Interview Q&A

Technical interview Q&A plus 100+ career & HR questions—notice period, salary negotiation, resume, LinkedIn, freelancing, AI careers, and behavioral interviews with detailed, real-world answers.

Online interview practice exams

40 MCQs per stack · 80% pass · certificate + per-question feedback

All quizzes

ADO.NET — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

ASP.NET Core MVC — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

ASP.NET Core — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

ASP.NET Web API — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Agile & Scrum — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Angular — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Azure DevOps — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

C# Coding Interview — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

C# Collections — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

C# OOP — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Design Patterns & SOLID — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Entity Framework Core — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Gang of Four Patterns — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Git & GitHub — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

JavaScript — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

LINQ — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Managerial Interview — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Microservices — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Microsoft Azure — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Node.js — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

React.js — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

SQL & Databases — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Unit Testing — Interview Practice Exam

40 questions · 60 min · Pass 80%

Start practice exam

Popular tracks

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: An optimized LinkedIn profile clearly communicates who you help, what you are good at, and why someone should contact you. Treat it like a landing page for recruiters and hiring managers. Clarity in headline, About, and Featured section drives most inbound opportunities.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Write a headline that combines role, stack, and business value in one line.
  2. Update About section with a concise story and measurable achievements.
  3. Pin 2 to 3 strong projects in Featured with proof links.
  4. Use experience bullets with outcome metrics instead of generic responsibilities.
  5. Add role-relevant skills and request endorsements from credible peers.
  6. Turn on open-to-work preferences with clear location and role filters.

Real-world example

Priya from TCS had a LinkedIn profile with basic title and no project proof. Rahul at Razorpay helped her rewrite the headline, About section, and Featured links with backend reliability outcomes. She also updated skills and experience bullets with real metrics. Within a month, recruiter messages increased and she received referral requests.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Using a headline like "seeking opportunities" without role signal.
  • Leaving About section empty or extremely generic.
  • Adding too many unrelated skills that dilute profile focus.
  • Ignoring profile updates for months during active job search.

Toolliyo resources

Headline and About section decide first impressions.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Recruiter inbound increases when your profile matches search filters and your activity signals expertise. Visibility alone is not enough; relevance and consistency matter. Optimize for discoverability, then maintain credibility through useful posts and engagement.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Set clear role intent in headline and open-to-work settings.
  2. Use recruiter keywords in About, Skills, and recent experience bullets.
  3. Publish one role-relevant post weekly showing practical insights.
  4. Comment meaningfully on hiring posts from recruiters and engineering leaders.
  5. Respond quickly and professionally to inbound recruiter messages.
  6. Track which profile updates increase recruiter views and iterate monthly.

Real-world example

Ananya wanted recruiter outreach while working at Infosys but her profile looked static. Vikram from Freshworks helped her add relevant keywords and post weekly backend scaling notes. She began engaging on recruiter job posts with concise technical comments. In six weeks, she started receiving higher-quality inbound opportunities.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Waiting for inbound without optimizing profile searchability.
  • Posting motivational quotes unrelated to target role.
  • Ignoring recruiter messages for several days.
  • Sending connection requests without context.
Searchability + credibility = recruiter inbound.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Referrals come from trust, not cold asks. Build context through relevant engagement and then ask for referral with a concise, role-specific message. Make it easy for the referrer by sharing resume, job link, and fit summary.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Identify employees in target companies working in teams related to your role.
  2. Engage with their posts meaningfully before sending any request.
  3. Send a short intro with your role fit and one measurable credential.
  4. Share job ID, tailored resume, and why you are a strong match.
  5. Follow up once politely if there is no response in 3 to 4 days.
  6. Thank referrers and update them on interview progress.

Real-world example

Neha targeted a data platform role at Zoho and wanted a referral from someone on the team. Instead of asking directly, she engaged with Arjun’s architecture posts for two weeks with thoughtful comments. Then she sent a concise referral request with JD link and tailored resume. Arjun referred her, and she moved to final rounds quickly.

What to say / email template

Hi [Name], I have been following your posts on [topic] and found your insights on [specific point] very useful. I am applying for [Role] at [Company] (Job ID: [ID]). I have [X years/project evidence] in [relevant stack] and have attached a tailored resume. If you feel my profile is a fit, I would be grateful for a referral.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Asking for referral in the first message with no context.
  • Sending generic mass referral templates to many people.
  • Not tailoring resume for the specific role before asking.
  • Failing to acknowledge and thank people who help.
Earn trust first, request referral second.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: A good headline is specific, searchable, and value-oriented. It should tell recruiters your role, key stack, and impact area in one scan. Avoid vague labels and use terms people actually search for.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Start with role title, for example Backend Engineer, Data Analyst, or Product Designer.
  2. Add 2 to 3 high-signal technologies or domain keywords.
  3. Include one value phrase such as "improving API reliability" or "driving conversion."
  4. Keep character count concise so entire headline is visible on mobile.
  5. Test two versions for a week each and compare profile view trend.
  6. Update headline whenever your role focus changes significantly.

Real-world example

Karan’s headline said "Engineer at Razorpay," which did not show specialization. Isha from PhonePe helped him rewrite it to include backend stack and payments reliability focus. He noticed better profile views from relevant recruiters in fintech. The headline change improved profile discoverability within days.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Using only company name with no skill or role context.
  • Stuffing too many buzzwords that reduce readability.
  • Using emojis heavily in technical-professional profiles.
  • Never revisiting headline after career direction changes.
Headline should answer: what do you do and for whom?
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Your About section should read like a short professional narrative, not a resume copy. Include your current focus, major outcomes, and what opportunities you are open to. A strong About section improves recruiter confidence before they even open your resume.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Open with your current role focus and domain in one strong sentence.
  2. Add 2 to 3 notable achievements with measurable impact.
  3. Mention key technologies, industries, or customer problems you solve.
  4. Include collaboration style or leadership strengths if relevant to your level.
  5. End with the type of roles or projects you are interested in.
  6. Keep it readable with short paragraphs and no buzzword overload.

Real-world example

Meera’s About section at Freshworks was copied from her resume and sounded flat. Rohit from CRED helped her write a concise narrative around customer support automation and delivery outcomes. She added one line about roles she was exploring next. Recruiters began sending role-relevant messages instead of generic outreach.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Writing a long paragraph with no structure.
  • Listing generic traits instead of outcomes.
  • Copying resume bullet points verbatim.
  • Not indicating target role direction.
Narrative clarity in About section builds trust quickly.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Follower growth comes from consistent, useful, and niche-focused content. You do not need virality every time; repeat value compounds over months. Build authority by teaching what you practice in real projects.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Pick one content niche aligned with your professional positioning.
  2. Create a weekly posting system with 2 to 3 repeatable post formats.
  3. Share implementation learnings, failures, and practical frameworks.
  4. Engage in comments for the first 30 minutes after posting.
  5. Collaborate with peers through co-posts, discussion threads, or short interviews.
  6. Track which topics bring profile views, saves, and inbound conversations.

Real-world example

Priya from Zoho began posting random career quotes and saw little traction. Rahul suggested she focus on backend scaling lessons and production incidents resolved each week. She maintained that niche for three months and responded thoughtfully to comments. Her follower count grew steadily and so did recruiter DMs.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Changing niche every week and confusing audience.
  • Posting only when job searching urgently.
  • Ignoring comments and missing relationship-building opportunities.
  • Copying viral post styles without personal insight.
Consistency beats occasional viral spikes.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Viral posts are usually clear, relatable, and insight-rich with strong hooks. You cannot guarantee virality, but you can improve probability with audience relevance and structured storytelling. Focus on useful depth first, then optimize packaging.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Start with a hook that states a surprising result or hard-earned lesson.
  2. Use short paragraphs and one clear core message per post.
  3. Add specific example, process, and takeaway instead of vague motivation.
  4. Close with a question that invites informed discussion.
  5. Post at times when your target audience is active and available.
  6. Repurpose high-performing post ideas into deeper follow-up threads.

Real-world example

Ananya posted long generic updates and got very low engagement. Vikram helped her rewrite one post around a real incident where she fixed a production issue in a payment workflow. She added a clear lesson and one practical checklist at the end. That post was widely shared and brought quality connection requests from engineering leads.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Writing clickbait hooks with no actual value in body.
  • Using long dense blocks that reduce readability.
  • Copying another creator’s style line-by-line.
  • Posting once and expecting instant personal brand growth.
Useful specificity creates share-worthy posts.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Becoming a Top Voice is a long game of consistent expertise, constructive engagement, and community trust. It is not only about posting frequency but about quality and relevance over time. Build authority in one domain before expanding topics.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Choose a niche where you have authentic, repeatable expertise.
  2. Publish high-value educational posts and practical frameworks regularly.
  3. Contribute thoughtful comments on major discussions in your domain.
  4. Participate in newsletters, live sessions, or collaborative expert threads.
  5. Maintain professional consistency in tone and evidence quality.
  6. Track audience trust indicators like saves, reposts, and inbound expert invites.

Real-world example

Neha wanted to build authority in AI operations while at CRED. Arjun from Flipkart advised her to focus only on one niche and publish implementation-led content for six months. She consistently shared deployment lessons, evaluation pitfalls, and practical checklists. Her network began recognizing her as a go-to expert and her opportunities expanded.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Chasing titles instead of delivering audience value.
  • Posting broad opinions without practical proof.
  • Switching persona frequently and confusing followers.
  • Ignoring community interaction and only broadcasting.
Authority is earned through repeated useful contributions.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Personal brand is the intersection of your expertise, values, and visible work. It grows when people consistently associate your name with a specific problem you solve well. Brand strength depends on trust built over repeated outcomes and communication quality.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Define your core positioning: who you help, how, and with what differentiator.
  2. Align profile messaging, resume narrative, and content themes around that positioning.
  3. Publish proof-of-work consistently through case studies and project breakdowns.
  4. Build relationships with peers, mentors, and community leaders in your niche.
  5. Speak at meetups, write threads, or mentor publicly to strengthen trust signals.
  6. Review quarterly whether your brand attracts the opportunities you want.

Real-world example

Karan at TCS wanted to stand out in cloud security roles. Isha from Razorpay helped him focus his profile and content on one theme: practical cloud hardening patterns. He shared real lessons from labs and internal implementations over several months. His brand became identifiable, and he started getting targeted speaking and hiring invitations.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Trying to be known for too many unrelated topics.
  • Creating content with no real project backing.
  • Measuring only follower count and ignoring opportunity quality.
  • Stopping visibility efforts once one job is secured.

Toolliyo resources

Your brand is what people trust you for.
Permalink

LinkedIn & Personal Brand Career & HR Interview Guide · LinkedIn & Personal Brand

Short answer: Recruiters reach out when your profile signals clear fit and low hiring risk. Make your profile easy to search, easy to validate, and easy to contact. Small optimizations in visibility and response quality compound quickly.

Step-by-step approach

  1. Set role intent clearly in headline and open-to-work preferences.
  2. Use recruiter-friendly keywords in key profile sections.
  3. Show proof through featured projects, certifications, and measurable outcomes.
  4. Engage with recruiter posts and hiring updates in your domain.
  5. Keep response time fast and communication professional when messaged.
  6. Refresh profile monthly based on roles you want to attract.

Real-world example

Meera from Infosys wanted recruiter attention for product analyst roles. Rohit at Freshworks helped her optimize skills, About section, and featured dashboard projects with business metrics. She also began commenting on relevant hiring posts from analytics recruiters. Recruiter outreach quality improved within one month.

Mistakes to avoid

  • Leaving contact and preference settings incomplete.
  • Ignoring profile SEO and using low-signal wording.
  • Showing no proof links despite claiming strong skills.
  • Replying late and losing recruiter momentum.

Toolliyo resources

Recruiter attraction is mostly profile clarity + responsiveness.
Permalink
Toolliyo Assistant
Ask about tutorials, ebooks, training, pricing, mentor services, and support. I use public site content only—not admin or internal tools.

care@toolliyo.com

Need callback? Share your details