Showing 1027 prompts
Prepare a 30-60-90 Day Plan to Impress in an Interview
You are a job search strategy coach. I am interviewing for [JOB_TITLE] at [COMPANY_NAME] and want to bring a 30-60-90 day plan to demonstrate initiative and strategic thinking. Here is what I know about the role and company: [ROLE_AND_COMPANY_CONTEXT]. Build a compelling 30-60-90 day plan with: Day 1–30 (learn and listen), Day 31–60 (contribute and plan), Day 61–90 (lead and deliver). Include 3 specific actions per phase and one measurable deliverable I commit to by Day 90.
Describe Your Management Style in an Interview
Act as an executive interview coach. I am interviewing for a management role and will be asked: 'How would you describe your management style?' My authentic approach to managing people is [MY_MANAGEMENT_APPROACH]. Write a 90-second answer that: describes my style in concrete, specific terms (not generic buzzwords), includes a brief real example of it in action, acknowledges that I adapt my style to different people and situations, and connects it to the outcomes I consistently get from teams.
Answer 'Why Do You Want to Work Here?' Specifically
You are an interview preparation coach. I am interviewing at [COMPANY_NAME] for [JOB_TITLE] and need to answer 'Why do you want to work here?' in a way that is specific, genuine, and impressive. Here is what I genuinely find compelling about this company: [GENUINE_REASONS]. Here is my research on the company: [COMPANY_RESEARCH]. Write a 60-second answer that: goes beyond the obvious (great company, great products), connects their specific mission or direction to my own career motivations, and includes one company detail that shows I have done real research.
Handle Being Overqualified in an Interview
Act as an interview coach for overqualified candidates. I am applying for [TARGET_ROLE] which is below my previous level of [PREVIOUS_LEVEL] because [MY_REASON]. The interviewer is likely to ask why I am applying for a lower role or worry I will leave quickly. Write a proactive, confident answer that: addresses the concern before it is raised, reframes my experience as an advantage not an overqualification problem, explains my genuine motivation for this specific role, and commits to the company in a credible way.
Prepare for a Video or Remote Interview
You are a virtual interview specialist. I have an important video interview for [JOB_TITLE] at [COMPANY_NAME] on [PLATFORM] in [DAYS_AWAY] days. Give me a complete video interview preparation checklist covering: technical setup and testing, background and lighting, eye contact and camera awareness, pacing and energy on video, what to do if there is a technical glitch mid-interview, and the 3 specific differences between a video interview and in-person that most candidates underestimate. Also write an emergency script if audio cuts out.
Build a Target Company Hit List for Your Job Search
Act as a job search targeting strategist. I am looking for a [TARGET_ROLE] in [INDUSTRY] and I want to build a list of 20 target companies that would be a great fit for my background and goals. My criteria are: [COMPANY_CRITERIA] (e.g. size, growth stage, culture type, mission). For each company category I specify, suggest 4–5 companies with a one-line reason why they fit my criteria. Also suggest where to research each company deeply before applying.
Manage Rejection and Maintain Job Search Momentum
You are a job search resilience coach. I have been searching for [JOB_TITLE] for [DURATION] and have had [NUMBER_OF_REJECTIONS] rejections. I am starting to feel [EMOTIONAL_STATE] and my motivation is dropping. Give me: a structured debrief process to extract learning from each rejection, 3 mindset reframes to maintain confidence, a daily job search routine that prevents burnout, and a set of leading indicators (not just applications sent) that show my search is progressing even before offers arrive.
Prepare for a Strengths-Based Interview
Act as a strengths-based interview coach. I have an interview at [COMPANY_NAME] that uses a strengths-based format rather than competency-based. In this format they ask questions like 'What energises you?' or 'When do you feel most like yourself at work?' Here is my genuine profile: [STRENGTHS_PROFILE]. Prepare me for the top 8 strengths-based questions I am likely to be asked, explain the difference in how to answer them vs STAR-based questions, and write a sample answer for each that is honest and enthusiastic.
Identify Red Flags in a Job Description
You are a savvy job search advisor. Here is a job description I am considering: [JD_TEXT]. Analyse it for red flags that indicate a toxic culture, unrealistic expectations, poor management, or a role that will burn me out. Look for signals in: the language used, scope vs seniority level, urgency language, vague compensation, and anything that seems off. List the red flags you find, explain what each one signals, and give me 3 questions to ask in the interview to probe each concern.
Write a Compelling LinkedIn 'Open to Work' Message
Act as a LinkedIn job search strategist. I want to let my network know I am open to new opportunities without triggering anxiety at my current employer. I am looking for [TARGET_ROLE] in [INDUSTRY]. Write a LinkedIn post (under 150 words) that: signals availability without desperation, highlights my value and what I am looking for, makes it easy for people to refer me, and feels like a confident career move rather than a distress signal. Also advise whether to use the 'Open to Work' badge and how to set it to recruiter-only visibility.
Apply for a Role You Are Underqualified For
You are a bold job search strategist. I want to apply for [JOB_TITLE] at [COMPANY_NAME] even though I meet only [PERCENTAGE]% of the listed requirements. Here is what I have: [MY_QUALIFICATIONS]. Here is what I lack: [MISSING_QUALIFICATIONS]. Help me build a case for why I should apply anyway: write a cover letter that leads with my strongest match points, addresses my gaps proactively, and makes a compelling argument for why potential and drive matter as much as experience. Also coach me on what to say if asked about the gaps in the interview.
Apply for a Role at a Startup or Early-Stage Company
Act as a startup hiring specialist. I am applying for [JOB_TITLE] at [STARTUP_NAME], an early-stage company. I come from a corporate background at [PREVIOUS_COMPANY_TYPE]. Write application materials that speak to what startups care about: bias to action, ownership mindset, ability to operate in ambiguity, and commercial impact without large resources. Rewrite my most relevant resume bullet points and cover letter intro to use startup-friendly language and eliminate corporate jargon.