A panel interview — where 2 to 6 interviewers question you simultaneously — is one of the most nerve-wracking formats in the Indian hiring process. It is standard at top-tier companies like McKinsey, Deloitte, Goldman Sachs, Infosys leadership roles, and most government PSU selection boards like UPSC and IBPS. The good news: panel interviews follow patterns, and patterns can be mastered.
When Will You Face a Panel Interview?
| Company / Sector | Common Panel Size | Who Is Usually on the Panel |
|---|---|---|
| MNC Consulting (McKinsey, BCG, Bain) | 2–3 | Case interviewer + HR + partner |
| IT Leadership roles (TCS, Wipro, HCL) | 3–4 | Technical lead + HR + business head |
| Banking (HDFC, ICICI, Kotak leadership) | 3–5 | Functional head + HR + senior manager |
| Government PSU (ONGC, BHEL, SAIL) | 5–8 | Board of directors, subject matter experts |
| FMCG (HUL, ITC, Nestlé) | 2–3 | HR + functional manager + senior leader |
| Startups (Series B+) | 2–3 | Founder + tech lead + product/business head |
The Core Challenge: Who Do You Look At?
The biggest mistake in panel interviews is either staring at one person (usually the most intimidating one) or awkwardly scanning between faces every 3 seconds.
The Triangle Technique:
- When asked a question, make brief eye contact with the person who asked it (2–3 seconds)
- As you develop your answer, sweep naturally to include others — one or two seconds of eye contact per person
- Return to the questioner for the conclusion of your answer
Think of it as telling a story to a small group, not answering a question from a single examiner.
Reading the Panel: Who’s Who
Before answering, quickly identify each panellist’s role — it tells you what they care about.
| Panellist Type | Visual Cues | What They’re Evaluating |
|---|---|---|
| The Technical Expert | Laptop open, technical terms in questions | Depth of knowledge, accuracy |
| The HR/Culture Fit Person | Friendly opener, behavioural questions | Values, communication, teamwork |
| The Decision-Maker / Hiring Manager | Senior-looking, fewer but heavier questions | Overall fit, leadership potential |
| The Skeptic | Arms crossed, follow-up challenges | Resilience, depth of thought |
| The Observer | Takes notes, rarely speaks | Looking for red flags |
Pro tip: Address each person by name when you answer their specific question. If you learned names during introductions, use them. If not, reference their role: “That’s a great point from the technical perspective — here’s how I’d approach it.”
Common Panel Interview Formats in India
Format 1: Sequential (Most Common)
Each panellist asks questions in turn. Predictable, manageable.
Strategy: Mentally assign “topic ownership” — HR will ask culture, tech lead will ask technical, business head will ask about outcomes.
Format 2: Simultaneous / Interruptive
Panellists jump in, overlap, and challenge mid-answer.
Strategy: Stay calm. Pause for 2 seconds before answering. If interrupted, say: “I’d like to finish this thought and then absolutely address your question.”
Format 3: Case-Based Panel (Consulting / PSU)
All panellists observe you solve a problem live. Often 45–60 minutes.
Strategy: Think out loud. State your framework first. Ask clarifying questions. Welcome pushback as part of your solution.
Answering Techniques for Panel Interviews
| Situation | What to Say |
|---|---|
| Two panellists ask conflicting questions | “Both perspectives are valid — let me address [Person A’s] point first and then reconcile it with [Person B’s] angle.” |
| You don’t know the answer | “I don’t have that exact data in front of me, but here’s how I’d think through it…” |
| A panellist interrupts you | “Absolutely — [their question]. Let me address that directly, and then complete my earlier point if that’s okay.” |
| You’re asked the same question twice by different panellists | “I touched on this briefly with [name], but let me add more depth: [new angle].” |
| A panellist disagrees openly with you | “I appreciate that pushback — you may be right. Let me reconsider [their point] and share how that changes my view.” |
India-Specific Panel Interview Etiquette
Greet everyone when you enter. A brief nod or “Good morning” to each panellist as you enter establishes warmth before a word is spoken.
Stand until invited to sit. In traditional companies (PSUs, large banks, old-guard MNCs), always wait for the senior panellist to invite you to be seated.
Don’t ignore junior panellists. Many candidates focus only on the senior person. A junior HR or technical team member who feels ignored will give you a lower score.
Gifts, excessive gratitude, and touching feet: Absolutely avoid all of these, even if you’re interviewing for a family-connected role. It looks desperate.
Language switching: If the panel is in English but one panellist slips into Hindi or a regional language for a question, it is fine to answer in the same language — it often relaxes the room.
Preparing Before a Panel Interview
Research Phase (48 hours before):
☐ LinkedIn profiles of all expected panellists
☐ Company’s recent news (last 6 months)
☐ Department-specific challenges your role will address
☐ One intelligent question prepared for each panellist type
Logistics:
☐ Arrive 15 minutes early for in-person
☐ Log in 5 minutes early for video (test camera and mic)
☐ Bring 4–5 printed copies of your resume (one per panellist)
☐ Bring a notebook and pen (signals preparation)
During:
☐ Introduce yourself to each panellist individually
☐ Apply Triangle Technique for eye contact
☐ Pause 2 seconds before every answer
☐ Address at least 2 questions back to the panel
Questions to Ask a Panel at the End
Asking a question to the panel collectively is powerful. Here are formats that work:
- “For each of you — what do you find most energising about working here?” (Gets individual responses, shows genuine interest)
- “What would success look like for the person in this role after 6 months?” (Asked to the hiring manager specifically)
- “Is there anything about my background that gives you pause? I’d love the chance to address it.” (Brave, memorable, and often disarms the skeptic)
References:
- Harvard Business Review — Mastering the Panel Interview — https://hbr.org/panel-interview-tips
- McKinsey Careers India — Interview Preparation — https://www.mckinsey.com/careers/india
- UPSC Interview Board Guidelines — https://www.upsc.gov.in/interview-guidance
- LinkedIn India Talent Acquisition Insights 2024 — https://business.linkedin.com/talent-solutions/resources/india
- National Institute of Personnel Management — Interview Best Practices — https://www.nipm.in
