What the BDR interview looks like

BDR interviews are typically fast-paced and span 1–2 weeks. Unlike engineering roles, there’s a heavy emphasis on live role-plays and situational questions — companies want to see how you perform, not just how you describe past performance. Here’s what each stage looks like and what they’re testing.

  • Recruiter screen
    20–30 minutes. Background overview, motivation for sales, salary and OTE expectations. They’re filtering for energy, coachability, and genuine interest in a sales career — not just someone who couldn’t find another job.
  • Hiring manager interview
    30–45 minutes. Deep dive into your past experience, prospecting approach, and how you handle rejection. Expect situational questions about pipeline building and objection handling. They’re assessing your sales instincts and work ethic.
  • Mock cold call or role-play
    15–30 minutes. You’ll either do a live cold call simulation or a discovery call role-play with an interviewer acting as a prospect. This is the make-or-break round — they want to see your ability to think on your feet, handle pushback, and stay composed.
  • Team or cross-functional interview
    30 minutes. Often with an Account Executive or sales leader. Culture fit, teamwork, and how well you’d collaborate with the closing team. Some companies also test your written communication with a mock email exercise.

Role-specific questions you should expect

These are the questions that come up most often in BDR interviews. They test your prospecting methodology, objection handling, communication skills, and understanding of the sales development function. For each one, we’ve included what the interviewer is really evaluating and how to structure a strong answer.

Walk me through how you would research and prospect into a target account.
They’re testing your prospecting methodology, not just whether you know how to use LinkedIn.
Start with the company: understand their industry, recent news (funding, product launches, leadership changes), tech stack (if selling software), and likely pain points. Then identify the right personas — who owns the problem your product solves? Use LinkedIn Sales Navigator to find 3–5 contacts: the decision-maker, the champion (day-to-day user), and an internal coach if possible. Research each person: their role tenure, recent posts, shared connections. Build a personalized outreach sequence: a cold email that references a specific pain point or trigger event, a LinkedIn connection request with a note, and a phone call. Emphasize that generic templates don’t work — personalization based on research is what gets replies.
A prospect says “We’re happy with our current solution.” How do you respond?
Classic objection handling — they want to see you stay curious, not combative.
Don’t argue or pitch harder. Acknowledge their satisfaction: “That’s great to hear — sounds like you’ve found something that works for your team.” Then get curious: “Out of curiosity, when you last evaluated it, what were the top criteria you looked at?” or “If there were one thing you could improve about your current setup, what would it be?” The goal is to find a gap without being pushy. If there truly is no pain, respect that and move on — but leave the door open: “Totally understand. Would it be okay if I followed up in a few months? Things change, and I’d hate for you to miss something that could help.”
How do you prioritize your daily activities when you have 50+ accounts to work?
They’re evaluating your time management and ability to focus on high-impact work.
Tier your accounts by fit and intent signals. Tier 1 (5–10 accounts): best ICP fit, recent trigger events (hiring, funding, tech stack changes), or inbound interest. These get fully personalized outreach. Tier 2 (15–20 accounts): good fit but no immediate trigger. Semi-personalized sequences. Tier 3 (remaining): lighter touch, more templated. Structure your day in time blocks: morning for research and email (when open rates are highest), midday for phone calls (after people settle in), and late afternoon for LinkedIn outreach and CRM updates. Track your activity metrics (emails, calls, connections) but optimize for output metrics (meetings booked, qualified opportunities). Mention that you review and re-tier accounts weekly as new signals emerge.
Write a cold email to a VP of Marketing at a mid-size SaaS company for [our product].
Some companies give you 10 minutes to write a real email. They’re testing your writing, personalization, and understanding of the value proposition.
Structure: short subject line referencing their world (not your product), personalized opening (1 sentence tying to their company or role), pain statement (the problem you solve, framed from their perspective), brief value prop (1–2 sentences, outcome-focused, not feature-focused), and a low-friction CTA (“Would a 15-minute call this week make sense?” not “Let me schedule a demo”). Keep it under 100 words. No attachments, no long paragraphs, no “I hope this email finds you well.” The best emails feel like they were written for one person, not batch-sent to 500.
What metrics would you use to measure your own performance as a BDR?
They want to see you understand the full funnel, not just activity volume.
Activity metrics (leading indicators): emails sent, calls made, LinkedIn touches. But these are inputs, not outcomes. Output metrics matter more: reply rate (is your messaging resonating?), meetings booked (are you reaching the right people?), meeting show rate (are you qualifying properly?), and SQLs generated (are the meetings actually valuable to the AE team?). The most important metric is pipeline generated — the dollar value of qualified opportunities you create. Discuss how you’d track conversion rates between stages (email → reply → meeting → SQL) to identify where your funnel leaks. Mention that you’d benchmark against team averages and iterate on the weakest conversion point.

Behavioral and situational questions

BDR behavioral rounds are heavily weighted. Hiring managers know that skills can be taught, but resilience, coachability, and drive are harder to develop. They’re looking for patterns in your past behavior that predict success in a high-rejection, high-activity role. Use the STAR method (Situation, Task, Action, Result) for every answer.

Tell me about a time you faced repeated rejection and how you stayed motivated.
What they’re testing: Resilience, persistence, emotional maturity — the #1 predictor of BDR success.
Use STAR: describe the Situation (what you were working on and the level of rejection), your Task (what you were trying to achieve despite the setbacks), the Action you took (did you change your approach? ask for coaching? study what top performers were doing differently?), and the Result (how it turned around and what you learned). The best answers show you didn’t just “push through” blindly — you analyzed what wasn’t working and adapted. Interviewers love candidates who treat rejection as data, not personal failure.
Describe a time you had to learn something quickly to succeed in a role or project.
What they’re testing: Coachability, learning speed, resourcefulness — critical for BDRs ramping on new products.
Pick an example where you went from zero knowledge to competence quickly. Explain what you needed to learn (product knowledge, an industry, a new tool), how you learned it (training, shadowing top performers, self-study, asking questions), and the outcome (meeting quota, winning a competition, earning a certification). Quantify the speed: “I ramped from no SaaS knowledge to booking 15 meetings in my first month.” BDR managers care deeply about coachability — they’d rather hire someone who learns fast than someone with years of mediocre experience.
Tell me about a time you went above and beyond to hit a goal.
What they’re testing: Work ethic, competitive drive, willingness to do what others won't.
Describe a specific goal with a clear target (not a vague “I worked hard”). Explain what extra effort looked like: Did you work different hours to catch prospects in another timezone? Build a creative outreach campaign? Volunteer for an account blitz? The Result should be quantified: “Hit 140% of quota that month” or “Booked 8 meetings in the final week.” Show that your drive is sustainable, not just a one-week sprint before burnout.
Give an example of a time you received constructive feedback and what you did with it.
What they’re testing: Coachability, self-awareness, growth mindset.
Describe the feedback specifically (not just “they said I could improve”). Explain your reaction honestly — it’s okay to say it stung initially. Then focus on what you changed: Did you practice differently? Adjust your approach? Ask for follow-up feedback to confirm improvement? Quantify the result if possible. The worst answer is “I’ve never really gotten negative feedback” — that signals either a lack of self-awareness or a lack of people willing to be honest with you.

How to prepare (a 2-week plan)

Week 1: Build your foundation

  • Days 1–2: Research the company deeply: their product, target customer (ICP), competitors, pricing model, and recent news. Read their case studies and customer reviews on G2 or TrustRadius. You need to speak about their product as if you already work there.
  • Days 3–4: Study sales development fundamentals: prospecting methodology, cold outreach best practices, objection handling frameworks (feel-felt-found, acknowledge-bridge-close), and discovery call structure. Read Fanatical Prospecting by Jeb Blount or New Sales. Simplified. by Mike Weinberg.
  • Days 5–6: Practice cold call role-plays with a friend or record yourself. Focus on your opening (pattern interrupt, not “How are you today?”), handling the first objection (usually “I’m busy” or “Not interested”), and asking for a meeting naturally. Do at least 5 practice calls.
  • Day 7: Rest. Review your notes but don’t over-rehearse — you want to sound natural, not scripted.

Week 2: Simulate and refine

  • Days 8–9: Write 3 cold emails for the company’s actual target persona. Make each one personalized to a real company you’d prospect into. Practice the cold email exercise — some interviews include timed writing.
  • Days 10–11: Prepare 4–5 STAR stories from your experience. Focus on: resilience through rejection, coachability, competitive drive, learning speed, and teamwork. Even non-sales examples work if they demonstrate the right traits.
  • Days 12–13: Do a full mock interview with someone in sales if possible. Practice the cold call role-play, email writing, and behavioral questions back-to-back. Get feedback on your energy, pace, and listening skills.
  • Day 14: Light review. Re-read your company research, review your STAR stories, and get a good night’s sleep. Show up with energy — BDR interviews reward enthusiasm.

Your resume is the foundation of your interview story. Make sure it sets up the right talking points. Our free scorer evaluates your resume specifically for BDR roles — with actionable feedback on what to fix.

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What interviewers are actually evaluating

BDR hiring managers have a clear profile of what predicts success in the role. Here’s what they’re evaluating — often subconsciously — throughout every round.

  • Resilience and grit: Can you handle 95% rejection and still show up with energy the next day? This is the single biggest predictor of BDR success. They’re looking for evidence in your past, not just claims.
  • Coachability: When given feedback during a role-play, do you incorporate it immediately? Do you ask clarifying questions? BDR managers invest heavily in training — they need people who absorb and apply feedback quickly.
  • Communication skills: Are you articulate, concise, and engaging? Can you hold a conversation without monologuing? Do you listen and adapt, or just recite a pitch? This matters on the phone, in email, and in the interview itself.
  • Curiosity and research ability: Can you learn a product, industry, and persona quickly? Do you ask thoughtful questions? BDRs need to understand their prospect’s world well enough to earn a conversation.
  • Work ethic and competitive drive: Are you someone who does 50 activities when the expectation is 40? Do you want to win, not just participate? Quota-carrying roles reward people who push themselves.

Mistakes that sink BDR candidates

  1. Not researching the company’s product and ICP. If you can’t explain what the company sells, who they sell to, and why a prospect would care, you’re not prepared. This is the bare minimum — and a surprising number of candidates skip it.
  2. Freezing during the role-play. The mock cold call is not about perfection — it’s about composure. If you get flustered by an objection, take a breath and stay curious. Practice enough that you have 2–3 responses ready for common pushback.
  3. Talking more than listening. BDRs who monologue don’t book meetings. In the interview (and especially the role-play), show that you ask questions and listen to answers. The best BDRs spend more time on discovery than pitching.
  4. Having no opinion on sales methodology. You don’t need to be an expert, but saying “I just call people” when asked about your prospecting approach signals you haven’t invested in the craft. Have a thoughtful framework, even if it’s simple.
  5. Not quantifying your past results. “I was good at sales” means nothing. “I hit 120% of quota for 3 consecutive months” or “I booked 45 meetings in Q3” is concrete. If you’re new to sales, quantify results from other areas: fundraising, customer service metrics, or competition placements.
  6. Low energy throughout the interview. BDR roles require enthusiasm and presence. If you’re monotone and disengaged in the interview, the hiring manager will assume you’ll sound the same on cold calls. Bring genuine energy — not fake hype, but real engagement.

How your resume sets up your interview

Your resume is not just a document that gets you the interview — it’s the evidence file for your claims about work ethic, results, and skills. BDR hiring managers scan resumes for numbers, and they’ll ask you to elaborate on every one.

Before the interview, review each bullet on your resume and prepare to go deeper on any of them. For each achievement, ask yourself:

  • What was the specific goal or quota, and how did you perform against it?
  • What was your approach, and how did it differ from others on the team?
  • What obstacles did you overcome to achieve this result?
  • What did you learn that you’d apply to a BDR role?

A well-tailored resume creates natural talking points. If your resume says “Booked 180+ qualified meetings in 2025, ranking #2 of 15 BDRs,” be ready to discuss your prospecting strategy, how you prioritized accounts, and what made your outreach effective.

If your resume doesn’t set up these conversations well, our BDR resume template can help you restructure it before the interview.

Day-of checklist

Before you walk in (or log on), run through this list:

  • Research the company’s product, ICP, competitors, and recent news thoroughly
  • Practice 3–5 mock cold calls with objection handling until you feel natural
  • Write 2–3 sample cold emails for the company’s target persona
  • Prepare 4–5 STAR stories that demonstrate resilience, coachability, and competitive drive
  • Quantify every result on your resume and be ready to discuss the details
  • Prepare 2–3 thoughtful questions about the team’s sales process and career progression
  • Test your audio and video setup if the interview is virtual
  • Show up with energy — this matters more in BDR interviews than almost any other role