What to do in the 10 minutes before a job interview
Parking lot, building lobby, or staring at the Zoom waiting-room logo. The reset itself takes about 10 minutes, so if you can, start 15 to 20 minutes before, leaving a few minutes to settle and walk in. If 10 minutes is all you have, take it. Here is what to do with the window you have.
Walk into the interview calm, clear, in control.
Reset before the interview →What should you do in the 10 minutes before a job interview?
Stop reviewing your resume. Stop rehearsing answers. Run the 10-minute reset, ideally starting 15 to 20 minutes before so you have a few minutes to settle: name the feeling, rate it 0-10, notice what the tightness looks like as an object (a clamp on your throat, a knot in your stomach, sometimes just a color), let it move further away until it feels separate from you, find what the feeling is teaching you, let the image dissolve, re-rate. Then walk in. The interviewer hires the version of you that is calm and clear, not the version cramming.
Almost everyone gets to the lobby already wound up. They re-read their resume for the eighth time, mentally re-rehearse the "tell me about yourself" answer, or scroll their phone to distract. None of those settle the body, and the body is what walks into the room.
Why last-minute review backfires
- It loads working memory. Cramming an extra fact at minute -8 actively pushes earlier prep out.
- It amplifies the nerves. Reviewing reminds you of the stakes, and your body reacts.
- It makes your answers sound rehearsed. The fresher the rehearsal, the more robotic it lands.
Your prep is done. These last minutes are not for adding more, they are for clearing the noise so the prep you already did can come through.
The 10-minute pre-interview reset
This is the same 7-step reset from the high-stakes moments guide, sized for an interview:
- Name the feeling. Tight. Cold. Spinning. One word. Rate it 0-10.
- Let it surface. Notice where it sits. Throat is common before interviews.
- Find the image. What does the tightness look like as an object? A clamp around your throat, a knot in your stomach, a hot band, a cold weight. Sometimes just a color. The image is what the feeling looks like, not the interviewer or the room.
- Create space from the image. Let it move further away until it feels separate from you. You are over here, watching it from over there.
- Find the gift. What is the feeling telling you? Usually: "slow down," "answer the actual question," "ask one question back."
- Let the image dissolve. Stop holding it.
- Re-rate. The number drops.
Do a free reset.
Less than 10 minutes. Overwhelm to clarity. No therapy, no journaling, no sharing.
Reset before the interview →FAQ
Where do I do this if the interview is on-site?
Parking lot, your car, a lobby corner, a restroom stall if needed. You only need a chair (or wall to lean on) and ideally 15 quiet minutes (10 for the reset, a few to transition before walking in). If 10 minutes is all you have, take it.
What if it is a video interview?
Even better. Start the reset 15 minutes before the call, in the room you will interview in, with the camera off. The reset itself takes about 10 minutes; the rest is buffer. Then turn the camera on and join.
Should I review my notes during the reset?
No. Set them aside. The reset works because you are not adding cognitive load. Your prep is already in there.
What if I am too nervous to focus on the steps?
That is exactly the case the reset is built for. Step 1 (name the feeling) costs nothing. Just start there. The protocol does the rest.
Will I lose the energy I need to seem enthusiastic?
No. The reset removes the noise, not the warmth. Enthusiasm is easier when you are not fighting your own throat.
Do a free reset.
Less than 10 minutes. Overwhelm to clarity.
Reset before the interview →