Sales Interview Questions & Preparation
- The questions you will almost certainly face
- How to evidence your numbers credibly
- A prep framework, and the red flags to avoid
A sales interview is a sales meeting in disguise. The interviewer is the prospect, the role is the deal, and the way you handle the conversation is itself the demonstration of whether you can sell. Preparation is everything — not memorising scripts, but knowing your numbers, your stories and your motivation cold. This guide covers what interviewers are really assessing, the questions you will face, how to answer them, and the questions you should ask back.
In this guide
Behind every question sits one of a handful of judgements: Can you actually sell? Do you have a repeatable process, or do you just get lucky? Are you coachable and self-aware? Are you genuinely motivated, or just available? And will you fit the team and the way it sells? Strong candidates answer the question asked while also feeding these underlying judgements — every story you tell should quietly prove process, resilience or results.
Use the STAR framework for any “tell me about a time” question: briefly set the Situation and Task, spend most of your time on the Action you personally took, and always finish on a quantified Result. In sales, the result must carry a number — revenue, percentage of quota, ranking, deal size, cycle time. “I turned the territory around” is forgettable; “I grew it 34% in two quarters and finished first of nine reps” is hireable.
These probe whether your results are real and repeatable. Expect: “Walk me through your most important deal”, “How do you consistently hit target?”, “Describe your sales process from prospect to close”, and “Tell me about a deal you lost — what happened?” Answer with specifics and ownership. For the lost-deal question in particular, never blame the prospect, the price or the product — show what you learned and changed. Demonstrating a clear, deliberate process matters as much as the outcome; it tells the interviewer your wins will travel to their business.
You may be asked to sell something live — the classic “sell me this pen” — or to handle an objection or run a mock discovery call. The trap is to pitch features. The winning move is to ask questions first: understand the buyer’s need before you present, then connect your product to that specific need. Role-plays are not testing slickness; they are testing whether you discover before you pitch and stay composed under a little pressure.
Expect “Why sales?”, “Why this company?” and “How do you handle rejection?” These reward authenticity and homework. Have a genuine reason for choosing a sales career, specific knowledge of the company and role, and an honest, constructive answer on resilience — rejection is the daily reality of the job, and they need to know it does not derail you.
Bring your numbers. The single most powerful thing in a sales interview is evidence: quota attainment by year, your ranking on the team, biggest deals, average deal size, win rate. Have them written down and rehearsed. Candidates who can quantify their performance instantly stand out from those who speak only in generalities.
The questions scale with the seniority of the role. For an entry-level role — an SDR or BDR in tech, or a sales executive or graduate role elsewhere — the focus is activity, resilience and coachability — they are hiring potential and attitude. For an account executive or business development manager, it is pipeline generation, deal command and closing evidence. For an account manager, it is retention, growth and relationship judgement. For a sales director, the conversation moves to leadership, forecasting and how you build and scale a team. Pitch your examples at the level of the role you are interviewing for.
Strong candidates interview the company back — it signals confidence and commercial judgement. Ask what proportion of the team hit quota last year, how quota is set, what the ramp and onboarding look like, why the role is open, and what separates the top performers. The attainment question is especially revealing: it tells you whether the OTE is realistic. For more on reading the package, see our commission and OTE guide, and benchmark the pay against our 2026 salary guide.
The fastest ways to lose a sales interview: blaming others for losses, speaking only in generalities with no numbers, showing no curiosity about the business, failing to research the company, and being unable to articulate your own sales process. Avoid these and you are already ahead of most of the field. Pair your preparation with a CV that backs up your claims — our sales CV guide shows how to quantify it.
Know your numbers cold, prepare three or four STAR stories that prove process and results, research the company and role in depth, and ready a handful of sharp questions to ask back. Treat it exactly as you would prepare for an important sales meeting.
A mix of track-record questions (your best and worst deals, how you hit target), scenario or role-play questions (selling something live, handling objections), and motivation and fit questions (why sales, why this company, handling rejection).
Do not launch into features. Ask questions to understand what the buyer needs and how they currently solve it, then connect the product to that specific need. The exercise tests discovery and composure, not patter.
A record of your performance — quota attainment, rankings, key deals — and any tangible evidence such as a brag sheet, references or a 30-60-90 day plan if appropriate. Concrete proof of results is your strongest asset.
Ask what percentage of the team hits quota, how targets are set, what onboarding and ramp look like, why the role is open, and what makes the top performers successful. These show commercial judgement and help you assess the role honestly.
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