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Title
Careers Service
Category
general
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8592ec13d0ca45e5bba0a4a207ce40e0
Source URL
https://www.careers.manchester.ac.uk/applicationsinterviews/interviews/types/str...
Parent URL
https://www.careers.manchester.ac.uk/options/skills/
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2026-03-23T10:43:54+00:00
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Careers Service

Source: https://www.careers.manchester.ac.uk/applicationsinterviews/interviews/types/strengthsrecruit/ Parent: https://www.careers.manchester.ac.uk/options/skills/

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Strengths Recruitment and Interviews

Strengths-based recruitment is increasingly popular with graduate employers and an approach that you may experience instead of a competency-based interview when you apply for a job. It is rooted in the idea that your Strengths are skills that you are not just good at, but that you find motivating and energising when you perform them. Strengths-based employers believe that if we work in roles that use our strengths, we perform better.

Some examples of strengths-based employers:

How can I get to know my Strengths?

Some recruiters use the words ‘skill’ and ‘strength’ to mean the same thing. However, Strengths in the context given above have been further defined by Cappfinity, a firm of talent consultants whose recruitment and development work is rooted in positive psychology. The performance + energy approach forms the basis of all their strengths assessments, and they have made a free version of their development tool, Strengths Profile, available online.

You can also keep an eye out for Understanding Your Strengths workshops run by the Careers Service using CareerConnect, or check out the last recorded session on our YouTube channel.

How does a Strengths Interview work?

Recruitment using a Strengths framework has to test you on your enjoyment of your work, rather than simply asking for examples of when you have done something well. This is the basis for a Strengths interview.

A company using this technique will normally tell you so beforehand, perhaps even providing a list of the core skills on which they will be testing you. Strengths interviewers need to gauge whether you enjoy using your skills. So as well as looking for examples of what you do well, in line with their chosen Strengths they will also look at your choice of language, facial expression, body language and sense of enthusiasm.

Strong candidates will give spontaneous answers using active language – they will lean in and smile when talking animatedly about what they enjoy. Weaker candidates will give short, contained answers, without enthusiasm for the task at hand. These are the cues that a Strengths interviewer will be looking out for.

The components of a Strengths interview can comprise:

How can I perform well in a Strengths Interview?

It is often said that you cannot prepare for a Strengths interview as you would for a competency one, but there are still things you can do:

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