Tech interviews can feel like first dates with a quiz at the end. Nerves rise, sweat threatens, and many candidates assume the panel wants brilliance on demand. They do not. Recruiters say they look for clarity, curiosity and confidence. These are qualities plenty of applicants overlook.
Below, three tech-sector recruiters share what actually separates memorable candidates from the pack and how to apply those lessons in Canada’s hiring market.
Five recruiter-backed ways to stand out
- Do your homework, but skip the script
Recruiters say candidates who recite the “About” page sound rehearsed. You do not want to do that. Instead, arrive ready to link your skills to the company’s direction, not to deliver a memorised speech.
“My goals are simple: learn your background, your expectations and your energy,” says Meaghan Latella, Toronto-based recruiter and career coach. - Always ask thoughtful questions
Ending with “No, I think you covered everything” is a red flag. Former Meta recruiter Jenn Bouchard told Business Insider she worried when candidates had nothing to ask. Query team priorities, success metrics or a recent product launch; it shows genuine interest. - Use structure over sparkle
Canadian firm 2iResourcing lists rambling answers as a top interview error. Apply the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result) when describing past work. Clear narrative beats clever anecdotes. - Win trust in the first 30 seconds
Career coach Herman Ko notes that early-screen interviews often rely on quick impressions. Sit up, smile, and speak without reading notes. Authentic delivery signals confidence long before technical questions start. - Treat the meeting as a two-way evaluation
Interviews are mutual vetting sessions. Bring curiosity and professionalism, even humour. Latella reminds candidates: “I’m not here to interrogate. I’m here to learn about you.”
Why this approach works in Canada’s tech scene
Many domestic firms compete with US giants for talent. They value candidates who understand the local market, show prepared interest and communicate efficiently. Displaying energy, asking sharp questions and structuring answers prove you can collaborate across small teams and changing roadmaps, skills Canadian start-ups and scale-ups prize.
Remember: interviews test alignment more than raw intelligence. Understand the mission, ask smart questions, own your story and bring positive energy. Those straightforward moves put you ahead of most applicants long before the coding challenge begins.
And if you’re thinking of applying to roles, check out our article on highest paying tech jobs in canada to know what role benefits you.