Urdu Software Engineer interview prep for Netherlands
What's different about Software Engineer interviews in Netherlands
SWE interviews use behavioural rounds heavily, especially at FAANG and large public companies. The bar isn't just code — it's whether you can narrate technical decisions in clear English. Practice structuring answers as Situation → Action → Result. Drop excessive hedging that comes from L1 politeness norms (especially common for Hindi/Mandarin/Korean speakers).
Questions you will be asked
- Walk me through the architecture of your last project.
- Tell me about a production bug you had to debug under pressure.
- How do you handle a code review where you disagree with the reviewer?
- Tell me about a time you wrote code that worked but was hard for others to understand. What did you change?
- A teammate's pull request will slow down the system, but they are in a hurry to ship. How do you raise this?
- How do you decide when to write tests first and when to write the code first?
Weak answer vs stronger answer
Question: Tell me about a hard bug you fixed.
Weak answer: I'm good at solving problems and I always fix the bugs in the end.
Stronger answer: Our checkout failed for about 5% of users. I traced it to a race condition in the payment retry, added a lock and a test, and the failures dropped to zero. I wrote it up so the team could spot the pattern 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 Urdu speakers
Urdu places verbs at the end — in English, put your key achievement first: 'I increased sales by 30%'.
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
What the interviewer is really scoring in a Software Engineer interview
- Problem-solving approach: They break a hard problem into smaller parts and explain their thinking clearly, not just the final answer.
- Code quality care: They write clear, testable code and think about how others will read and maintain it later.
- Team collaboration: They give and take feedback well, and explain technical choices without making others feel small.
Smart questions to ask in your Software Engineer interview
When they ask "do you have any questions?", having two ready shows interest. For example:
- How does the team balance shipping fast with code quality?
- What does the code review process look like here?
- How do engineers learn and grow on this team?
Common mistakes in a Software Engineer interview (and what to do instead)
- Jumping straight into code or a solution before checking what the problem really needs. Instead, ask a few clarifying questions first, as a recruiter may read this as careful thinking rather than slowness.
- Describing your last project with 'we built it' so the interviewer cannot tell your own part. A recruiter may want your specific work, so instead say which parts you designed, wrote, or fixed.
- Getting defensive when asked about a code review disagreement, as if your code was attacked. Instead, show that you listen, explain your reasoning, and stay open, as a recruiter may read calm discussion as teamwork.
Check your free Interview Readiness Score
The free baseline runs you through these questions, scores your readiness, names your top Urdu L1 patterns, and shows the 2–3 specific things to fix before your next interview. No card needed.
Check your free Interview Readiness Score