💥 Myth-Busters

Myth #40: Hobbies Section is Just Filler | GDPIWAT Myth-Busters

The hobbies section isn't filler—it's where panels test authenticity and assess personality. Learn why your interests matter more than you think in MBA interviews.

🚫 The Myth

“The hobbies section is just filler—something to complete the form. Panels focus on academics, work experience, and ‘Why MBA?’ The interests section at the bottom of your resume or application is barely glanced at. As long as you list something reasonable, it doesn’t really matter. Don’t waste time preparing for hobby questions when there’s so much more important stuff to cover.”

⚠️ How Candidates Interpret This

Candidates treat the hobbies section as an afterthought. They copy generic interests (“reading, music, travelling”), spend zero time preparing to discuss them, and are caught off-guard when panels ask detailed questions. Some candidates leave the section blank or fill it carelessly, missing a critical opportunity to differentiate themselves and build rapport.

🤔 Why People Believe It

This myth persists because of several misconceptions:

1. Placement at the Bottom

On resumes and applications, hobbies typically appear last—after education, work experience, and achievements. This physical placement creates the impression that it’s least important. “If it mattered, it would be at the top.”

2. Short Time Allocation

In a 15-20 minute interview, candidates assume panels will prioritize “substantive” topics. Why would they waste time asking about cricket or cooking when they could ask about work projects or career goals?

3. Corporate Interview Patterns

In job interviews, hobbies are often ice-breakers that don’t affect outcomes. Candidates assume MBA interviews follow the same pattern. They’re wrong—B-school panels use hobbies very differently.

4. Overthinking “Important” Topics

Candidates spend hours preparing for “Why MBA?”, “Why this school?”, and technical questions. Hobbies feel like low-stakes territory that doesn’t need preparation. This prioritization is a strategic mistake.

Coach’s Perspective
I’ve seen more interviews turn on the hobbies discussion than candidates realize. The hobbies section is where panels test authenticity. They expect candidates to prepare polished answers for “Why MBA?” They don’t expect preparation for “Tell me about your interest in astronomy.” When candidates can discuss hobbies with genuine depth, it builds trust for everything else they say. When they stumble, panels wonder: “If they can’t be authentic about their hobbies, what else is fabricated?”

✅ The Reality: Why Panels Care About Hobbies

Here’s what the hobbies section actually does in an MBA interview:

Authenticity Test
Can you be genuine when you’re not “performing”?
Personality Window
Who are you beyond academics and work?
Rapport Builder
Common ground that makes conversation natural

The Five Strategic Functions of Hobbies in Interviews:

1
The Authenticity Detector
Panels know candidates rehearse “Why MBA?” But hobbies? Most candidates don’t prepare. This is where panels catch fakes.

When someone claims “photography” but can’t explain aperture, or “reading” but can’t name recent books—panels note it. If you’re dishonest about hobbies, they question everything.
2
The Personality Revealer
Beyond transcripts and resumes, who ARE you? What do you do when no one’s watching?

Someone who plays competitive chess thinks differently than someone who does improv comedy. Hobbies reveal thinking styles, values, and personality traits that academics don’t show.
3
The Rapport Opportunity
If a panel member shares your interest, the dynamic shifts. Suddenly you’re two people discussing a shared passion, not a candidate being evaluated.

I’ve seen 5-minute hobby discussions that changed interview trajectories entirely. Panels remember candidates they connected with.
4
The Stress Reliever
Panels sometimes use hobbies to reduce candidate stress after tough questions. If you handle this well, you recover and finish strong.

If you stumble on hobbies, the stress compounds. A section meant to relax you becomes another failure point.
5
The Differentiation Tool
In a pool of engineers from similar colleges with similar work experience, what makes YOU memorable?

“The candidate who brews their own beer” or “the one passionate about urban sketching”—hobbies create mental hooks that make you stand out.

What Panels Actually Do With Hobbies:

❌ What Candidates Assume
  • “They’ll glance at it and move on”
  • “It’s just small talk to fill time”
  • “As long as I have something listed, I’m fine”
  • “They won’t ask detailed questions”
  • “It doesn’t affect my final score”
✅ What Panels Actually Do
  • Use it to test if you’re genuine or performing
  • Ask 2-3 follow-up questions to probe depth
  • Note inconsistencies that damage overall credibility
  • Look for common ground to build conversation
  • Form impressions about personality and fit
💡 The Hidden Evaluation

Here’s what candidates don’t realize: panels often make notes about hobby discussions.

Positive notes: “Genuine interest in astronomy—discussed telescope specifications knowledgeably” or “Passionate about cooking—connected it nicely to patience and process”

Negative notes: “Claims photography but couldn’t discuss basics” or “Listed reading but no recent examples”

These notes influence final decisions, especially in borderline cases.

Real Scenarios from Interview Rooms

📢
Scenario 1: The Generic Lister
Candidate: IT Professional, CAT 96%ile, IIM Bangalore Interview
What Happened
Panel: “I see you’ve listed reading, travelling, and music as interests. Let’s talk about reading—what are you reading currently?”

Candidate: “Uh… I’ve been busy with CAT prep, so not much recently. But I like self-help books generally.”

Panel: “Name a self-help book that influenced you.”

Candidate: “Rich Dad Poor Dad… it’s about financial literacy and thinking differently about money.”

Panel: “That’s from 1997. Anything more recent?”

Candidate: “Atomic Habits… everyone reads that one…”

Panel: “What about music? What do you listen to?”

Candidate: “All kinds, really. Bollywood, some English songs…”

The panel had checked three hobbies. Each response was shallow. They moved on, but the authenticity damage was done.
3
Hobbies Listed
0
Depth Shown
Damaged
Credibility
Waitlist
📢
Scenario 2: The Authentic Engager
Candidate: Banking Professional, CAT 93%ile, XLRI Interview
What Happened
Panel: “You’ve listed ‘bird watching’ as an interest. That’s unusual. Tell me about it.”

Candidate: “Yes! I started during lockdown when I noticed the variety of birds visiting my balcony in Pune. Now I maintain a life list—I’ve spotted 127 species across Maharashtra. I go on weekend birding trips to Bhigwan and Mayureshwar sanctuary. My latest addition was a Painted Stork two weeks ago.”

Panel: [Leaning in] “How do you identify birds? They move so fast.”

Candidate: “It’s a combination of field marks—size relative to common birds, color patterns, beak shape, flight pattern. And calls—once you learn the call of a Coppersmith Barbet, you’ll never mistake it. I use the Merlin app for confirmation, but I try to ID first without it.”

Panel: “What does bird watching teach you?”

Candidate: “Patience, mostly. You can’t rush a bird sighting. Also observation skills—noticing small details matters. Actually, it’s helped my audit work too. I’ve become better at catching small discrepancies in documents because I’m trained to notice details that others miss.”

Panel spent 6 more minutes discussing birds. The candidate later said this was the most enjoyable part of her interview.
Unique
Hobby Choice
High
Depth Shown
Strong
Connection Built
Convert
Coach’s Perspective
Notice the difference: the 96%ile candidate with generic hobbies was waitlisted. The 93%ile candidate with “bird watching” converted. It wasn’t the CAT score. It wasn’t the work experience. It was the hobbies section. The first candidate treated hobbies as filler and got caught. The second treated it as an opportunity and connected. Same interview structure, completely different outcomes. Still think hobbies don’t matter?

⚠️ The Impact: How Treating Hobbies as Filler Hurts You

Aspect Treating Hobbies as Filler Treating Hobbies Strategically
What you list Generic defaults: reading, music, travelling, cricket Specific, genuine interests you can discuss deeply
Preparation level Zero—assuming it won’t come up seriously Ready with specific examples, recent activities, connections to skills
When panel asks follow-ups Stumble, give vague answers, damage credibility Engage naturally, show depth, build rapport
Panel perception “This candidate pads sections—what else is fake?” “This candidate is genuine and interesting”
Interview flow Hobbies become another stress point Hobbies become a comfortable space to shine
Memorability Blend in with hundreds of similar profiles Stand out: “the birder” or “the chess player”
🔴 The Authenticity Spillover

Here’s the hidden danger: when panels catch you being inauthentic about hobbies, they question everything else.

Your impressive work achievements? “Maybe exaggerated.”
Your articulate ‘Why MBA?’ answer? “Probably rehearsed from a template.”
Your leadership examples? “Could be inflated.”

Hobbies are the authenticity litmus test. Fail it, and your entire credibility is suspect. This is why treating hobbies as filler is so dangerous—the damage extends far beyond the hobby discussion itself.

💡 What Actually Works: The Strategic Hobbies Approach

Here’s how to transform hobbies from filler to strategic advantage:

Step 1: Audit Your Listed Hobbies

❌ Remove If You Can’t…
  • Talk about it for 2+ minutes without struggling
  • Give a specific example from the last 3 months
  • Answer “what specifically do you enjoy about this?”
  • Discuss it with genuine enthusiasm
  • Handle 3 follow-up questions comfortably
✅ Keep If You Can…
  • Discuss specific details, techniques, or knowledge
  • Share recent activities or examples
  • Explain WHY you enjoy it authentically
  • Connect it to personality traits or skills
  • Show progression or deepening engagement

Step 2: The SPARK Framework for Each Hobby

S
Specific Details
Replace vague with specific.

❌ “I like reading”
✅ “I read about 2 books a month, mostly behavioral economics—currently on Kahneman’s ‘Noise'”

❌ “I play cricket”
✅ “I play gully cricket every Sunday with my colony group—I’m a leg-spinner working on my googly”
P
Personal Why
Know why this hobby appeals to YOU specifically.

“I like cooking because it’s my creative outlet after structured work days. Building something from scratch in 45 minutes is therapeutic.”

“Chess appeals to the pattern-recognition part of my brain. It’s meditation that looks like a game.”
A
Activity Examples
Have 2-3 specific recent examples ready.

“Last month I tried making Tamil-style chicken curry for the first time—took three attempts to get the spice balance right.”

“I ran my first 10K last weekend—finished in 58 minutes, which was slower than my target but I’m happy I completed it.”
R
Relevance Connections
Know how the hobby connects to traits or skills (but don’t force it).

“Bird watching has made me more observant—I notice details others miss, which helps in my audit work.”

Note: Only use this if it comes up naturally. Forcing connections sounds rehearsed.
K
Knowledge Depth
Know enough to have a real conversation.

If you list photography: know aperture, shutter speed, composition basics
If you list cricket: know current players, recent series, some tactical understanding
If you list music: know artists, genres, what specifically you like about them

You don’t need to be an expert—just genuinely engaged.

Step 3: Hobby Categories and Strategic Selection

Hobby Type Examples Strategic Value
Skill-Based Chess, coding projects, musical instruments, cooking, languages Shows learning ability, patience, dedication
Physical/Active Running, trekking, specific sports, yoga, fitness Shows discipline, health consciousness, stress management
Creative Writing, sketching, photography, crafts, design Shows creativity, alternative thinking, self-expression
Intellectual Reading (specific genres), documentaries, podcasts, debates Shows curiosity, continuous learning, breadth of interest
Social/Community Volunteering, teaching, mentoring, community organizing Shows empathy, leadership, social consciousness
Niche/Unique Bird watching, astronomy, brewing, collecting, specific gaming Memorability, conversation starter, depth demonstration
💡 The Strategic Mix

Ideal: 2-3 hobbies that show different sides of you.

Example combination:
• One skill-based (chess—shows analytical thinking)
• One active (running—shows discipline)
• One unique or creative (home brewing—memorable, shows curiosity)

Avoid: Listing 5 hobbies you can’t discuss deeply. Quality beats quantity.

Common Hobby Traps to Avoid

🚫
Trap: The Default Trio
“Reading, Music, Travelling”
Why It’s a Trap
  • 80% of candidates list these exact three
  • Panels have heard generic versions thousands of times
  • Instantly signals “didn’t think about this section”
  • Forces you to compete on depth—most can’t
If You Keep These…
  • Make them SPECIFIC: “Reading behavioral economics” not “reading”
  • Have concrete recent examples ready
  • Be prepared to go deep—you’ll be tested
🚫
Trap: The Impressive-but-Fake
Listing hobbies to impress, not reflect reality
Common Examples
  • “Volunteering” when you went once for a photo
  • “Photography” when you just take phone photos
  • “Stock market” when you track 3 stocks casually
  • “Blogging” when you wrote 2 posts in 2019
Why It Backfires
  • 3 follow-up questions expose the truth
  • Damages credibility for entire profile
  • Better to list “watching cricket” authentically
Coach’s Perspective
My advice: treat your hobbies section like a mini-interview topic. Prepare it. Have stories ready. Know why each hobby matters to you. Practice discussing them out loud. The 5 minutes you spend preparing hobbies can yield more interview impact than an hour on “Why MBA?” because panels expect you to prepare “Why MBA?”—they don’t expect you to prepare hobbies. Exceed their expectations where they’re not looking.

🎯 Self-Check: How Ready Are You to Discuss Your Hobbies?

📊 Your Hobbies Readiness Assessment
1 For each hobby on your profile, can you talk about it enthusiastically for at least 2 minutes?
For some yes, but others I’d struggle or give generic answers
Yes—I can discuss each one with genuine depth and specific details
2 Can you give a specific example of something you did related to each listed hobby in the last month?
For some hobbies, my most recent example is from months ago or I can’t think of one
Yes—I have recent, specific examples for each hobby I’ve listed
3 How did you select which hobbies to list on your profile?
Listed common ones or what sounded impressive without much thought
Carefully selected hobbies I genuinely engage with and can discuss authentically
4 If a panel member happens to share one of your hobbies, you would feel:
Nervous—they might ask technical questions I can’t answer
Excited—great opportunity to connect and discuss something I genuinely enjoy
5 How much time have you spent preparing to discuss your hobbies for interviews?
Almost none—I’ve focused on “more important” topics like Why MBA
I’ve thought through examples, stories, and connections for each hobby
Key Takeaway

The hobbies section is not filler—it’s a strategic opportunity most candidates waste. Panels use hobbies to test authenticity, assess personality, and build rapport. When you treat hobbies as throwaway content, you risk credibility damage that extends to your entire profile. When you treat them strategically—listing only genuine interests you can discuss deeply—they become a differentiator. The candidate who can talk passionately about bird watching for 3 minutes is more memorable than the one who says “reading, music, travelling” like everyone else. Audit your hobbies. Prepare to discuss them. Turn filler into fuel.

🎯
Want to Turn Every Section of Your Profile into an Advantage?
Learn how to present your hobbies strategically, build authentic connections with panels, and transform overlooked sections into differentiators—through personalized interview coaching.
Prashant Chadha
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