Loading...
Prepare for portfolio walkthroughs, design reasoning, user research discussion, and collaboration with product and engineering. UX interviews usually include portfolio presentation, problem framing, design critique, research questions, and collaboration scenarios.
Portfolio storytelling, User-centered decision making, Cross-functional collaboration
Come prepared with stories that cover 3 different proof points, not one repeated example.
Pair this page with a live job description so your practice matches the actual role, company context, and likely follow-up questions.
These are the themes that tend to show up repeatedly in ux designer loops. Build examples that make your role, judgment, and outcomes easy to follow.
Your walkthrough needs to show problem definition, constraints, decisions, and what changed because of your work.
Interviewers look for evidence that your design choices came from users, context, and iteration rather than taste alone.
Strong answers show how you worked through constraints with PMs, engineers, and researchers.
These prompts are not scripts. Use them to pressure-test your stories, uncover weak spots, and make sure your examples fit the role.
Expect your project choices and process decisions to be challenged directly.
Interviewers want to hear how you used evidence and tradeoffs.
Use examples that show resilience and clarity when design work is challenged.
Choose two portfolio projects with different constraints and make your role unmistakably clear.
Practice a concise walkthrough that covers context, decision points, iteration, and impact.
Prepare one story about research shaping a design and one about constraints forcing a tradeoff.
Review how you explain visual decisions in terms of user goals, not personal preference.
Most role loops get stronger when you bring specific evidence instead of abstract claims.
This page is role-specific. The general guide covers STAR structure, common questions, remote interview setup, and follow-up basics.
Read the general guidePaste a real job posting into CareerCheck to surface likely interview themes, skill gaps, and the stories you should tighten before the loop starts.
If your search crosses adjacent roles, rehearse those loops too.
Prepare for prioritization, product sense, stakeholder management, and execution stories with real tradeoffs.
Focus on UI execution, performance, accessibility, and how you collaborate with design and product.
Prepare for requirement discovery, process mapping, data-backed recommendations, and translating between business and delivery teams.