The camera doesn't need performance. It needs calm, human structure. Build your stories, practise your timing, and submit without sounding scripted.
Smart, professional, neat. Solid colours work better on camera than patterns. Avoid very bright white. Dress as you would for an in-person assessment day.
Tick each item before recording.
Most candidates think video interviews are about answers. They aren't. They are about behaviour — how you think, how you prioritise, how you structure, and how you stay controlled under mild pressure.
Nothing feels difficult in a video interview. The questions are not unexpected. The time pressure is mild. You're in your own home. This is exactly why most candidates lose marks without realising it.
Candidates who score well: pause before speaking, choose a structure before they begin, speak in short complete sentences, maintain a steady unhurried pace, and stay calm even when an answer feels uncertain.
Your overall score reflects the weakest area — not just the strongest. The goal is consistency, not peaks.
Scenario: A passenger becomes frustrated during a delay and starts raising their voice.
Most candidates don't fail completely. They drift.
Clarity drops slightly. Pace increases. Structure weakens. Priorities become unclear. This is what costs the offer — and most candidates never see it happening because nothing felt wrong in the moment.
Understanding this gap is the single most useful shift you can make before your interview. You are not being judged on what you say. You are being judged on how you say it.
Run through these after every recorded answer. If any of these drift, that is where to focus.
Unlike STAR, TAOR includes Reflection — the component that shows self-awareness and trainability. That's what separates a strong answer from a merely competent one.
1–2 sentences. Brief, clear, no drama. Set the scene and move on.
What you specifically did. Behaviour — not tasks. How you communicated, stayed calm, supported the person.
What changed. Brief and human. A visible shift — they relaxed, the situation resolved.
What it taught you. Most candidates miss this. A specific reflection scores far higher than a generic one.
Not testing what you'd do. Testing the order you'd do it in.
These are not scripts. They are tone examples — the register, the pace, the level of specificity. Notice how none of them try to impress. They demonstrate calm, structured behaviour.
You don't need 15 separate answers.
You need 8 strong stories you can adapt calmly.
Every question in a video interview maps to one of eight behaviour categories. Build one genuine TAOR story for each — with an opening sentence and a camera close — and you can answer anything they ask. Click any story to build it, see which questions it covers, and practise the matching scenario.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Write your story for this behaviour. Saves automatically. Aim for 60–90 seconds when spoken aloud.
Understanding delivery is not enough — it has to be trained deliberately. Repeat this drill across your 8 core stories to build the habits that score well under pressure.
For any behavioural answer, challenge yourself to deliver it in exactly four sentences. This forces clarity and cuts everything that isn't scoring.
After recording a practice answer, watch it back twice. Each pass scores something different.
Record an answer and listen back for these patterns. Each one lowers your Clarity or Emotional Control score without you realising.
One or two per answer. They signal behaviour clearly — but only when they feel natural.
If your interview is in less than 7 days, compress Days 1–2 into Day 1 and Days 3–4 into Day 2.
Read Stage 2 in full. Write one sentence summarising what you learned from each section.
Read Stage 3. Write out the five-step scenario structure and TAOR from memory. Build one example using each.
Build all 8 core stories in Stage 4. Day 3: Stories 1–4. Day 4: Stories 5–8.
Work through each scenario in Stage 4. Record a full five-step response for each. Score using the four-area grid.
Record a complete mock video interview. No pausing between questions. Watch the full recording back.
Fix the two weakest things from Day 6. Re-record both. Compare to Day 6.
Read your 8 stories once, calmly. Review the four scoring areas. Set your opening sentence. Sort your setup. Take one slow breath.
Warm first. Calm always.
30s prep to settle. 90s answer to train the timing discipline. Notes and confidence rating after each run.
The fastest way to internalise the difference between low and high answers. Take any scenario from Stage 3 and write two versions.
Most of these don't feel like problems in the moment. That's what makes them costly.
| What you do | What recruiters may hear |
|---|---|
| Reading from notes | This candidate may struggle to communicate naturally under pressure |
| Speaking too fast | Nerves may affect clarity and composure when things get difficult |
| Over-smiling constantly | Warmth may be performed rather than steady and genuine |
| Giving a perfect script | Rehearsed answer — unclear what the actual behaviour would be |
| Pausing calmly before speaking | Controlled thinking and composure under mild pressure |
| Giving one clear, specific example | Structured judgement — this candidate has prepared properly |
| Ending with reflection | Self-awareness and trainability — this candidate thinks about how they behave |
More targeted than the general phrasing library. These are video-specific — designed for the format.
The trigger is not the situation — it's the specific cue that made you act. Strong triggers show observation: "I noticed she kept glancing at the door and hadn't touched her drink."
Five weak answers with real problems. Diagnose each one, then rewrite it.
| Corporate language | Human language |
|---|---|
| "I utilised my communication skills" | "I kept my tone calm and listened carefully" |
| "I demonstrated leadership" | "I helped the group stay focused" |
| "I liaised with" | "I spoke to" |
| "I endeavoured to" | "I tried to" |
After a practice run, tick each item honestly.