Video interviews split into two genuinely different formats, and preparing for the wrong one is a common own goal. The one-way recorded interview — a question appears on screen, a timer runs, you answer to a camera with nobody behind it — is an anxiety format: no rapport, no follow-ups, usually one retake at most. The live video interview is a normal interview transmitted badly: the questions are standard, but eye contact, timing, and presence all behave differently through a lens. This page prepares both.
The questions themselves are mostly the classic set — motivation, strengths, competency stories — which is why the question bank below is the substance of this page. What the camera adds is a delivery layer: answers need cleaner endings (no interviewer will rescue a trailing sentence), earlier signposting (attention through a screen decays faster), and composure rituals for the format's unique failure modes — the frozen screen, the timer you didn't expect, the answer you fluffed with no retake left.
Scope note: this page covers video interviews with human beings on the other end — recorded for later human review, or live. Interviews conducted BY an AI interviewer are a different experience with different dynamics; our guide to passing an AI interview owns that ground, and the two are worth reading together if your process includes both.
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How the marking guidance works
Each model answer below is marked against the four criteria a live aurate session scores:
See how a full session is scored
aurate is a practice tool. Marking guidance describes what strong practice answers show — it isn't an employability assessment.
Why it's asked: The near-universal one-way opener. The reviewer will watch dozens of these at speed, so the format rewards a front-loaded answer: the strongest reason in the first fifteen seconds, evidence in the middle, and a deliberate ending before the timer does it for you. Structure IS the differentiator when everyone gets the same clock.
Three reasons, strongest first — and I'll land this at about eighty seconds.
First: I've already done a volunteer version of this job for your cause area. For two years I've run social media for a local food-bank network — unpaid, evenings — and grown its supporter list from about 400 to 2,300. Not because I'm a growth hacker, but because I learned what makes people share hardship stories without feeling used: dignity in the framing. Your charity's communications already do this — the winter campaign's 'first names only, real kitchens' choice was the tell — and I want to do that work with proper resources behind it.
Second: the role's split. Half content, half supporter journeys. My weakness in the volunteer role was never finding out what happened AFTER someone followed us — this job owns that pipeline, which is exactly the gap in my experience I'm trying to close.
Third, practically: you're a twelve-person team where the communications officer sits in the room when decisions get made. I've spoken to enough peers in bigger charities to know how rare that is at this level.
So: proven unpaid commitment to the cause, a role shaped around the exact skill I need to build, and a structure where the work has a seat at the table. That's my ninety seconds — thank you.
Marking guide
Why it's asked: The one-way competency staple: a full story with no follow-ups possible, so the answer must anticipate the probes an interviewer would have asked — the why, the alternative you rejected, the result — and include them unprompted inside the time box. It tests whether you can be your own interviewer.
The story is a venue cancelling nineteen hours before a 180-person awards evening — and I'll include what a follow-up would ask, since the format doesn't let you ask it.
The call came at 4pm: burst pipe, venue unusable, event at 11am next day. My first move wasn't venue-hunting — it was a fifteen-minute triage with my manager to decide what the event actually needed to survive: the awards moment itself, seated catering for 180, and accessibility for two wheelchair users and a signer. Everything else — the branded staging, the planned layout — was declared losable in that meeting. That decision list is what made the next five hours possible, because I could say yes and no to venues in seconds.
Why I chose the hotel we landed on, over the closer conference centre a colleague found: the conference centre was nicer and £400 cheaper, but couldn't confirm catering-for-180 until their manager arrived at 8am — a fourteen-hour uncertainty we couldn't carry. The hotel confirmed everything, in writing, by 7pm. I took certain-but-plainer over better-but-maybe, and I'd defend that trade every time at nineteen hours' notice.
The result: the event ran at 11am, all 180 seats filled, the signer positioned correctly — and the client's feedback scored it higher than the previous year in the original venue. The honest cost: our team worked until 1am re-printing signage, and I approved about £900 in overtime and rush fees against a contingency line that existed for exactly this.
What changed permanently: every venue contract I've booked since has a named same-day catering confirmation contact. The adaptation was fine. The prevention is better.
Marking guide
Practise to a lens that talks back
One-way formats fail candidates on timing and live formats fail them on follow-ups — both are delivery problems that reading cannot fix. An aurate session is voice-first and live: you answer out loud, the AI interviewer pushes back in real time, and your answers are marked on the same four criteria used across this page. Two free sessions. No credit card.
Try it freeWhy it's asked: Half practical protocol, half competency probe — interviewers increasingly pair them because remote roles make tech-failure composure a genuine job skill. The scored behaviours: calm verbal handling in the moment, a pre-arranged fallback, and a history of treating technical failure as logistics rather than catastrophe.
The protocol first, because I have one — then the time it mattered.
If my screen freezes mid-answer: I keep talking for one sentence ('if you can still hear me, I'll pause here'), because audio often survives video. Then ten seconds of silence-checking, then the fallback I set up before every video interview: I'll have put my phone number in the chat at the start, and I redial into the meeting by phone while my laptop reconnects. If the meeting software's truly dead, I email one line from my phone — 'happy to continue by phone now or rejoin in five minutes' — because the worst version of a tech failure is the interviewer wondering whether you've simply gone.
The time it mattered: my second-round interview for my current role, conducted over video, where the building's internet failed entirely — mine, not theirs — eleven minutes in, mid-way through my main competency story. I was redialled by phone within ninety seconds, said 'shall I pick up from the decision point of that story?', and finished the interview audio-only, including a presentation I narrated from the slide numbers since they had the deck. I got the job; the hiring manager later told me the recovery WAS the standout answer — better evidence of calm-under-pressure than the story it interrupted.
What I do differently since: I test the meeting software an hour before (not five minutes — an hour leaves fixing time), close everything that can push a notification, and have the meeting link, dial-in, and interviewer's email on paper next to me. Paper doesn't freeze.
The general principle: technology fails; what's assessed is whether your composure fails with it.
Marking guide
Why it's asked: The one-way closer, and the format's hardest ask: a complete case, compressed, delivered with energy to a lens after twenty minutes of solo recording. Reviewers watch this one for stamina as much as content — the candidate whose final answer matches their first answer's energy stands out from a fatigued field.
Because the three things this role needs are the three things I've just spent this recording evidencing — so let me stack them rather than add a fourth.
You need someone who can run supporter communications without a big team behind them: I grew a volunteer-run channel from 400 to 2,300 supporters with no budget, which is this job's core motion performed under harder constraints than you'd ever give me.
You need someone who closes loops in a half-content, half-journeys role: my answers today included the pipeline gap I'm deliberately moving to fix — I know exactly what I'm here to learn, which beats pretending there's nothing left to learn.
And you need someone who'll represent the organisation steadily on camera and in rooms — and you've just watched twenty minutes of primary evidence on that. This recording is the work sample.
One honest line to close, because sixty seconds shouldn't end on a slogan: you'll have stronger-credentialed applicants than me on paper. What I'd ask you to weigh is trajectory and proof-of-commitment — two years of unpaid weekends for this cause area is a datapoint no CV formatting can fake.
That's my case. Thank you for the time — genuinely.
Marking guide
Why it's asked: Practical, and quietly diagnostic: your setup discipline previews your remote-work discipline. Interviewers want a real checklist — camera at eye level, light facing you, notifications killed, dial-in fallback on paper, software tested with time to fix — not vague reassurance that you'll 'find somewhere quiet'.
Why it's asked: The mechanics question candidates are embarrassed to ask, so good interviewers ask it for them. The workable answers: lens when speaking (that's their eye contact), screen when listening; notes as sparse prompts positioned near the camera line, used openly rather than furtively — a glance at headings is professional, visible reading is not.
Why it's asked: The standard opener behaves differently on camera: attention decays faster through a screen, so the sixty-to-ninety-second discipline tightens and the first sentence carries more load. Build it on the same present-past-future skeleton as the in-room version — our tell me about yourself guide has five marked variants — then rehearse it once TO A LENS, which is a different skill than saying it to a mirror.
Why it's asked: A self-awareness probe about the medium: rapport through a screen is deliberate — earlier smiles, named acknowledgements ('that's a fair challenge'), slightly longer pauses to absorb latency, energy pitched a notch above natural. Candidates who've thought about this transmit better, and interviewers can hear the difference in the answer itself.
Why it's asked: Format strategy as a question — because the tools vary (30 seconds' prep to unlimited; zero retakes to one per question) and disciplined candidates have a policy: prep time for structure bullet-points, not scripting; the retake spent only on genuine derailment, never on chasing perfection, because the third take is reliably worse than the second.
Why it's asked: A real and demoralising scenario, asked to test professional self-management: your delivery standard can't be hostage to their attention signals. The strong answer names the reframe — perform to the role's standard, not the room's warmth — plus one polite engagement attempt ('happy to pause if now's difficult') before settling into steady delivery.
A recorded screening format: questions appear on screen (text or pre-recorded video), you get brief preparation time — typically 30 seconds to 3 minutes — then answer to camera inside a time limit, usually 1–3 minutes per question, sometimes with one retake. A human reviews the recordings later, often at speed, which is why front-loaded structure and clean endings matter disproportionately.
Mostly the standard set — tell me about yourself, motivation, strengths, competency stories — because the format changes delivery, not criteria. One-way formats favour self-contained questions answerable without follow-ups; live video interviews mirror in-room interviews fully. Prepare the classic bank, then rehearse it to a lens with a timer.
Use most of the allotted time — three-quarters or more — and end deliberately — a 90-second slot wants a 65–80 second answer with a clean closing sentence, not a sprawl the timer guillotines. Under-filling badly (answering 20 seconds of a 2-minute slot) reads as thin evidence; the discipline is a complete arc sized to the box.
Camera at eye level, main light source facing you (never behind), neutral background, and the software tested an hour before so there's time to fix what fails. Kill notifications on every device, keep the dial-in fallback and interviewer's contact on paper, and put water within reach. The setup takes twenty minutes and removes the format's cheapest failure modes.
No — this page covers video interviews reviewed or conducted by humans. AI-led interviews, where the interviewer itself is an AI asking adaptive questions, run on different dynamics (real-time follow-ups, different pacing, no rapport reading) and deserve their own preparation — our AI interview guide covers that format, and processes increasingly include both.
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