Russian IT Support Technician interview prep for Netherlands

What's different about IT Support Technician interviews in Netherlands

IT support interviews test how you communicate under pressure, not just what you know. Interviewers listen for calm, step-by-step explanations a non-technical user could follow, and for knowing when to escalate. Practise explaining one real fix in plain English — jargon-heavy answers raise 'can this person talk to our staff?' concerns.

Questions you will be asked

  • Tell me about a time you fixed a technical problem for a frustrated user. How did you keep them calm?
  • How do you decide which support tickets to handle first when several arrive at once?
  • Describe a problem you could not fix yourself. How did you escalate it?
  • A user reports 'the internet is down' but you can see the network is fine. How do you troubleshoot with them?
  • Tell me about a time you wrote instructions a non-technical person could follow.
  • How do you keep a clear record in the ticket so the next technician understands what you tried?

Weak answer vs stronger answer

Question: A user is angry because their laptop stopped working before a deadline. What do you do?

Weak answer: I am good with computers so I would fix it fast and tell them not to worry.

Stronger answer: First I let them tell me the problem without interrupting, so they feel heard. Then I say what I will check, in order. Last month a manager lost sound before a client call — I found a driver update had failed, rolled it back in ten minutes, and showed her a quick check for next time.

Same person, same role. The stronger answer names a specific situation, what you did, and the result — and uses 'I', not 'we'. That is what a Dutch interviewer remembers.

Common English clarity issue for Russian speakers

Russian doesn't use articles — 'I led team' should be 'I led the team'. Small fix, big impact.

Netherlands interview norms

  • Directness: Very direct, bluntness valued and expected, feedback is honest
  • Formality: Informal, flat hierarchy, first names from the start
  • Time orientation: Pragmatic, efficiency and work-life balance both valued

What Dutch employers listen for

  • Be straightforward
  • Don't oversell yourself
  • Show collaborative mindset
  • Punctuality expected
  • Work-life balance is a value, not a weakness

Check your free Interview Readiness Score

The free baseline runs you through these questions, scores your readiness, names your top Russian L1 patterns, and shows the 2–3 specific things to fix before your next interview. No card needed.

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