Why interviewers ask this question
"Tell me about yourself" is almost always the first question in an interview — and it is not small talk. Interviewers ask it for three reasons:
1. To hear how you frame your own story. The details you choose to include, and those you leave out, tell the interviewer a lot about what you think is relevant.
2. To set the direction of the conversation. A good answer plants seeds that the interviewer will follow up on — you have some control over where the interview goes next.
3. To assess communication clarity. If you cannot give a coherent two-minute summary of your professional background, it raises questions about how you would communicate in the role.
This question is an opportunity, not a formality. Most candidates waste it by reciting their resume. The best candidates use it to immediately establish why they are the right fit for this specific role.
The Present-Past-Future formula
The most reliable structure for answering "Tell me about yourself" is Present-Past-Future:
Present: Where you are now and what you do. 1-2 sentences on your current role and your primary area of focus or expertise.
Past: How you got here. 1-2 sentences on the experience that is most relevant to this role — not a career history, just the thread that connects to why you are sitting in this room.
Future: Why you are here. 1 sentence on what you are looking for next and why this role or company specifically fits.
Why this order works: Interviewers care most about what you are doing now and where you are going — your history is context, not the point. Leading with your current role grounds the conversation immediately.
Target length: 90 seconds to 2 minutes. If you are going past 2 minutes, you are over-explaining.
Example answers by career stage
Entry-level / recent graduate:
"I'm a recent Computer Science graduate from [University] where I focused on full-stack development and completed two internships — one at a fintech startup building internal tools, and one at a mid-size agency on client-facing web applications. Through those experiences I found I enjoy working closest to the product and user, which is why I'm drawn to product-focused engineering roles. The [Company] engineering team's approach to [specific thing] is exactly the environment I want to grow in."
Mid-level professional:
"I've spent the last four years in B2B SaaS marketing, most recently at [Company] where I run demand generation — everything from paid acquisition to content strategy. I joined as the first marketing hire and have built the function from scratch, which has given me experience I wouldn't have gotten in a larger team. I'm now looking for a role with more scope and a larger team to manage, which is what drew me to this Director-level opening."
Career changer:
"I spent five years as a secondary school teacher specialising in English, which gave me skills I didn't fully appreciate until I moved out of it — curriculum design, communicating complex ideas simply, and understanding how adults actually learn. Two years ago I started applying those skills in a corporate training context and discovered I was equally good at it and significantly more energised. I'm now looking to formalise that transition into a dedicated L&D role, and [Company]'s investment in employee development makes this position particularly interesting."
Senior / returning from career break:
"I spent a decade in management consulting — the last five years as a partner at [Firm] leading transformation projects in financial services. I stepped back eighteen months ago to care for a family member, which gave me time to reflect on what kind of work I actually want to do next. I've realised I want to be closer to implementation and further from selling, which is why in-house strategy roles are appealing. [Company]'s current inflection point makes this a genuinely interesting moment to join."
What not to say
Don't recite your resume chronologically. The interviewer has your resume. "I graduated in 2018, then I joined Company A, then in 2020 I moved to Company B..." is a waste of two minutes that tells them nothing they don't already know.
Don't start with personal information unless it's directly relevant. "I'm from Chicago, I love hiking, and I have two dogs" is not what they are asking. Keep it professional unless you have a specific reason to connect a personal detail to the role.
Don't be too humble. "I'm just a junior developer" or "I don't have a lot of experience yet" undermines everything that follows. Lead with what you have, not what you lack.
Don't forget to connect to this specific role. The weakest "Tell me about yourself" answers end without explaining why you are here. The last sentence should always land on this company or this role specifically.
Don't go over 2 minutes. If you are still talking after 2 minutes, you have lost the interviewer's attention and signalled poor self-editing skills.