How CEOs Answer the Most Common Job Interview Questions
After nearly four years of interviewing tech CEOs and founders for a recurring job-interview column, the writer distilled a set of patterns that repeatedly showed up in the answers of people who have sat on both sides of the table. The common thread, they found, is that strong interview answers are authentic, specific, and grounded in real examples, not polished scripts. Several executives also stressed that interviews are two-way conversations, and that the most important thing to prove today, especially in the age of AI, is the ability to learn and grow.
The article then breaks down how to answer the classic question, “Tell me about yourself.” The recommended structure is a brief present-day introduction, followed by a chronological story with a clear theme linking life stages, work, and a small personal detail. Examples included Gil Gron of Orca Security, Tamar Bar-Ilan of Cyera, Yevgeny Dibrov of Armis, and Yotam Gil of Pango, all of whom used family background, upbringing, or early responsibilities to explain their path.
For “Why do you want this role?”, the strongest answers focused on two things, impact and people, and showed real homework about the company. For strengths, executives advised naming two or three traits and backing each with behavior and concrete examples. For weaknesses, they recommended a genuine flaw, an explanation of its cost, and a practical way of coping with it, such as Nir Shahaf of JPMorgan Israel acknowledging that his directness was sometimes read as criticism.
On future plans, most said they wanted to stay and grow in the company, while Ofer Wolf of Akamai Israel stood out by saying he would retire in five years because staying too long would hurt both him and the organization. For “Why should we hire you?”, answers had to show specific value, not generic competence. On salary, there was no single correct answer, but the guidance was to do market research, explain how the number was reached, and, in tech roles, consider bonuses, options, or equity alongside cash.
The final and possibly most revealing question is, “Do you have any questions for us?” According to several executives, this is where candidates reveal what they care about, by asking about competitors, differentiation, the reason the role exists, success criteria, and risks. The piece concludes that small details also matter, from punctuality to how a candidate treats an espresso cup, because employers are ultimately looking for people they would want to work with.