- Feedback that quotes what you said
- Honest notes, no generic praise
- See what a strong answer would have covered
- Rewatch your interview recording
Most interview feedback fails the same way. “Good answer, but be more specific.” “Try to structure it better.” “Work on your confidence.” None of it tells you which answer, which moment, or what a better version would have said. You nod, feel vaguely bad, and change nothing, because there’s nothing concrete to change.
Why generic notes change nothing
You can’t fix what you can’t see. After an interview you barely remember what you said, let alone where the answer went soft. Without a precise record of the gap, every practice session blurs into the last one and the same mistakes survive untouched.
Why the usual sources stay fuzzy
Each of the usual sources stays vague for its own reason:
- A general AI tool gives you a paragraph of polite notes because it didn’t track your words closely enough to quote them, so the advice stalls at “be clearer,” which you already knew.
- Reviewing the interview from memory is unreliable, since memory smooths over the rough parts and the moments you cringe about often aren’t the ones that cost you.
- A friend stays kind and vague for the same reason you do, because they can’t replay the exact wording either.
What openskill’s report gives you
openskill builds a report after every mock interview that’s grounded in what you said. It quotes your answers, explains why each one held up or fell short, and shows what a strong answer would have covered, so you can see the gap instead of guessing at it.
It’s honest on purpose, with specific notes tied to moments in your interview. You get a clear read on where you came across strong and where you were weak, plus one concrete drill to work on next. You also get the full recording, so you can rewatch any answer and hear how it actually landed. Because the report is built from the transcript of your interview rather than a template, the advice is about your answers, not a stand-in for them.
See it for yourself
Run a mock interview on openskill and read the report afterward. Seeing your own words next to what a strong answer would have covered does more in ten minutes than a week of vague advice.