It is difficult to predict what will be the tone of the interview and the nature of the questions. We have received reports of hostile and friendly panels, detail oriented interviews, interviews that where much broader, and interviews that started with detailed questions and then switched to broader ones. So, be prepared for friendly and hostile questions, and questions about the details and the bigger picture.
General questions
General questions can be tricky. You easily drown in answering them. Especially if you do not prepare. Here is a list of typical general questions (not all of them might be relevant for your field). We ordered them according to their respective answering drawers.
- Proposal
- What is the groundbreaking aspect of your proposal? In what way is your proposal really at the frontier of science?
- What distinguishes your proposal? In particular what is the synergy of your multidisciplinary approach?
- What are the critical steps in your proposal? And what contingency strategies do you have in place if the research does not go as planned?
- Do you have proof of principle or preliminary results? What were the comments of your peers?
- Can you outline the proposal in one or two sentences?
- Why should this project be funded by the ERC? Why is this not executed by the R&D department of a company?
- You
- In what respect does this project differ or demarcate from projects you were previously involved in?
- What is your own specific expertise and what expertise will you need from other scientist or disciplines? What discipline you do not entirely master yourself and how will you deal with that?
- What in your cv makes you the right person to do the job?
- Do you have the management skills to bring the project to a successful end?
- Where do you see yourself in ten years?
- Team/network
- What is the quality of your network and how will it support the project?
- How will you ensure that the scientific staff that you hire can also work on their own visibility and not only yours?
- Why do you intend to hire a postdoc/PhD for work package x? Where will you find a candidate with such a specific skillset?
- Results
- What would be the most important contribution to your own scientific field? What is the high gain of this project?
- What would be the most important result and what would that mean to the world?
- How will you ensure that your results will find their way to organization outside the ivory tower: policy makers, industry, civil society, health care?
- If we would grant you half of the funding what would you do?
Specific questions
Next to the above mentioned general questions, you will receive specific questions. Most researchers feel more at ease with them, because usually they are closer to your daily work as a researcher. You have thought about them very well and they are similar to the kind of questions you answer after your presentations on conferences.
However specific, this class of questions is predictable. Partly they will come from external reviewers consulted by the panel. These reviewers are close to your field and probably you have heard their conserns before. They can also be inspired by the panel member’s perspectives. The exploration of the panel members in Step 1 helps to predict their questions.
The best way to collect specific questions is to make people representative for the panel part of your preparation. You can discuss your proposal one-on-one with colleagues from similar fields. Moreover, the mock-interview is a good source of questions. We will discuss this in Step 12.
Over all, most candidates we worked with report to have received no questions that they did not think about in advance. And, if they did, they were ready to apply the curve-ball approach.