"What Should We Know about You Thats Not on Your Resume?"

July 2024 · 4 minute read

Interviews can be stressful. You must simultaneously show you’re the best person for a job, evaluate a potential employer, and open yourself up to criticism. That’s a tricky mental course, but luckily your resume always provides a trusty map by which to navigate.

not on resume

Until the hiring manager asks, “What should we know about you that’s not on your resume?” That’s when many a mind goes blank.

You’ve spent so much energy constructing a succinct, yet informative resume, but now you have to cast it aside and hope an improvised answer makes you shine. Tricky? Yes. Impossible? Not if you’re prepared.

Oh, the thinks you can think

What should we know about you that’s not on your resume? is an open-ended question—that’s the challenge and the point. Hiring managers use this question to determine how your personality will fit within the company. Because you have freedom in your response, your answer offers a unique window into what you value and how you view yourself.

But such freedom can be paralyzing, so we recommend preparing a template for open-ended questions. Here’s one possibility:

The advantage to such templates is they can be used to answer many kinds of challenging interview questions.

Ordering off resume

Since your resume is one-page long, many of the qualities that make you you didn’t make the cut. This means you’ll have plenty of material to draw on. Some options to consider:
 

Things better left unsaid

Despite all your leeway, there are a couple of places you don’t want to go. They include:

On and off resume, preparation is key

What should we know about you that’s not on your resume? is one of those questions. Think “Tell me about yourself” or “Where do you see yourself in five years?” They’re difficult because they’re open ended, feel oddly invasive, and require you to boil down complex emotions and thoughts into concise responses.

Each one has its nuances, but the key to answering them successfully is to be prepared. Have a template. Write down a good response or two. Practice them before the interview. Even if hiring managers don’t ask you this exact question, chances are they’ll ask something similar. And you’ll be ready!

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