How to Prepare for an Interview at a Creative Studio.

You got the interview. That's worth a moment.

But here's the thing: creative studios don't evaluate candidates the way corporate environments do. The preparation you do beforehand matters just as much as your portfolio. Sometimes more. And the studios worth working for? They notice whether you've put in the work.

We've supported hundreds of candidates through this process over the years and heard feedback from Creative Directors and hiring managers across London's design scene. Here's what actually makes a difference.

Do the Research

Most candidates glance at a website and call it done. Studios can tell. They know the difference between someone who's genuinely engaged with their work and someone who skimmed the homepage on the tube that morning.

Start with their portfolio. If it's an interior design practice, look at how they handle residential versus hospitality. Notice the materials, the spatial flow, whether they lean minimal or layered. For architecture, pay attention to how they navigate planning, their relationship with site and context. At a branding agency, think about strategy. Do they lead with visual identity or positioning?

Then go further. Look for press coverage, awards, team activities or projects they share on Instagram, recent hires on LinkedIn. Check their social to see how they present their culture. If they've written anything or spoken at events, read it.

You're not doing this to recite facts in the room. You're doing it to understand whether the way they work aligns with the way you work. And to be able to say, honestly, why their work resonates.

Know Who You're Meeting

Find out who's interviewing you and look them up. Not to gather ammunition. Just to calibrate the conversation.

A Creative Director wants to understand your thinking, your influences, how you approach a brief. A Studio Manager cares about deadlines, collaboration, how you handle competing priorities. An HR lead will focus on culture, motivations, how you work with others.

Knowing who's in the room helps you bring the right examples. It shapes the conversation before you even walk in.

The Small Things That Aren't Small

Arriving flustered undermines everything that follows. Plan your route. Add fifteen minutes. If you're early, find a coffee shop, settle yourself, review your notes. Walk in composed.

Punctuality matters in creative industries. Studios run on tight timelines. Showing up late, even once, raises questions about reliability. Don't let that be you.

Dress for the Environment

Creative studios aren't corporate, so a formal suit can feel off. But too casual undermines your credibility.

If in doubt, smart-casual is the answer. Intentional, put-together, context-appropriate. Check their website and social for cues. A luxury interiors practice expects something different from a young agency with a relaxed studio culture.

For creative roles, your appearance says something about your visual sensibility. For operational roles, it signals you can read a room. Either way, aim for clean, considered, confident.

Connect Your Experience to the Role

Re-read the job description before you go in. Identify the skills and attributes they've emphasised. Then map your background against them.

If you're going for a creative role, be ready to talk about process, not just output. How you interpret a brief. How you develop concepts. How you handle feedback. Interior designers should be prepared to discuss material choices and spatial decisions. Architects should expect questions about planning, contractors, RIBA stages. Brand designers need to speak to strategy alongside execution.

For operational roles, you probably don't have a portfolio in the traditional sense. That's fine. Prepare concrete examples instead. How you've managed complex timelines. Handled difficult client situations. Improved processes. Supported creative teams to do their best work. Be specific about tools, scale, outcomes.

Be Clear About Why This Studio

"Why do you want to work here?" is one of the most common interview questions. It's also one of the most poorly answered.

Vague things about liking the work or wanting to grow don't land. Before you go in, think genuinely about what draws you to this particular place. Is it their approach to a certain project type? The clients? Their reputation for craft? The scale? The culture?

Be honest and specific. If you struggle to articulate it, that's worth sitting with. Some candidates exit interviews quickly because they can't explain why they want to be there.

Prepare Your Materials

If you're in a creative role, your portfolio is the centrepiece. Make sure everything is downloaded, your device is charged, navigation is smooth. Don't rely on WiFi. Have a backup on your phone or a printed book.

Physical materials still land well. For interior designers and architects, printed samples or material boards can be powerful. They let interviewers engage with your work tangibly and show your attention to finish.

Edit ruthlessly. Six to eight strong projects tells a better story than fifteen mediocre ones. Lead with work that's relevant to what the studio does.

For operational roles, bring a clean CV. Consider a one-page summary of key projects with scope, team size, budget, outcomes. If you've built processes or systems that improved things, be ready to talk about them.

Prepare Questions to Ask Them

Creative interviews probe beyond technical capability. Expect questions about collaboration, handling critique, managing ambiguity, working under pressure. Have stories ready.

But also prepare questions to ask them. Silence when you're invited to ask something comes across as disinterest. Ask about current projects, team structure, how work gets briefed and reviewed, what success looks like in the role.

Show genuine curiosity about how things actually work.

Why This Matters

Studios evaluate candidates holistically. Your work might be excellent. But if you arrive unprepared, can't explain why you want to be there, or seem disconnected from how the place operates, it raises doubts.

Preparation isn't about impressing people. It's about respecting the opportunity and giving yourself the best chance to show who you actually are.

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