You've read the guides, highlighted the "top 50 questions," and still don't feel ready. It's not the knowledge—it's how your answers will sound when someone is actually listening.
Socratify focuses on that moment. Short, repeatable reps where you practice thinking out loud.
Practice the conversation, not the script
Most first-job prep is a list of questions and model answers. Real interviews aren't like that. They wander. People follow up. They ask you to clarify.
Here, you rehearse those follow-ups. You get used to slowing down, explaining how you think, and noticing when you slip into vague answers—before it happens in front of a hiring manager.
Turn messy projects into solid stories
You might not have years of experience, but you have material: class projects, internships, part-time work. The hard part is turning that into stories that sound credible, not padded.
Frame each example simply—what the situation was, what you decided, and what changed. Learn to talk about mistakes without sounding defensive, and connect school work to actual business value.
A calm warm-up before the call
The night before an interview, another 20-page prep doc rarely helps. A ten-minute warm-up does.
Run through a few targeted questions, say your key stories out loud, and walk away knowing what you're ready to talk about. It's not about memorizing lines—it's about hearing your own thinking, so the actual conversation feels like a second take.

