Want to Instantly Perform Better in Job Interviews? Try This FBI Hostage Negotiation Technique
A little mirroring can turn what would be a question-and-answer session into a real conversation.
Want Better Interview Answers? Steal This Trick From FBI Hostage Negotiators
Every interviewer knows the frustration. You ask a behavioral question, and the candidate delivers a polished, rehearsed answer straight out of an interview prep guide. They've got their STARs ready — Situation, Task, Action, Result — and they're going to give you exactly what they think you want to hear.
So how do you get past the performance and find out who's actually sitting across from you?
Try mirroring.
The Negotiator's Secret Weapon
Chris Voss spent years as an FBI hostage negotiator — a job where reading people accurately wasn't just useful, it was life or death. In his bestselling book Never Split the Difference, he calls mirroring "the Jedi mind trick of negotiation."
The technique is almost absurdly simple: repeat the last three or four words the other person just said, phrased as a question, with your voice rising slightly at the end.
That's it.
Here's What It Looks Like in Practice
Say you ask a candidate, "Tell me about a time you had to raise an uncomfortable issue with your boss." They walk you through a situation, and wrap up with: "…but my boss wasn't very happy with me."
Instead of firing back with a follow-up question, you just say: "Wasn't very happy?"
Watch what happens. They'll keep going. They'll fill the silence with detail, context, and honesty they never planned to share.
As Voss puts it: "People love to be mirrored. They love to be encouraged to go on."
Why It Works Better Than Follow-Up Questions
Standard follow-up questions — "What did you do next?" "How did that turn out?" — have a subtle problem. They can feel interrogative. Even judgmental. The candidate hears those questions and wonders: Is there a right answer here? Are they testing me?
Mirroring sidesteps that entirely. There's no judgment in it. It simply signals: That's interesting. Tell me more. The conversation stays warm, open, and natural — and the candidate relaxes into telling you the real story.
Try It on a Sales Candidate
Picture this exchange with someone interviewing for a sales role:
You: "Tell me about the toughest sales call you ever made." Candidate: "…but I pushed through their objections." You: "Pushed through their objections?" Candidate: "…until I finally figured out what their real needs were." You: "Their real needs?"
Keep going, and without asking a single pointed question, you've learned exactly how they handle rejection, build rapport, adjust their strategy, and close under pressure. The candidate thinks they're just having a good conversation. You're getting the most useful interview data you've ever collected.
The Bottom Line
The best interviews don't feel like interviews. When candidates stop performing and start talking, that's when you learn what you actually need to know — their real motivations, instincts, and whether they'll thrive in your culture.
Mirroring gets you there. And the best part? It only takes three or four words.
