πŸ’₯ Myth-Busters

Myth #27: Longer Answers Show Depth of Knowledge | GDPIWAT Myth-Busters

Panel attention drops after 90 seconds. Long answers mean fewer questions and "poor communication" notes. Learn the ideal answer length and layered response strategy.

🚫 The Myth

“The more you speak in an interview, the more impressed the panel will be. Longer, detailed answers demonstrate thorough knowledge and preparation. Brief answers make you look like you don’t know enough.”

⚠️ How Candidates Interpret This

Many aspirants believe they must fill every answer with maximum contentβ€”background context, multiple examples, tangential pointsβ€”to prove they’ve done their homework. The fear: a 30-second answer looks “thin” compared to a 3-minute monologue.

πŸ€” Why People Believe It

This myth has deep roots in how we’re taught to demonstrate knowledge:

1. Academic Conditioning

In exams, longer answers typically score more marks. We’re trained from school that “more = better.” A 500-word essay gets more marks than a 200-word one. Candidates unconsciously apply this logic to interviews.

2. Fear of Silence

Silence feels awkward. When you finish answering in 45 seconds and the panel just looks at you, it’s tempting to keep talking to fill the void. Many interpret panel silence as “they’re waiting for more.”

3. The “Thorough Preparation” Signal

Candidates spend months preparing. When asked a question they’ve researched, they want to show ALL their preparationβ€”every statistic, every angle, every nuance. Leaving things out feels like wasting their hard work.

4. Misreading Successful Candidates

When seniors share interview experiences, they often describe detailed discussions. Candidates miss that these were dialoguesβ€”not monologues. The length came from back-and-forth, not one-sided rambling.

Coach’s Perspective
Here’s a pattern I’ve noticed in 18 years: The candidates who talk the most often remember their interviews as “going well”β€”and are shocked when rejected. Meanwhile, candidates with crisp, focused answers often feel their interviews were “too short”β€”and convert. Length is not depth. Relevance is depth.

βœ… The Reality: Why Longer Answers Often Backfire

Here’s what actually happens when you give lengthy answers:

90 sec
Maximum attention span for a single answer before panel disengages
45-60 sec
Ideal answer length for most interview questions
3x
More likely to contradict yourself in answers over 2 minutes

What Interviewers Actually Experience:

❌ Long Answers Signal
  • Inability to prioritize information
  • Poor communication skills
  • Nervousness masked by over-talking
  • Lack of clarity in your own thinking
  • Disrespect for the panel’s time
βœ… Concise Answers Signal
  • Clear thinking and prioritization
  • Executive communication ability
  • Confidence in your knowledge
  • Respect for the conversation flow
  • Managerial potential

Real Scenarios from Interview Rooms

πŸ“’
Scenario 1: The Rambler
Candidate: IT Professional, 3 Years Experience, CAT 98.5%ile, IIM Bangalore Interview
What Happened
Panel: “Why MBA?”

Candidate: “So, I’ve been working in IT for 3 years at Infosys, started as a developer, then moved to a lead role. I realized that while I enjoy coding, the real decisions happen at the management level. Like, last year we had this project where the technical solution was perfect but it failed because of poor stakeholder management. That made me think about the business side. Also, I’ve always been interested in strategyβ€”I read a lot of business books, follow markets, did a few online courses on Coursera. My manager also suggested I’d be good at client-facing roles. Plus, the IT industry is changing rapidly with AI, and I think having an MBA would help me navigate that transition. I’ve also considered entrepreneurship eventually, and IIM-B has a great startup ecosystem…”

[3 minutes 20 seconds later, candidate is still going. Panel members have stopped taking notes. One is looking at the next candidate’s file.]
3:20
Answer Length
7
Different Points Mentioned
0
Points Fully Developed
4
Follow-up Questions Lost
πŸ“’
Scenario 2: The Focused Communicator
Candidate: IT Professional, 2.5 Years Experience, CAT 96%ile, IIM Bangalore Interview
What Happened
Panel: “Why MBA?”

Candidate: “Two reasons. First, I’ve led a 12-person team for the last year and realized that my impact is now limited by business understanding, not technical skills. Second, I want to move into product managementβ€”specifically in fintechβ€”and an MBA from IIM-B gives me both the skillset and the recruiting pipeline to make that transition.”

[45 seconds. Pause. Panel leans forward.]

Panel: “Interesting. Tell me more about this team leadership experience. What was the hardest part?”

[Conversation flows naturally for the next 8 minutes with 6 follow-up questions.]
0:45
Answer Length
2
Clear Points Made
6
Follow-up Questions Generated
8 min
Total Discussion Time
πŸ’‘ The Hidden Math

A 15-minute interview has roughly 12-15 questions. If you take 3 minutes per answer, you’ll cover only 5 questionsβ€”and the panel will feel they didn’t get to know you. If you answer in 60-90 seconds, you’ll have a rich, multi-dimensional conversation across 10+ topics. More questions = more opportunities to shine.

⚠️ The Impact: What Long Answers Actually Cost You

Dimension ❌ Long, Unfocused Answers βœ… Concise, Structured Answers
Panel Engagement Panel mentally checks out after 90 seconds. They stop listening and start planning their next questionβ€”or thinking about lunch. Panel stays engaged. Your answer creates curiosity. They want to dig deeper into what you said.
Question Coverage You answer 5-6 questions total. Panel doesn’t explore your profile fully. Important strengths never get discussed. You cover 12-15 questions. Panel sees multiple dimensions of your personality, experience, and thinking.
Perceived Intelligence Paradoxically, you seem LESS knowledgeable. Rambling suggests you can’t distinguish important from trivial. You seem sharper. The ability to distill complex thoughts into clear points is a sign of deep understanding.
Contradictions Risk The more you talk, the more likely you’ll contradict yourself or say something you’ll regret. Panels notice. Fewer words = fewer opportunities to make mistakes. You control the narrative better.
Panel Control You’re driving the interview into random territory. Panel loses control, gets frustrated. Panel leads the conversation where THEY want. They feel in control. They like that.
πŸ”΄ The “Verbal Diarrhea” Label

Panel members have a term for candidates who can’t stop talking: “verbal diarrhea.” Once you get this label in the first 5 minutes, everything you say afterward is filtered through that lens. Even your good points get dismissed as “more rambling.” It’s nearly impossible to recover.

πŸ’‘ What Actually Works: The Art of Concise Answers

Concise doesn’t mean incomplete. It means structured, prioritized, and invitation-friendly.

The STAR-Lite Framework

For most questions, you don’t need the full STAR method. Use this lighter version:

1
The Direct Answer (10-15 sec)
What: Answer the actual question in 1-2 sentences.

Example: “Why MBA?” β†’ “To transition from technical roles to product management in fintech.”

Why it works: Shows you understood the question and can get to the point.
2
The Support (20-30 sec)
What: ONE reason, example, or context that backs your answer.

Example: “In my current role, I’ve realized my impact is limited by business understanding. Leading a team showed me that.”

Why it works: Provides depth without drowning in detail.
3
The Hook (10-15 sec)
What: End with something that invites a follow-up.

Example: “IIM-B’s fintech electives and startup ecosystem align perfectly with where I want to go.”

Why it works: Gives panel a thread to pull. They feel in control of the conversation.
4
The Stop
What: Stop talking. Embrace the pause. Wait for the next question.

Example: [Finish your point. Make eye contact. Stay silent.]

Why it works: Silence isn’t awkwardβ€”it’s confident. Let the panel process and respond.

The 60-Second Rule

Question Type ⏱️ Ideal Length πŸ“ Structure
Factual Questions
(“What does your company do?”)
20-30 seconds Direct answer + one interesting detail
Opinion Questions
(“What do you think about UPI?”)
45-60 seconds Position + one supporting reason + acknowledge complexity
Experience Questions
(“Tell me about a challenge”)
60-90 seconds Context (brief) + Action + Result + Learning
“Why” Questions
(“Why MBA? Why this school?”)
45-60 seconds 2-3 clear reasons, each in one sentence
Introduction 60-90 seconds Background + Current role + One achievement + MBA goal
Coach’s Perspective
I tell my students: “Your job is to answer the question, not to deliver a TED talk.” The best interviews feel like tennisβ€”short serves, quick returns, building rallies. The worst feel like someone reading a PowerPoint at you. Give the panel reasons to ask more, not reasons to zone out.

Practical Techniques

❌ Stop Doing This
  • Starting with “So basically…” and rambling into context
  • Giving 3 examples when 1 strong one will do
  • Repeating the same point in different words
  • Adding “also” and continuing when you should stop
  • Filling silence with more talking
βœ… Start Doing This
  • Start with your conclusion/answer first
  • Use “The main reason is…” to force prioritization
  • Practice stopping mid-sentence if you’re rambling
  • Count to 3 in your head after finishingβ€”don’t add more
  • Watch the panel’s eyesβ€”if they’re drifting, wrap up
πŸ’‘ The “Newspaper Headline” Test

Before you answer, imagine you had to summarize your response as a newspaper headline. If your headline would be “IT Professional Wants MBA for Multiple Vague Reasons”β€”you need to sharpen your thinking. A good headline: “IT Lead Seeks MBA to Transition into Fintech Product Management.” If you can’t summarize it in 10 words, you don’t understand it well enough.

🎯 Self-Check: Are You a Rambler?

πŸ“Š Your Communication Style Assessment
1 When asked “Why MBA?”, your natural response length is:
2-3 minutes covering your journey, multiple reasons, future plans, and why this specific school
45-60 seconds with 2-3 clear reasons and a specific goal
2 When you finish an answer and the panel is silent, you:
Feel uncomfortable and add more points to fill the silence
Stay quiet and wait confidently for the next question
3 In mock interviews, feedback you commonly receive is:
“Good points, but try to be more concise” or “You lost me in the middle”
“Clear and structured” or “I wanted to know more about X”
4 When you have three good examples for a question, you:
Share all three because each adds value and shows breadth
Pick the strongest one and save others for follow-ups
5 Your natural speaking pace in interviews is:
Fastβ€”you want to fit in as much information as possible
Measuredβ€”you pause between points and let ideas land
βœ… Key Takeaway

Depth isn’t measured in minutesβ€”it’s measured in clarity. A 45-second answer that’s structured, specific, and thought-provoking demonstrates more intellectual depth than a 3-minute ramble. Your goal isn’t to fill time. It’s to create a conversation where the panel WANTS to ask you more.

🎯
Want to Master Concise, Impactful Communication?
Learn how to structure answers that impress panels, create engaging conversations, and demonstrate depth without ramblingβ€”through personalized interview coaching.
Prashant Chadha
Available

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