Virtual Interviews Are Now the Norm — Not a Compromise
Video interviews have become standard at most organisations — for first-round screening, panel interviews, and even final-stage conversations. Many candidates treat them as easier than in-person because there's no travel, no waiting room, and you're in familiar surroundings. In practice, they carry unique challenges that require specific preparation.
The candidates who do well in video interviews are those who've thought about the medium, not just the content. Your setup, your presence on camera, your pacing, and your technical reliability all send signals — before you've said a word.
Setup: Get the Basics Right Before the Interview
Camera: your webcam or laptop camera should be at eye level. Looking up at the camera is fine; looking down at it (with the laptop on your desk and the camera pointing up at your ceiling) communicates a poor setup and makes you appear physically smaller. Raise the device to eye level with books or a stand if needed.
Lighting: light should come from in front of you — a window or lamp facing you, not behind you. Backlit faces show as silhouettes. The best setup is a ring light or a window directly in front of you. Overhead lighting creates unflattering shadows under the eyes.
Background: simple and clean. A blank wall, a bookshelf, or a neutral background. Avoid busy, cluttered, or distracting backgrounds — they compete for the interviewer's attention. Virtual backgrounds are acceptable but can look artificial and create edge artefacts around your outline; use only if your actual background is unusable.
Sound: a quiet room matters more than a high-quality microphone. Headphones with a built-in mic (earbuds work fine) often produce cleaner audio than a laptop's built-in microphone. Test your sound before the interview — record a short clip and listen back.
Internet: use a wired connection if possible for the most reliable video quality. If using WiFi, sit close to the router and close bandwidth-heavy applications before the call.
While you're here
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Build my interview answers — freeTechnical Preparation: Test Everything
Test your setup at least 24 hours before. Open the video platform (Zoom, Teams, Google Meet, etc.) and do a test call — with a friend or the platform's built-in test function. Check camera, microphone, and audio output.
Know where the platform logs are. If you have technical problems during the interview, knowing how to quickly resolve them (restart the app, rejoin the link, switch devices) is more professional than panicking. Have the meeting link visible and accessible so you can rejoin instantly if disconnected.
Close unnecessary applications. Browser tabs, other video apps, Slack — all consume bandwidth and processing. Close everything not needed for the interview.
Silence your phone. Not vibrate — silent. A vibrating phone on a desk is audible and distracting.
Log in 5 minutes early. Being in the waiting room when the interviewer joins (rather than making them wait for you to connect) starts the interaction professionally.
Performance on Camera: What's Different About Video
Eye contact means looking at the camera, not the screen. This is the most common mistake in video interviews. Interviewers see your eyes drifting to the screen (where their face is) — which reads as avoidance. Looking at the camera creates the impression of direct eye contact. It feels unnatural but looks right. A tip: move the video window to the top of your screen, as close to the camera as possible, so your eye drift is minimal.
Speak slightly slower than normal. Video compression and slight audio lag mean fast speech is harder to parse. A deliberate, measured pace reads as confident and clear — not slow.
Listen actively and visibly. Nod when appropriate. Verbal acknowledgements ("yes," "I see," "that makes sense") work in person but can interrupt audio in video calls — use visible cues instead.
Pause before answering. A 1–2 second pause after the question is professional in any interview, but in video it's especially important — audio lag can cause you to speak over someone. Let the question land before responding.
Energy compensation. Video compresses your natural expressiveness — your face and voice energy come across slightly flatter than they feel. Compensate by being slightly more expressive, more engaged, and more animated than you'd typically calibrate for an in-person conversation. You'll come across as appropriately present, not over-the-top.
What to Do if Something Goes Wrong
Technical problems happen. The way you handle them matters.
If your audio drops: type a message in the chat ("I think my audio has dropped — can you hear me?") and reconnect. Don't panic.
If you're disconnected: rejoin immediately using the same link. Send a brief message: "Sorry — dropped connection. Rejoining now." Calm and practical.
If there's background noise on your end: apologise briefly, mute if needed, and move to a quieter location if you can. Don't over-apologise — address it and continue.
If your video freezes: interviewers understand this. They may ask you to reconnect or switch to audio-only. Have the audio option ready as a fallback.
The professional response to any technical issue is calm, practical problem-solving — not panic, excessive apology, or blaming the technology. It's a test of composure as much as a technical inconvenience.