.
  • Based on our conversation, is there anything you'd like me to clarify about my fit.
09On camera

Frame yourself. The room can't do it for you.

Video interviews lose the easy rapport an in-person room gives you for free. You make it back by getting five things right before the camera turns on. None of them are expensive. All of them are noticed.

Camera.

Eye level. Centred. No tilted laptop angles. Raise it on books if you have to.

Lighting.

Face lit from the front. Not the back. A window or a ring light. Either works.

Dress.

Match the role. Look like you already belong in it. Not above. Not below.

Backdrop.

Neutral, not empty. One point of interest. A print, a shelf, a plant. Not distracting.

Energy.

Colour, sunshine, greenery. A subtle psychological lift. The conversation runs warmer.

PRO TIP

A good backdrop doesn't compete. It connects.

A music print, a piece of artwork, a plant. Something that gives a glimpse of who you are without pulling the eye away from what you're saying. The backdrop is supporting cast, not the lead.

10Two final gems

Two small habits. Big difference.

These don't change what you say. They change how it lands. Neither costs you anything. Both move the room.

Stay on message.

Sales, marketing, support. Talkative roles tempt you to say too much. Listen properly. Answer the question they asked. Notice yourself drifting and bring it back.

Smile is a weapon.

Professional doesn't mean painfully serious. Smiling lifts your confidence, warms your tone, and raises likeability. The thing that separates two otherwise equal candidates.

11Pre-interview checklist

Six ticks. Then go.

If all six are ticked, you've done the work. Walk in. The rest is delivery.

12Close

Now go and
do the work.

Prepare like a performance. Research that wows. Answers with structure. A cherry on top. That's how you stop wasting questions and start scoring points.

Five things to remember

  • 01. Stand-up, not a chat. Prepared material. Structure. Rehearsal.
  • 02. The job description is the marking scheme. Map every line.
  • 03. Sandwich. Belly Rub. Cake + Cherry. STAR. Use the frameworks.
  • 04. Always ask back. Always finish on a high.
  • 05. Stay on message. Smile. Both move the room.