What the Interviewer Is Really Asking
"Tell me about yourself" sounds open-ended but it isn't. The interviewer is not asking for your life story, your childhood, or a summary of everything on your CV. They're asking:
- Can you communicate clearly and concisely?
- Do you understand what's relevant to this role?
- Are you confident and composed?
- Is there a coherent thread to your career?
The candidates who get it wrong tell a long, unfocused story from their first job forward. The candidates who get it right deliver a structured, 60–90 second answer that positions them specifically for this role and sets the agenda for the rest of the interview.
The LoopCV Tell Me About Yourself Generator produces three ready-to-use answers — structured past-present-future, achievement-led, and brief — with a speaking time estimate. Free, no sign-up.
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Get 3 ready-to-use "Tell Me About Yourself" answers
The LoopCV Tell Me About Yourself Generator produces structured, achievement-led, and brief answers with a speaking time estimate. Free, no sign-up.
Generate my answer — freeThe Past-Present-Future Structure
The most reliable structure for "tell me about yourself" is past → present → future:
Past: where you've come from — the relevant experience and background that got you to where you are now. 2–3 sentences maximum. Don't start from the beginning of your career; start from the most recent 5–7 years that are most relevant to this role.
Present: where you are now — your current or most recent role, what you're working on, and what you've achieved. This should be the most substantive part of the answer.
Future: why you're here — what you're looking for, and why this role and this company specifically match that. This is where you tie your answer to the interview context and demonstrate genuine interest.
Example:
*"I've spent the last 6 years in B2B marketing, starting as a content marketer and moving into a demand generation lead role over the last 2 years. In my current position I own the full funnel from awareness to MQL, and last year I led a campaign that contributed £1.2m in pipeline. I'm looking to take on more strategic ownership — particularly in a company at the growth stage — and what drew me to [Company] specifically is the pace of the product roadmap and the opportunity to build the marketing function properly."*
This answer is 82 words and delivers: background, current scope, a quantified achievement, what they want next, and a company-specific reason. No filler.
What to Include and What to Leave Out
Include:
- The most relevant career history (not everything — the relevant arc)
- A specific achievement or area of expertise in your current or most recent role
- What you're looking for in your next role
- A specific reason for applying to this company (not generic)
Leave out:
- Personal information not relevant to the role (where you grew up, family background, hobbies — unless directly asked)
- Every job you've ever had in chronological order
- Negative framing ("I was let go from..." "I struggled with..." — save difficult topics for specific questions)
- Vague qualifiers ("hard-working," "passionate about learning," "team player") without evidence
- A verbatim reading of your CV — the interviewer has it; your job is to add context, not repeat it
Variations for Different Situations
Recent graduate or no experience: Past = your degree, most relevant project or placement. Present = what you've been doing since graduating (job search, relevant activities). Future = why this role specifically is the right start.
Career changer: Past = your background in brief, framed as building transferable skills. Present = your transition process (courses, projects, relevant experience). Future = why this new direction and this specific role.
Returning after a gap: Past = your career before the gap. Present = what you did during the gap (framed positively) and how you stayed current. Future = your enthusiasm and readiness to return.
Long career, lots of experience: Be ruthlessly selective. Lead with your most senior and most recent work. A 30-year career does not require 30 years of content — pick the last 7–10 years and the 2–3 most relevant achievements.
Delivery: How to Sound Confident, Not Rehearsed
The goal is to sound prepared, not scripted. There's a difference — scripted sounds like you're reading from a teleprompter; prepared sounds like you know exactly what you're talking about and can communicate it clearly.
Practise out loud — not just in your head. Saying the answer in your head feels complete; saying it aloud reveals where you stall, rush, or use fillers.
Learn the structure, not the script. Know your past → present → future points. The exact words should vary slightly each time, which makes it sound natural.
Pause. A brief pause before answering signals confidence, not uncertainty. Rushing into the answer looks nervous.
Make eye contact. In a video interview: look at the camera, not the screen. In person: look at the interviewer, not at your notes.
Stop talking when you're done. The most common mistake is a strong 60-second answer followed by "so... yeah, that's me really." End with your future point (why you're here, why this company) and stop. The interviewer will pick up from there.