Answering 'Tell Me About Yourself' Without Reciting Your Résumé
The classic opener is also the most wasted minute in the interview. Here's a three-beat structure that turns it into a hook.
Maya Chen
Career Coach
The interviewer has read your résumé. Reciting it back to them — chronologically, job by job — wastes the most attentional minute of the entire conversation. The opener is your only chance to set the narrative for everything that follows.
The three-beat structure
- Now: the one-sentence summary of what you do today and the kind of work you're best at.
- How you got here: two or three turning points that explain why this role is the obvious next step.
- Why this conversation: a specific reason this team or this problem matters to you right now.
This structure works because it ends with intent. The interviewer's first follow-up will almost always be a 'why' question, and you've handed them the thread.
An example, in under 90 seconds
I'm a backend engineer at a mid-size fintech, currently leading the team that owns ledger integrity. The work I'm best at is taking systems that mostly work but no one trusts, and making them boring again. I came to this from infra — I started in DevOps at a startup, moved into platform engineering at a larger company, and the more I worked on payments the more I cared about correctness over throughput. The reason I wanted to talk to you specifically is that your team rebuilt the reconciliation pipeline last year, and I want to work on the next layer of that problem.
What to leave out
- Your education, unless you graduated last year.
- Job titles in chronological order — group them into a thesis instead.
- Personality adjectives ('I'm passionate, driven, detail-oriented').
- Anything the interviewer can read off LinkedIn in fifteen seconds.
Why intent closes the loop
Ending with why this specific role matters does two things: it forces you to research the company before the interview, and it filters the rest of the conversation toward the work you actually want to do. The interviewer will follow your lead more often than you'd expect.
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