At the tech interview bootcamp [<a href="http://InterviewKickstart.com" rel="nofollow">http://InterviewKickstart.com</a>], here is how we think about it:<p>* The interviewer is looking to break the ice and also get to know what to ask you next.<p>* For you, it's an elevator pitch, and shouldn't take more than one or two minutes. Too short isn't good either.<p>* You can give an answer which falls into either of the three categories:<p>a) An answer that subtly sells yourself. Not blatantly, but subtly<p>b) An answer that leaves it neutral<p>c) An answer with which you shoot yourself in the foot<p>* The key is to prepare beforehand.<p>If you are <i></i>not<i></i> prepared, then there are high chances you'll ramble for a time that's too long or too short, and/or you'll pick words that shoot yourself in the foot. e.g. "... and that project I did, failed. Man, I should have coded faster". Not good.<p>Or, without preparation, you'll leave it neutral i.e. you'd have wasted the opportunity to impress the interviewer, or lead them into a direction you want them to go into.<p>You want to target the best outcome (a) above. To do that, best is to prepare with someone (a friend, mentor etc) and choose your words carefully. A good answer to that, has:<p>1. Focus: Based on the position you're interviewing for, talk about related work.<p>2. A hook or two: A good company you may have worked for, a good OSS project, a good school you went to, any stats on scale you've handled, anything that led to broader recognition etc.<p>3. End with what you're looking for<p>e.g.<p>1. "My name is Mia. I am a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon, specializing in Cloud Computing. I previously interned at Google and Microsoft. I'm looking for a fulltime role at a company that interfaces with hardware and software"<p>2. "Hi, I'm Praveen. I work as network protocol engineer at Ericsson. I have deep interest in the area and have authored two papers on it. I'm looking to branch out into application level engineering"<p>3. "Hi, I'm Mani. I'm a DBA by profession. I held Oracle certifications back in the day. My most recent experience has been with MongoDB in a 24/7 environment with a peak QPS of 25000. I am also very comfortable with managing MySQL and have managed a hybrid environment of 150 instances. I'm looking to go to a place which has a mix of NoSQL and SQL environments"