NEW YORK, March 26, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — After reviewing patterns across thousands of candidate sessions, LockedIn AI found that interview anxiety isn’t random — it spikes around the same handful of questions, and it disproportionately punishes the candidates who prepared the most.
There’s a moment in almost every job interview where the room gets a little quieter, the candidate’s posture stiffens, and whatever confidence they walked in with starts to crack. It usually happens right after one of five questions. According to a JDP report cited by StandOut CV, 93% of people have experienced interview-related anxiety — and 41% said their biggest fear is being unable to answer a difficult question. Not being unqualified. Not showing up late. Just freezing when the moment matters most.
The Five Questions Candidates Dread Most
Ask anyone who’s sat through a panel interview and they’ll tell you: it’s rarely the technical questions that break you. It’s the open-ended, deceptively simple ones that feel like traps.
“Tell me about yourself.” It should be the easiest question in the room — after all, who knows you better than you? But without structure, most candidates either ramble through their entire resume or give a vague answer. The question demands a compelling 60-to-90-second pitch, delivered cold, with no warmup. For candidates already battling nerves, it sets a shaky tone for everything that follows.
“What is your greatest weakness?” This one has tormented job seekers for decades, and for good reason. It asks you to be vulnerable in a setting designed to make you look strong. According to Science of People, 44% of Americans admit to being dishonest during the hiring process — and this question is a big reason why. Candidates know the “perfectionist” answer is a cliché, but the alternative — real honesty — feels like handing the interviewer a reason to say no.
“Why are you leaving your current job?” For candidates who were laid off, this question carries a specific sting. Explaining your departure without sounding bitter, desperate, or damaged is a tightrope walk that many candidates don’t feel prepared for.
“Where do you see yourself in five years?” Hiring managers ask some version of this question almost during every interview. But in 2026, it feels almost absurd. How do you project five years into the future when AI is reshaping entire industries in five months? Candidates — especially younger ones — struggle because the honest answer (“I have no idea, and neither do you”) isn’t the one interviewers want to hear.
“Tell me about a time you failed.” Behavioral questions like this require candidates to recall a specific, structured story under pressure. The STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result) is the standard advice, but executing it in real time while managing anxiety is a different skill entirely. For candidates who haven’t rehearsed extensively, the silence that follows this question can feel like an eternity.
Why Preparation Alone Isn’t Solving This
The typical advice for interview anxiety is straightforward: research the company, practice your answers, do a mock interview. And it helps — to a point.
But here’s what the data reveals about the gap between preparation and performance. Indeed found that candidates typically spend 5 to 10 hours preparing for an interview. Despite that investment, only 24% of candidates say they’re happy with the interview process, according to JobScore. And interviewers aren’t impressed either — 47% of recruiters reject candidates simply for not knowing enough about the company, per TeamStage.
The problem isn’t that people don’t prepare. It’s that preparation doesn’t replicate the pressure. You can rehearse your “greatest weakness” answer fifty times in your bathroom mirror, but when a hiring manager locks eyes with you and asks it for real, your brain doesn’t always cooperate. You did the research and read the articles but still you walk in anxiously.
Enter AI: The Real-Time Safety Net
This is where a shift is happening — quietly, but fast.
A growing number of candidates aren’t just using AI to prepare before interviews. They’re using it during them. Fabric’s analysis of over 50,000 candidates found that AI-assisted interview behavior jumped from 15% to 35% between mid and late 2025.
The appeal is obvious. When a candidate freezes on “Tell me about a time you failed,” a real-time AI tool can surface a structured prompt based on the conversation context. It doesn’t answer for the candidate — it nudges them past the freeze.
Platforms like LockedIn AI have built entire products around this concept. Their LockedIn DUO feature goes further, pairing AI-powered transcription with a live human mentor who watches the interview in real time and provides strategic guidance — text, audio, or formatted code blocks for technical interviews — without ever joining the call.
It’s the difference between studying for a test and having a tutor whispering in your ear during it. Controversial? Absolutely. But for a generation that watched experienced professionals lose their jobs despite doing everything right, the line between “unfair advantage” and “reasonable support” is blurring fast.
The Deeper Question Employers Should Be Asking
The rise of AI interview tools isn’t just a candidate story. It’s a signal to employers that something about the process is broken.
If 93% of candidates experience anxiety, and the questions causing the most distress are the same five that have been asked for decades, perhaps the problem isn’t underprepared candidates. Perhaps it’s that the interview format itself rewards performance under artificial pressure rather than actual job competence.
The most anxiety-inducing questions like “Tell me about yourself”, don’t test whether someone can do the job. They test whether someone can talk about doing the job, under stress, to a stranger, in a format they rarely encounter outside of hiring.
That’s a communication skill, and it’s a valid one. But when it becomes the primary filter through which talent is assessed, companies risk losing qualified candidates who simply don’t perform well in a 45-minute high-pressure monologue.
AI tools aren’t going away. The candidates using them aren’t going to stop. And the questions that trigger the most anxiety aren’t changing anytime soon.
The real question is whether the hiring world will adapt to a reality where candidates have access to the same kind of real-time intelligence that companies have used for years — or whether it will keep pretending that a nervous answer to “What’s your greatest weakness?” tells you anything meaningful about how someone will actually perform on the job.
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