How to Answer "What Is Your Greatest Weakness?"

The question candidates dread most — answered with a framework that's honest, professional, and impressive.

Why This Question Exists (and What It's Really Testing)

The weakness question isn't a trap — it's a self-awareness test. Interviewers are not genuinely hoping you'll hand them a disqualifying piece of information. They're testing:

- Self-awareness: do you know yourself well enough to identify a genuine area for improvement?
- Maturity: can you discuss imperfection without becoming defensive or evasive?
- Growth orientation: are you taking active steps to address your weaknesses?
- Honesty: are you giving a real answer or a packaged non-answer?

The candidates who answer this well come across as confident, grounded, and honest. The candidates who answer it poorly — with the famous "I work too hard" or "I'm a perfectionist" — come across as evasive and, worse, as someone who's either never reflected on this or doesn't trust the interviewer enough to be real.

The LoopCV Greatest Weakness Generator generates a polished, honest answer from your real weakness type — full and brief versions. Free, no sign-up.

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The Formula for a Good Weakness Answer

A good weakness answer has three components:

1. Name a real weakness — something genuine, not a disguised strength. The weakness should be credible and specific.

2. Show what you've done about it — the growth or mitigation work you've done. This is the most important part of the answer.

3. Show the current state — where you are now: improved but still working on it, or managed effectively through a system or approach.

The formula: "I've historically [real weakness]. I recognised this because [specific example or moment]. I've been addressing it by [specific action]. I'm not perfect at it yet, but [measurable improvement or current approach]."

The length: 60–90 seconds. Long enough to be substantive, short enough to avoid over-explaining.

Good Weaknesses vs. Fake Weaknesses

Good weaknesses to use:
- Difficulty delegating (especially if you're moving into a more senior role)
- Impatience when projects move slowly
- Over-preparing / spending too long on analysis before acting
- Public speaking or presenting (if not core to the role)
- Struggling to say no to new projects, leading to overcommitment
- Being too direct or blunt in feedback
- Difficulty with ambiguity (if you've actively developed systems to handle it)

Weaknesses to avoid:
- "I'm a perfectionist" — overused and reads as non-answer
- "I work too hard" — transparent non-answer
- "I care too much" — same
- Weaknesses that are core requirements of the role (e.g., "I'm not great at data analysis" for a data analyst)
- Weaknesses so severe they genuinely raise red flags ("I miss a lot of deadlines" without strong mitigation)

The ideal weakness is genuine, non-catastrophic for this specific role, and demonstrates real self-awareness and active improvement.

Word-for-Word Example Answers

Example 1: Delegation
*"Early in my career I found it hard to delegate. I'd been an individual contributor for a long time and had very high standards for the work — it was easier to do things myself than to brief someone else and review their output. I recognised this was limiting me when I moved into a team lead role and was clearly becoming a bottleneck. I've worked on it deliberately: I now write explicit briefs when I hand off work, I check in at agreed milestones rather than constantly, and I've got much better at letting go of stylistic preferences as long as the outcome is right. I still catch myself wanting to redo things sometimes — but I have the awareness to stop and ask whether it actually matters."*

Example 2: Public speaking
*"I've historically been uncomfortable presenting to large groups. One-on-one and small team settings I'm confident in, but getting on stage or presenting to the full company was something I'd avoid if I could. I joined a Toastmasters group about 18 months ago and have also volunteered to present at team meetings and external webinars to build the practice deliberately. I'm not going to pretend it's my favourite thing, but I'm significantly more confident than I was — and for this role, the presenting component is manageable and something I'm actively developing."*

What to Do if They Ask for a Second Weakness

Some interviewers follow up with "is there anything else?" or "can you give me another example?" Prepare two genuine weaknesses — not one.

If asked for a second weakness, give a different, equally genuine answer. Don't give the same answer reworded. Don't escalate to a more severe weakness — keep the same level of honesty and composure.

Being asked for a second weakness is often a test of depth: can you reflect further? The composed candidate who gives a second honest answer with growth framing continues to score well. The flustered candidate who says "I can't really think of another one" signals that the first answer was also somewhat prepared rather than genuinely reflective.

Frequently Asked Questions

More questions? Visit our help centre .

What is the best answer for "what is your greatest weakness?"

The best answer names a real weakness, describes a specific moment when you recognised it, explains the concrete steps you've taken to address it, and notes your current progress. The worst answer is a disguised strength ("I work too hard"). The best answer shows genuine self-awareness and active growth — not perfection, but honest reflection and improvement.

Is it OK to say "I'm a perfectionist" for weakness?

It's widely known as a non-answer and interviewers see through it immediately. Using it signals either that you haven't thought seriously about the question or that you don't trust the interviewer enough to be genuine. Either impression works against you. Use a real weakness with a growth story instead.

Can I mention a weakness that's relevant to the job?

With care. A weakness that's directly relevant to a core requirement of the role is risky — "I'm not very good at stakeholder management" for a client-facing role, for example. But a weakness that's somewhat relevant with strong mitigation (e.g., "I've historically struggled with ambiguity but I've developed a system for structuring unclear briefs") can work well if the growth story is compelling.

What are good weaknesses to say in an interview?

Difficulty delegating, impatience with slow progress, over-preparing before acting, discomfort with public speaking (if not a core requirement), a tendency to overcommit, being too direct in feedback, or struggling with ambiguity. All of these are real, relatable, and non-catastrophic — especially when paired with genuine growth steps.

How long should my weakness answer be?

60–90 seconds — roughly 80–120 words. Longer than 2 minutes suggests over-justification; shorter than 45 seconds may seem thin or evasive. The answer should feel complete but not like a speech.

What if I genuinely can't think of a real weakness?

You have weaknesses — everyone does. The problem is usually that you haven't reflected on them in a professional context. Think about: feedback you've received in performance reviews, moments where you've felt stressed or underperformed, skills you know you should develop but haven't yet. Ask a trusted colleague or mentor what they'd say is your main developmental area. The LoopCV Greatest Weakness Generator gives you 12 genuine weakness types to choose from and builds an answer around the one you select.

Is there a tool to help generate a weakness answer?

Yes — the LoopCV Greatest Weakness Generator lets you choose from 12 genuine weakness types, add optional context, and get a full and a brief answer. No "I work too hard" answers. Free, no sign-up required.

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