Internship interviews are fundamentally different from campus recruiting. You're no longer being evaluated just on potential—you're being assessed on whether you can think strategically, quantify problems, and communicate with impact from day one. Whether you're targeting tech, finance, or consulting, the core skills are the same: structured problem-solving, rapid analysis, and confident communication under pressure.
Unlike generic interview prep, Internship Interview trains you in the exact frameworks and mental models that experienced professionals use. You'll practice real cases from Google, Goldman Sachs, McKinsey, Amazon, and JPMorgan—the companies that set the standard for early-career hiring.
How it works
- Practice market analysis, business strategy, and financial cases modeled on real internship interview questions
- Get AI-powered feedback on your structured thinking and quantification skills
- Build competency across case frameworks, mental math, and business intuition
- Track your progress across 20+ internship interview skills with adaptive difficulty
Why internship interviews need dedicated prep
Internship interviews filter for a specific skill set: the ability to think like an insider while still being a student. You need to demonstrate both analytical rigor and the humility to ask clarifying questions. Generic interview prep focuses on "answering correctly"—internship prep focuses on "thinking correctly," which interviewers can assess from your first response.
The AI coach pushes you in ways peer mock interviews can't. It tracks the exact moment you skip the structuring step, jumps to numbers without a framework, or presents conclusions without quantification. Real feedback, no social courtesy.
Built for aspiring technologists, strategists, and operators
Whether you're a sophomore targeting your first tech internship or a senior going for a final tour before full-time recruiting, this platform scales with you. Early-stage practice focuses on frameworks and mental models. Advanced practice layers in business acumen and strategic judgment—the differentiators at companies like Google and McKinsey.