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128 Free Practice Interview Questions – Sample Behavioral Questions and More

By Biron Clark

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If you’re looking for free sample job interview questions to practice, you came to the right place.

In this article, you’ll find the top behavioral interview questions and standard interview questions – more than 100 in total. 

Reading through and practicing these interview questions will also help you identify areas you need to improve so you can work on them before the interview.

  • In Part I you’ll get 53 free sample behavioral interview questions to practice (behavioral interview questions are questions that start with phrases like, “tell me about a time you had to…”)
  • Then in Part II we’ll cover 75 other common interview questions you should practice along with your behavioral questions.

Let’s get started…

Part I: Free Sample Behavioral Interview Questions

Sample behavioral questions about teamwork:

  • Talk about a time you had to work closely with someone whose personality was very different from yours
  • Tell me about a challenge or conflict you’ve faced at work, and how you dealt with it
  • Give me an example of how you have worked on teams. What role did you play?
  • Describe a time you struggled to build a relationship with someone important. How did you overcome it?
  • Tell me about a time you wish you’d handled a situation differently with a colleague
  • Tell me about a time you needed to get information from someone who wasn’t very cooperative. What did you do?
  • Tell me about a time you exercised leadership
  • Describe a time when you didn’t agree with others. What did you do?
  • Tell me a time when you worked with a colleague who was not completing his or her share of the work. Who, if anyone, did you tell or talk to about it? Did the manager take any steps to correct your colleague? Did you agree or disagree with the manager’s actions?
  • Describe a situation in which you had to arrive at a compromise or guide others to a compromise

Sample behavioral interview questions about motivation:

  • Describe a time when you saw a problem and took the initiative to correct it rather than waiting for someone else to do it
  • Tell me about a time when you worked under close supervision or extremely loose supervision. How did you handle that?
  • Give me an example of a time you were able to be creative with your work. What was exciting or difficult about it?
  • Tell me about a time you were dissatisfied in your work. What could have been done to make it better?
  • Tell me about a time when you went above and beyond the call of duty in order to complete the job
  • Tell me about a time you disagreed with a decision that was made at work
  • Give me a specific occasion in which you conformed to a policy you didn’t agree with
  • Give me an example of an important goal which you had set in the past and tell me about your success in reaching it
  • Describe some times when you were not very satisfied or pleased with your performance. What happened and what did you do about it?

Sample behavioral questions about handling customers:

  • Describe a time when it was especially important to make a good impression on a client. How did you approach things?
  • Give me an example where you did not meet a client’s expectations. What happened and how did you attempt to fix the situation?
  • Tell me about a time you went above and beyond what was required to make sure a customer was happy
  • Describe a time when you had to interact with a difficult client. What was the situation, and how did you handle it?
  • When you’re working with a large number of customers, it’s tricky to deliver excellent service to all of them. How do you go about prioritizing your customers’ needs?

Sample behavioral questions about problem-solving:

  • Tell me about a time you were under a lot of pressure. What was going on, and how did you get through it?
  • Describe a time when your team or company was undergoing some changes you had no control over. How did that impact you, and how did you adapt?
  • Tell me about the first job you ever had. What did you do to learn the ropes?
  • Tell me about a time you failed
  • Describe a difficult work situation and what you did to overcome it
  • Tell me about a time when you had to make a decision without all the information
  • Tell me about a time you made a mistake at work, what happened?
  • Tell me about a time you were under a lot of stress at work and how you dealt with it
  • Describe a crisis you faced at work. What was your role? How did you resolve it? What were the results?
  • Describe a time when you were asked to do something you weren’t trained to do. How did you adapt?
  • Describe an instance when you had to think on your feet to solve a problem
  • Tell me about a time from your work experience when your manager or supervisor was unavailable and a problem arose. How did you handle that situation?
  • Give me a specific example of a time when you used good judgment and logic to solve a problem
  • Sometimes it’s easy to get in “over your head.” Describe a situation where you had to request help or assistance on a project or assignment
  • What steps do you follow to study a problem before making a decision?
  • We can sometimes identify a small problem and fix it before it becomes a major problem. Give an example of how you have done this
  • Give an example of a time in which you had to be relatively quick in coming to a decision

Update: Read 26 examples of problem-solving here.

Sample behavioral questions about time management:

  • Tell me about a time you had to juggle multiple high-priority tasks. How did you handle it?
  • Describe a long-term project that you managed. How did you keep everything moving along in a timely manner?
  • Sometimes it’s just not possible to get everything on your to-do list done. Tell me about a time your responsibilities got a little overwhelming. What did you do?
  • Tell me about a time you set a goal for yourself. How did you go about ensuring that you would meet your objective?
  • Give me an example of a time you managed numerous responsibilities. How did you handle that?

Sample behavioral questions about communication:

  • Describe a time when you were able to use persuasion to successfully convince someone to see things your way
  • Give me an example of a time when you had to explain something fairly complex to a frustrated client or coworker. How did you make sure they understood you?
  • Tell me about a successful presentation you gave and why you think it was a hit
  • Describe a time when you had to use your written communication to get an important point across
  • Give me an example of a time when you were able to successfully communicate with another person even when they may not have personally liked you (or vice versa)
  • In a supervisory or group leader role, have you ever had to discipline or counsel an employee or team member? What steps did you take? How did you prepare yourself?
  • Tell me about a time you thought you communicated clearly but were misunderstood. What happened and how did you handle the situation?

Part II: Standard Interview Questions

After you’ve reviewed the behavioral questions above, we’d recommend also practicing for these other common interview questions that employers ask.

See below for 75 other questions employers love to ask to find out about your background, your skills, why you’re job searching and more.

Also, if you want word-for-word sample answers for the top 20 questions employers ask, read this article.

Questions about your job search:

Questions about the job and company:

Practice interview questions about your background:

Interview questions about your personality and motivation:

Common interview questions about your interests:

Common hypothetical job interview questions to practice:

  • Where do you see yourself in five years?
  • What would you do in the first 90 days of this position to succeed?
  • What would you do if you made an important business decision and a coworker challenged it?
  • What would you do if management made a decision you didn’t agree with?
  • What do you do when you make a mistake at work?
  • What would you accomplish in the first 30 days on the job?
  • Assume that you come to work here. One year from now you go home one Friday afternoon thinking that accepting this job was the best thing you ever did. What happened during the year for you to feel that way?
  • How would you deal with an angry or irate customer?
  • How would you fire someone?
  • If you had a million dollars, what kind of work would you do and why?
  • How many tennis balls can you fit into a limousine?

(Hint: It’s not about getting these brain-teaser interview questions 100% right. The interviewer mainly wants to see your thought process and how you break a problem down into smaller pieces to get an answer that’s pretty close.)

How Should You Practice Your Interview Answers?

Okay, now you know the questions you’re likely to face, but what’s the best way to practice? I recommend you record yourself speaking or practice in front of a mirror.

And don’t just memorize a ton of answers word-for-word. It’s going to get all jumbled up in your head and come out wrong in the heat of the moment! And if they ask something slightly different than what you prepared for, you’ll panic.

So practice talking about general topics and ideas…


About the Author

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2 thoughts on “128 Free Practice Interview Questions – Sample Behavioral Questions and More”

  1. I’ve studied this website as a manual and practiced, practiced, practiced… And it worked! Now I got the job I wanted in the country of my dreams. Thank you so much for this great input in people’s careers and lives!

    Also, I wanted to mention my unusual experience. After 3 interviews with managers, I had the final one with the director of the department. I was very surprised when he asked me about my wife, her job, our newborn baby, even where my parents live. Frankly speaking, I was not ready to answer these question, so I took the safest path – I told the truth, even if it could have a negative impact.
    I think he asked this to find out my availability, how flexible I am after working hours and, considering that we are new in Switzerland, will we be able or not surviving financially in this new, expensive ambiance being both starters + having a baby.

    I thought reasonable mentioning this, so you could add these questions to the list, or maybe even make a separate article about it. I apologize in advance if this subject was mentioned already somewhere.
    Again, many thanks for what you are doing!

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