How I Went From My First Ever Interview to 4 Job Offers — Everything I Learned Along the Way
I have had a lot of interviews over the past two years. Some went great. Some crashed and burned. But every single one taught me something that made the next one better. Here is the full story, every interview, every mistake, every win, so you can skip the learning curve I had to go through the hard way. Interview 1 — IKO Glass Fiber | The One That Started Everything My very first interview ever. A materials engineering co-op at a glass fiber plant in South Carolina. I showed up dressed to the absolute maximum. Suit, gelled hair, clean shave, everything. When I met the interviewers, Jeff, a senior engineer in a Star Wars hoodie, and Sherrie from HR dressed plainly, they immediately noticed. Jeff actually commented on it. I told him I wanted to take it seriously. That moment set the tone for the entire interview. Before a single question was asked, they already knew I came with intention. Here is my honest take on dressing for interviews: always dress up more than you think you need to. Not because it guarantees you the job, but because it immediately communicates that you respect the opportunity. When someone comments on it, own it. Tell them exactly why you did it. The interview itself followed my resume. Jeff asked about my landscaping job. I told him I had done it every summer for five years, that I had gotten fast at it, and that I was used to working hard in brutal conditions. He asked about my factory job, which I had for two months, 12-hour shifts, working landscaping at the same time. I explained it plainly. He didn't say much, but I could tell it landed. Then he asked about my robotics club role as construction captain. I told him the story of building the arena obstacle from wood found under the building, coordinating with others to get it done under constraints. When he asked about my ceramics knowledge, I was honest; I had covered it in general materials classes but hadn't taken a dedicated ceramics course yet. When he asked about XRF spectroscopy, I talked about my lab experience at NCSU without pretending to know more than I did.