Working on it! · Interviews · New Build

Research the Client Before You Talk

Learn what they do, then prepare answers that fit them. This is how you become the candidate who understands their business.

Length: 20 minutes For: anyone with an interview coming up Updated: 2026-06-24 (v1) Prerequisite: none

"I walked into the interview knowing nothing about the company. I answered the questions, but I never connected with the client."

The gap between an okay interview and a winning one

Before my client interview, the very first thing I did was a background check. I got familiar with what the company does, so that when the client asked me anything, I could answer in a way that fit their world. That is the difference. Not a smarter answer. A more fitting one. And the fit comes from research you do before you ever speak.

The wrong question vs the right question

Wrong question: "What clever things can I say about myself?"

Better question: "What does this client care about, so I can speak to that?"

A client is not hiring the most impressive stranger. They are hiring the person who clearly understands their business. Research is how you become that person before the call even starts.

What to research, and what it buys you

Research thisSo that you can
What the company actually doesTheir product, their customers, their industry. Speak about their work like you already get it.
Their content and channelsTheir website, blog, social pages, YouTube. Reference something real you noticed.
What is current in their worldIf they are technology-forward, know the hot topic. I knew AI and ChatGPT were big, so I was ready to talk about them.
Your own talking pointsPrepare your "hobbies and interests" answer in advance, picking things that are true and that make the client like you.
The real lesson

Understanding their business is the skill clients pay for. When I told my client I was into AI, ChatGPT, and building my own tools, I think that is what set me apart. Not because it was clever, but because it showed I could easily understand a technology-forward business. Research told me that was what they wanted to hear.

The broken tooth, and the mantra that carried me

I will tell you something real. The day before my client interview, I had a dental accident. My front tooth was broken, cut in half. I felt shy. Anyone would. But I did not back out. My mantra when I apply for a job is simple: give my best, and let God take care of the rest. So I managed my confidence, broken tooth and all, and showed up. The show must go on.

And the interview went well, because the preparation was already done. I had researched the client. I had my talking points ready. I knew AI was their world. A broken tooth could shake how I looked, but it could not touch what I had prepared. That is the quiet power of doing the research first: when something goes wrong on the day, your readiness still stands.

The rule that came out of that day

Prepare what you can control, and walk in anyway. You cannot control a broken tooth or a shaky nerve. You can control whether you understood the client before you spoke. Do that part, give your best, and let the rest go.

The Client Research Loop

Five steps, done the day before. This pairs with researching the real client behind an agency: the same digging that keeps you safe also makes you ready to connect.

StepWhat you doWhy it works
1. Read their websiteUnderstand the product, the customer, the promise.You speak their language, not generic freelancer language.
2. Skim their contentBlog, social, a video or two. Note one thing you genuinely liked.A specific, true compliment lands hard.
3. Learn what is current in their fieldWhat topic is hot in their industry right now? Be ready to mention it.It shows you live in their world, not just yours.
4. Prepare your interests answerPick true hobbies that also make the client like you and fit their business.The personal question is a chance, not a trap.
5. Pick two things to ask themSmart questions about their goals. Research makes good questions possible.Questions show you are already thinking like their teammate.

One client, researched in 30 minutes

Setup: a client interview tomorrow for a content role.

Their site
You learn what they sell and who buys it. You can now talk about their customer, not just the job.
Their content
You watch one of their videos. You have a real, specific thing to mention.
Their field
You see they are technology-forward. You prepare to mention your interest in AI and the tools you are building.
Your answer
For "tell me about your hobbies," you have a true answer ready that also signals you fit their world.
What that cost

Thirty minutes, and you walk in as the candidate who gets it. Everyone else is improvising. You are connecting.

Practice. Research one real client.

  1. Take a real or upcoming interview (or a dream client).
  2. Read their website and note what they sell and to whom.
  3. Skim their content and find one specific thing you liked.
  4. Learn one current topic in their field.
  5. Write your interests answer that is true and fits them.
  6. Prepare two smart questions to ask them.

Audit checklist:

  • Read their website and understood the business
  • Found one specific, true thing to mention
  • Learned one current topic in their field
  • Prepared an interests answer that fits them
  • Wrote two smart questions to ask

Action items, based on your archetype

🌱 The Fresh Starter~5% · research beats experience here

You worry you have less experience than others. Research levels the field: the prepared beginner often connects better than the lazy expert.

Do this week
  1. Research one dream client fully as practice.
  2. Write the interests answer that fits them.
  3. Note their current field topic so you can speak to it.
Recommended pairing: research plus a logged win to point to.
💼 The Corporate Transitioner~30% · you already vet, apply it

You researched companies in your corporate life. Use that exact instinct for your own interviews now.

Do this week
  1. Research a target client like a business case.
  2. Map your corporate skills to their needs.
  3. Prepare two strategic questions.
Recommended target: speak to their goals, not your past titles.
🌟 The Polished Freelancer~25% · research raises your close rate

You interview well. Deeper research is what turns a good interview into a signed contract.

Do this week
  1. Research current results in their niche.
  2. Tailor one win to their exact situation.
  3. Ask a question only a prepared person could ask.
Recommended angle: specificity is what closes premium clients.
🎨 The Creative Specialist~15% · match your craft to their voice

Research their brand voice and visuals so your samples feel made for them.

Do this week
  1. Study their current look and tone.
  2. Pick portfolio pieces that match it.
  3. Mention one creative choice of theirs you admire.
Recommended pairing: research plus a perfectly matched sample.
🛒 The Solo Entrepreneur~15% · you think like an owner

You understand running a business. Research lets you speak owner to owner.

Do this week
  1. Research their business model and pain.
  2. Frame your help in their bottom-line terms.
  3. Ask about their biggest current bottleneck.
Recommended angle: owner empathy is your edge.
📋 The Generalist Admin~10% · research shows your range fits

Research tells you which of your many skills this client needs most, so you lead with that.

Do this week
  1. Find which skill they need most from their site.
  2. Lead with that in your answers.
  3. Keep the rest as backup, not the headline.
Recommended pace: research first, then aim your breadth.
Universal rule

For every archetype: understand them before you sell yourself. The candidate who clearly gets the client's business wins over the one who only talks about themselves.

Checkpoint. Show proof that you used the lesson.

Postable artifact

Post this in the BFF Facebook Group (Work At Home Geek):

  1. Your research notes on one real client and the interests answer you prepared, OR
  2. The current field topic you found and how you would bring it up.

Proof posted means lesson passed.

Community + next step

Hold steady, BFF Team. We keep going together.

– Lala