Interview Tips for someone with 15 plus years of experience

The Core Problem to Avoid

After 15–20 years, candidates don’t get rejected for lack of knowledge.

They get rejected for:
👉 under-positioning themselves

Meaning:

  • Sounding like a mid-level executor
  • Not showing ownership
  • Talking tasks instead of impact

1. Own the conversation from the first minute

Mistake:

  • “I’m not sure who reached out…”

Why it hurts:

Signals:

  • Lack of awareness
  • Passive mindset

Better:

Start with clarity and control:

“I was approached regarding a BA role in insurance, and based on my experience in policy admin and data projects, I believe I align well. Happy to walk you through my background.”

👉 Senior candidates anchor the conversation early


2. Never lead with your gaps

Mistake:

  • “I haven’t worked in reinsurance”
  • “Not sure”

Why it hurts:

You are telling them why NOT to hire you

Better approach:

👉 Strength → Then gap → Then confidence

“I’ve worked extensively in insurance systems and data, including reinsurance-related flows. While I haven’t worked exclusively on reinsurance platforms, I understand the concepts and can ramp up quickly.”

👉 You control the narrative—not your limitations


3. Stop explaining everything—start structuring answers

Mistake:

  • Long, wandering answers
  • No clear point

Why it hurts:

At senior level:
👉 Clarity = competence

Use this structure every time:

Context → Role → Action → Outcome

If you miss this:
👉 You sound experienced but not sharp


4. Don’t say “I don’t know” the wrong way

Mistake:

  • “Not sure”
  • “I’m assuming”

Why it hurts:

Shows lack of confidence, not just lack of knowledge

Better:

“I haven’t worked directly on that, but based on my understanding…”

Then reason it out.

👉 Senior people are judged on thinking ability, not just answers


5. Don’t trivialize your learning curve

Mistake:

  • “I can learn it in 1 day”

Why it hurts:

Sounds unrealistic and junior

Better:

“Given my experience in similar domains, I’m confident I can ramp up quickly and contribute meaningfully.”

👉 Show confidence, not overconfidence


6. Speak like a senior, not a task executor

Mistake:

  • Talking about:
    • Jira tickets
    • User stories
    • Templates

Why it hurts:

That’s execution-level language

Upgrade your language:

Instead of:

“I created Jira tickets”

Say:

“I drove requirement breakdown and ensured clarity across development and QA teams”

👉 Same work, different positioning


7. Show decision-making, not just involvement

Mistake:

  • “I worked on…”
  • “I was involved in…”

Why it hurts:

Sounds like support role

Better:

“I led…”
“I owned…”
“I was responsible for…”

👉 After 20 years, you are expected to drive, not assist


8. Avoid generic textbook answers

Mistake:

  • “Agile is flexible…”
  • “We work in sprints…”

Why it hurts:

Sounds rehearsed and shallow

Better:

“In Agile, my focus is ensuring clear user stories and acceptance criteria so dev and QA don’t lose time in rework.”

👉 Practical answers > textbook definitions


9. Handle domain gaps strategically

If you lack experience in a specific area:

Don’t:

  • Apologize
  • Over-explain
  • Panic

Do:

  • Map your experience
  • Show transferability

👉 “I haven’t done X directly, but I’ve done A, B, C which are closely related”


10. Be crisp—brevity is power

Mistake:

  • Talking too much
  • Trying to prove everything

Why it hurts:

Senior people are expected to:
👉 Communicate clearly under time pressure

Rule:

  • 2–3 minutes per answer
  • Then stop

One Powerful Mindset Shift

Most candidates with 20 years think:

“Let me explain everything I’ve done”

That’s wrong.

You should think:

“Let me show why I am worth hiring in 30 minutes”


Final Truth

At this level:

  • Your experience gets you the interview
  • Your communication gets you the job

If you want, I can help you turn this into a very short checklist (like 5 rules) that he can quickly review before every interview.

Empowering Role Models: Inspirational Figures to Guide Your Career Journey

  • Elon Musk – CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, known for his innovations in the electric car industry and space exploration.
  • Oprah Winfrey – Media mogul, television host, producer, and philanthropist, recognized for her influential talk show and media empire.
  • Cristiano Ronaldo – Professional soccer player, widely regarded as one of the greatest footballers of all time, with a massive global fan base.
  • Angela Merkel – Former Chancellor of Germany, a prominent political figure known for her leadership in European politics.
  • Beyoncé – Singer, songwriter, actress, and businesswoman, renowned for her music, influence on pop culture, and advocacy for social issues.
  • Jeff Bezos – Founder and former CEO of Amazon, one of the world’s wealthiest individuals and a key figure in the expansion of e-commerce.
  • Dr. Anthony Fauci – Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), a leading immunologist and prominent figure in public health, particularly during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Jack Ma – Co-founder of Alibaba Group, a Chinese business magnate, investor, and philanthropist, known for his contributions to e-commerce and technology.
  • Serena Williams – Professional tennis player, considered one of the greatest athletes of all time, with numerous Grand Slam titles and a significant impact on the sport.
  • Malala Yousafzai – Pakistani activist for female education and the youngest Nobel Prize laureate, known for her advocacy for girls’ rights to education after surviving an assassination attempt by the Taliban.