Tips for Standing Out in Online Interviews - Creative Guide.

Online Architecture Interview Guide

Online architecture interviews are not easier than in-person interviews. They are just different. The best candidates remove friction before the call starts, so the practice can focus on their experience, portfolio and judgement.

This Architecture Social webinar with Will Ridgway, Jack Moran and Stephen Drew is useful because it covers the details candidates often underestimate: camera, sound, screen sharing, presentation rhythm, dress, confidence and follow-up.

Watch: how to interview online

Will Ridgway, Jack Moran and Stephen Drew cover the practical details that make an online architecture interview feel smoother and more professional.

Listen: online interview preparation

The audio version gives the full conversation around remote interviews, presentation, confidence, setup and how candidates can avoid avoidable mistakes.

You can also open the related Architecture Social podcast page.

Set up the call before you think about answers

A good answer can still land badly if the call is messy. Before the interview, test the basics and make sure you can move between your face, CV and portfolio without panicking.

  • Check the meeting link, platform and time zone before the day.
  • Test camera, microphone, internet and screen sharing.
  • Use a simple background and decent lighting.
  • Close distracting tabs and notifications.
  • Have a PDF portfolio open and ready, not buried in a folder.

How to answer on video

Video interviews reward structure. Keep answers shorter than you think, then invite detail if the interviewer wants more. A rambling answer feels even longer on a screen.

  • Start with the direct answer, then give the example.
  • Explain your role clearly on team projects.
  • Use project scale, stage and responsibility to anchor the story.
  • Pause before answering complex questions.
  • Look at the camera enough to feel present, but do not perform awkwardly.

Go deeper with Architecture Social

These related Architecture Social episodes add more context once you have the practical framework.

Listen next: what to do after an interview

This related episode helps with the follow-up stage after an interview, including timing, tone and how to stay professional.

You can also open the related Architecture Social podcast page.

How to present your portfolio online

Your portfolio should help the conversation, not become a slideshow the interviewer has to survive. Choose the work you want to discuss and make sure the file is easy to read at screen size.

  • Use a landscape PDF where possible.
  • Keep page numbers visible so people can follow you.
  • Practise the first three projects out loud.
  • Know which project proves technical ability, which proves design judgement and which proves responsibility.
  • Do not rely on tiny diagrams or dense text that nobody can read on a call.

Watch next: presenting documents online

If your interview depends on showing a CV, portfolio or other document, this related video is a useful practical add-on.

Run a 20-minute interview rehearsal

A short rehearsal can remove the avoidable problems that make online interviews feel clumsy.

  • Open the meeting link and test the platform.
  • Share your portfolio and practise moving between pages.
  • Answer three common questions out loud.
  • Check sound, lighting and camera position.
  • Prepare one smart question for the practice.

Common mistakes

  • Waiting until the call starts to test screen sharing.
  • Opening a huge portfolio file that loads slowly.
  • Giving long answers without a clear point.
  • Reading from notes so the call feels flat.
  • Forgetting to follow up properly after the interview.

Architecture Social view

Stephen’s recruiter view is that online interviews are won by clarity. A practice should leave the call understanding your level, your best evidence and why you would be useful in the role.

Next step

Watch or listen to the webinar, then use the interview practice tool, the interview questions guide and the portfolio guide before your next online interview.

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