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Interview

How to Prepare for a Remote Job Interview (2026)

Published April 18, 2026 · 7 min read

A remote job interview tests your content, your setup, and your remote-readiness. The last two are specific to video — unreliable internet, poor camera framing, or awkward background can undermine strong answers. This guide covers the full preparation sequence, the remote-specific questions to expect, and how to follow up effectively.

Your technical setup

  • Internet: 25 Mbps minimum (speedtest.net). Use ethernet if possible, not only WiFi. Have 4G hotspot ready as backup.
  • Camera: eye-level (stack books under laptop if needed; your camera should be roughly eye height, not below your chin)
  • Lighting: face a window or soft light. Avoid backlighting that silhouettes you.
  • Audio: headphones with a microphone, not laptop speakers. Test for echo.
  • Background: plain wall or neat shelves. Avoid virtual backgrounds unless clearly professional.
  • Phone: silent, not in sight of camera
  • Water and paper/pen within reach
  • Test the video tool (Zoom, Google Meet, Teams) 1 hour before — log in, check camera, speakers, microphone

Your research

  • Company: what they do, recent news, funding stage, competitors, their product
  • Interviewer: LinkedIn profile — where they worked, shared connections, recent posts
  • Role: expected skills, team structure, what success looks like at 3/6/12 months
  • Questions you'll ask them — at least 5, genuinely curious, not generic

Common remote-specific questions

  • How do you structure your working day? — test of self-management
  • How do you collaborate asynchronously? — test of written communication, documentation habits
  • Tell me about a time you worked across timezones successfully
  • How do you avoid loneliness / maintain energy? — wellbeing assessment
  • Describe your home office setup — practical readiness
  • How do you handle interruptions / focus blocks?
  • What tools do you use for remote work? (Slack, Notion, Linear, Figma, etc.)
  • How do you give/receive feedback in writing?

Technical interviews (for engineering roles)

  • Coding: typically 45–60 min on CoderPad, HackerRank, or shared IDE. Practice on LeetCode, HackerRank.
  • System design: 45–60 min using Excalidraw, Miro, or shared whiteboard. Practice with "Designing Data-Intensive Applications" concepts.
  • Take-home exercises: ~4 hours typical. Always deliver something you're proud of, with a clear README.
  • Live-coding pair programming: think aloud, communicate your reasoning, ask clarifying questions.

Behavioural interviews

Use the STAR format: Situation, Task, Action, Result. Prepare 8–10 stories mapped to common competencies: leadership, conflict resolution, prioritisation, failure, cross-functional collaboration, innovation, delivery under pressure. One story often fits multiple competencies — pick the angle that answers the specific question.

Body language on video

  • Look into the camera when speaking, not at the screen (feels like eye contact)
  • Smile when appropriate
  • Nod occasionally to acknowledge
  • Avoid glancing at your phone or second screen
  • Sit upright, hands visible, relaxed posture
  • Don't rush — pause after interviewer finishes speaking

Your questions for them

Have 5–8 prepared, genuine questions. Examples that consistently work:

  • What does success look like in the first 90 days?
  • Walk me through a typical day for someone in this role.
  • How does the team handle timezone differences?
  • What's the biggest challenge facing the team right now?
  • How are decisions made in this team?
  • What does a performance review look like?
  • How are promotions and raises handled?
  • What made you join the company?

The follow-up

Within 24 hours, send a brief thank-you note. Reference something specific from the conversation. Reiterate interest. 3–5 sentences. If a technical take-home was assigned, set expectations for when you'll deliver.

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