The Best Way to Organize Your Interview Prep Notes (So You Actually Use Them)
You've prepped for interviews before. You've written STAR answers, researched companies, and practiced common questions. But here's the problem: where did all of that prep go?
If the answer is "scattered across three Google Docs, a Notes app, and a Word document I can't find," you're not alone. Most job seekers lose 80% of their interview prep work between job searches because they never organize it properly.
The Cost of Disorganized Interview Prep
Every time you start a new job search, disorganized prep means:
- Re-doing work you've already done. You wrote a great answer about leading a difficult project, but you can't find it.
- Wasting time searching. You know you saved company research somewhere, but where?
- Missing connections. That project you documented last year is the perfect answer for today's question, but you forgot about it.
- Increased anxiety. Walking into an interview knowing your prep is scattered and incomplete is stressful.
The Five Categories of Interview Prep
Everything you need to store falls into five categories:
1. Questions & Answers
The core of your prep: interview questions paired with your best answers.
What to capture:
- The question as asked
- Your answer in STAR format (for behavioral questions)
- Where you encountered it (which company, which round)
- How it went (did the interviewer respond well?)
- Tags: behavioral, technical, situational, case study
2. STAR-Format Examples
Standalone career stories formatted as Situation → Task → Action → Result. These are reusable building blocks you can adapt to many different questions.
What to capture:
- A descriptive title (e.g., "Led emergency database migration under 24-hour deadline")
- The full STAR narrative
- Tags: leadership, conflict, failure, innovation, etc.
- Skills demonstrated
3. Projects & Accomplishments
Detailed records of significant projects and achievements. These are the raw material for your STAR stories.
What to capture:
- Project name and dates
- Your role and the team size
- The problem you were solving
- What you specifically did
- Quantifiable results (revenue, users, performance metrics)
- Technologies or methodologies used
- Challenges and how you overcame them
4. Company-Specific Research
Notes specific to each company you're interviewing with.
What to capture:
- Company values and culture notes
- Questions specific to this company (from Glassdoor, etc.)
- Answers tailored to this company's values
- Questions to ask the interviewer
- Interviewer research (LinkedIn profiles, published talks)
5. Templates & Frameworks
Reusable structures you rely on.
What to capture:
- Your "Tell me about yourself" template
- Your "Why this company?" template
- Salary negotiation talking points
- Thank-you email templates
Choosing the Right Organization System
The best system is one you'll actually use. Here's how common tools compare:
Spreadsheets (Google Sheets, Excel)
- ✅ Flexible, free
- ❌ Hard to search, terrible for long-form answers, clunky on mobile
- Verdict: Okay for tracking questions, bad for storing answers
Documents (Google Docs, Word)
- ✅ Good for writing long answers
- ❌ No tagging, slow search across multiple docs, gets messy fast
- Verdict: Fine for a few answers, breaks down at scale
Note-Taking Apps (Notion, Obsidian)
- ✅ Flexible, supports tagging
- ❌ Requires significant setup, not purpose-built for interview prep
- Verdict: Workable if you invest the time to build a custom system
Purpose-Built Tools (Interview Answer Bank)
- ✅ Designed specifically for interview prep
- ✅ Native support for questions, answers, STAR examples, projects, and company notes
- ✅ Instant full-text search across everything
- ✅ Tagging and categorization built in
- ✅ Bulk import from existing Word docs and PDFs
- ✅ Flag questions likely for your next interview
- Verdict: The most efficient option if interview prep is a priority
Setting Up Your System (30-Minute Quickstart)
No matter which tool you choose, here's how to get organized in 30 minutes:
Step 1: Gather Everything (10 Minutes)
Pull together all your existing prep materials — old Google Docs, Word files, notes, emails to yourself, bookmarked articles.
Step 2: Sort by Category (10 Minutes)
Organize everything into the five categories above. Don't worry about perfecting anything yet.
Step 3: Tag the Top 10 (10 Minutes)
Identify your 10 strongest stories and tag them by theme (leadership, conflict, etc.). These are your go-to answers.
Step 4: Maintain the Habit
After every interview, add new questions, refine answers, and update your notes. After every major project at work, write it up while details are fresh. This is what turns a one-time exercise into a career-long advantage.
The Compounding Effect
Here's what most people miss: interview prep should compound over your career. Every interview you do generates new questions, new stories, and new insights. If you capture them in an organized system, each job search gets easier.
With Interview Answer Bank, this is effortless. Store unlimited questions and answers, organize them with tags, track your projects and examples, and search everything instantly. Import your existing prep documents in bulk and start with everything in one place. At $29 for lifetime access, it's an investment that pays off every time you interview — whether that's next month or five years from now.
The candidates who land the best offers aren't necessarily the most qualified. They're the most prepared. And preparation starts with organization.
Keep Reading
- Build an Interview Prep System That Actually Works — Take your organized notes and turn them into a repeatable interview prep system.
- How to Structure STAR Answers That Actually Land Offers — Learn the STAR format to make sure every answer in your bank is structured for maximum impact.
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