Best for hourly applicants
Use the generator when you want copy-ready text and do not want to manage a long prompt.
Faster option
If you are applying fast, use the Alphabet / Google answer generator first. It turns three details into a resume bullet, a why-this-company answer, and an interview answer without requiring ChatGPT setup.
Use the generator when you want copy-ready text and do not want to manage a long prompt.
It uses the same Alphabet / Google fact sheet, worker language, and hiring signals as this prompt.
Quick answer
Use this page if you are applying to Alphabet / Google and need to prepare interview stories. It helps you shape customer, conflict, reliability, or teamwork examples into STAR-lite answers, while keeping the answer focused on technical depth, structured problem solving, and user impact.
Applicants targeting Big Tech SWE roles at Alphabet / Google, especially when the final answer needs to sound specific rather than copied from a generic template.
Use Googler for workers and user for the people they serve.Alphabet / Google has strong company-specific hiring signals, so this page uses its worker language, customer language, red flags, and interview themes.
If true, mention availability for interview scheduling flexibility, relocation or hybrid constraints. Add one concrete example tied to technical depth or structured problem solving.
Live prompt
You are preparing me for a Alphabet / Google Big Tech SWE interview. Common themes:- Availability and reliability- user service- Handling a difficult person or mistake- Physical readiness, if relevant: lift not applicable, stand not applicable- Teamwork during busy shifts My stories:- Customer service or helping story: {{STORY_1}}- Difficult person or mistake story: {{STORY_2}}- Reliability story: {{STORY_3}} For each story, rewrite it using STAR lite:Situation, Task, Action, Result. Rules:1. 4-6 sentences per story.2. Plain English.3. If a story is weak, say it is weak and ask one specific question that would unlock a better example.4. Keep first-job stories valid: school, volunteer, family responsibility, sports, clubs, and informal work can count.5. End with one sentence for "Why should we hire you?"
About this prompt
Use Googler for workers and user for customers.
Google Careers; typical timeline: varies by role and hiring committee process.
2026-04-21
Verify current SWE role page, interview format, and team-specific requirements before launch.
Method
This page is generated from a structured Alphabet / Google fact sheet, a reusable Big Tech SWE prompt pattern, and the prompt type shown above.
Before submitting any final answer, check the current job posting, local store or property details, schedule requirements, and any role-specific qualifications.
Replace every variable with true information. Remove any claim that does not match your own experience, availability, or the current role description.
This page was last updated on 2026-04-21; source gaps are listed in the evidence layer.
Common questions
Use this Alphabet / Google interview stories prompt when you need to prepare interview stories for a Big Tech SWE role. It is built around technical depth, structured problem solving, and user impact.
This page gives you a Alphabet / Google-specific prompt to paste into ChatGPT, Claude, or Gemini when preparing a job application. It is designed for Big Tech SWE roles and keeps the output focused on what hiring managers are likely to check.
Use this prompt if you are applying to Alphabet / Google and want your answer to reflect the role, company language, and practical hiring filters. It is most useful when you replace the variables with real availability, experience, and store or role details.
Alphabet / Google has rich public hiring and culture signals, so this prompt uses company-specific language, values, and interview patterns.
Replace every placeholder with true details from your own work, school, volunteering, or customer experience. Remove any line that sounds exaggerated, and keep the final answer concrete instead of repeating company values back verbatim.
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