Video on making applications

Essentials: making applications

Application forms are a series of questions designed to test your competency and motivation for a particular opportunity. They allow the assessor to make direct comparisons between applicants in a way not possible with CVs and make it easier to obtain standardised information.

Start with the video Career Snapshot: making applications which gives an overview of how to make effective applications, and then use the sections below and the donwloadable resources for further support. For guidance in answering a range of questions on your application form watch our mini presentation on Application and Interview Questions.

Making Application Tabs

The basics

Imperial male student using laptopA successful application form should clearly link your experiences, knowledge and enthusiasm for the opportunity with the key criteria provided in the advertisement. 

You should consider how you can be useful and valuable to the particular opportunity and evidence that you have relevant skills, competencies, abilities and knowledge.

Know yourself:

Understand why you are interested in a particular opportunity and understand your strengths. For help with this see our section on self reflection

Know the opportunity:

Understand the opportunity by reading the advertisement along with the organisation’s website carefully. Make a list of qualities which are important in a candidate as these must be addressed in your application form.

  • What makes this opportunity unique?
  • What are the organisation’s key values?
  • How might you have demonstrated relevant skills and values in your academic, work experience, and extracurricular activities? 

For jobs, examine more about the role by reading the advertisement, and research the industry sector using business databases such as MarketLine Advantage from the library’s Market and industry information

For further study, think about how it will build on the knowledge and skills you have already developed. Consider which parts of the course or research programme particularly interest you, and why. 

Create a good overall impression: 

Ensure that you make clear connections between what you have to offer and the skills and attributes they are looking for.

  • Recent examples are more impressive. Don’t go back too far – certainly not prior to the last couple of years at school unless it is for a truly stellar achievement. 
  • You need a good range in your answers. Aim to draw upon experiences in all three areas of your life – study, previous work experience and extracurricular activities. 

Completing an application

It takes quite a bit of time to complete an application form. Some questions will require factual answers, such as your personal details, while others will explore your motivations and skills which require you to talk about your experiences in more depth.

  • Application forms are generally online and allow you to save your progress as you're going along. Do this frequently! 
  • Make sure you have key details ready – for example your transcript of grades  and National Insurance number.
  • Prepare some parts of your application, for example, a supporting statement or answers to longer questions can be drafted before and copied into the application form. 
  • If you get the option, preview your form before it is submitted, for a final check of the content and layout. 
  • Save your completed application form and all related documents (such as the role description) so you have this ready for review if you make it through to the interview stage. It can be hard to remember exactly what you wrote if you have made several applications and the opportunity or course may no longer be advertised.

Why do most application forms fail? 

  • The answers are not sufficiently detailed or specific. Selectors are expert at detecting “waffle” and information solely gathered from their website. They want hard facts, details and numbers. They also set a word limit and expect you to make the most of this. If you have a limit of 250 words but provide only 100 it's likely that you've not given enough detail.
  • You have answered different questions from those which were asked. This happens if you don’t read questions carefully. Some are complicated, having several separate sub-questions. You must deal with each part in turn. This also happens when you cut and paste answers from one form to another without appropriate editing. 
  • You have not been positive and persuasive when describing yourself and your abilities. You need to use an enthusiastic tone. Don’t undervalue your own experiences. If you don't have direct experience of a certain skill you can talk about how you have learned things quickly in the past.
  • The answer has mistakes in spelling, grammar or punctuation. Don’t rely on the spell checker. If necessary, get a friend (ideally a fluent English speaker) to proofread your application. They can help you spot any obvious errors.

Typical questions

Competency questions 

Competency questions are used to assess your soft skills, such as teamwork, problem-solving or creativity, by asking for an example of when you have shown this skill before. 

How to answer 

Use STAR (Situation, Task, Action, Result): 

  • Situation - describe the situation that you were in. 
  • Task - describe what you needed to accomplish. 
  • Action - describe the actions you took, being sure to keep the focus on you ('I'), rather than ‘we’. Focus on skills and attributes, what went well and what you learnt. About 70% of the answer should be here. 
  • Result - what happened? What were the results? How did the event end? What did you accomplish? What did you learn? Describe outcome, in positive terms, quantified where possible. 
A typical question: 
Describe a situation where you have worked efficiently in a group. Describe the role you played and any problems you encountered

To answer, break down your response using the STAR technique as below: 

S: In my second year I worked in a team of four on a group-based case study that looked at haemodialysis and the polymer membranes used for the separation process. 
T: We investigated the biocompatibility of haemodialysis membranes, which involved producing a summary report and presentation in a two-week time frame. 
A: A few days into the project, it became apparent that one of our team was not pulling their weight as they did not attend the visit to the local dialysis unit. Some of my teammates opted for absorbing his workload into their own, whereas others suggested that he was directly challenged for slacking off. 
I volunteered to speak to him, and it transpired that he was unclear about the assignment but was embarrassed to ask in front of the group. I arranged a one-to-one session to talk through what was needed and where he could contribute, he was very good in conducting literature reviews and so I re-assigned some of this work to his area and assumed some of the writing work myself. I also arranged for a knowledge exchange meeting to share the findings from the visit and the literature research. This way he could liaise with other members of the group to provide them with relevant material for the presentation and exchange knowledge with them about the visit which he missed. 
R: He also volunteered to do the presenting with one of the colleagues from the presentation group, and overall, we received 68% as a group mark. 

Achievements questions 

What do you consider your main achievements?

How to answer 

Panic can easily set in at the sight of these types of questions. It can feel difficult to come up with sufficiently worthy examples. However, the magnitude of the achievements you describe is not the most important aspect. 
 
The key to success here is to choose achievements which provide good evidence that you are the right sort of person for the job. Focus on the skills and positive attributes which are demonstrated by the achievements you describe. Combining several extracurricular achievements with a good academic record could count and would show real evidence of good time management skills, drive, and energy. 

Personal statements or open-ended questions 

Explain why you have applied for this job function. Offer evidence of your suitability. Emphasise why you consider yourself to be a strong candidate. 

How to answer 

Typically, you will have a large words allocation for this question, so structure your response. Deal with each part of the question in turn. Highlight the skills you have which are relevant to the job. Give enough detail in your evidence to paint a convincing picture of your abilities. Even if the question is as general as 'Why have you applied for this job?'  the secret is to cover the same type of points. The content required is similar to that of a cover letter or personal statement. Our page on Personal statements though focused on applications for further study, may provide some further advice on structure. 

Additional information questions 

Please write here any additional information, not covered elsewhere, which will strengthen your application.

How to answer 

Include any unmentioned achievements or difficulties overcome, if you feel it has some relevance. For example, if you suffered a setback during your A-level studies which affected your grades or had an issue with a second-year project, you should explain that here. If you have nothing to write, at least write 'not applicable' to show that you have seen the question. 

Further help  

For additional tips on answering a range of  questions on your application form, watch our mini presentation on Application and Interview Questions 

Prospects also has some example answers to help you think about what kinds of experiences you could consider. 

Postgraduate study applications

You may be submitting applications up to 12 months prior to the course start date so planning ahead is crucial to your application success. Application procedures vary greatly between different institutions and countries; however, you will generally submit the following: 

  • Application form 
  • Personal statement/Statement of purpose (generally one/two pages) 
  • References (generally two - three) 
  • Research proposal (sometimes requested for PhD applications) 
  • Official transcripts of university exam results 
  • Standardised test results such as the GMAT or GRE (for postgraduate study in some countries such as US, Canada) 

Application forms 

An online form that collects personal details and may request submission of answers to specific questions relevant to the course and your future career plans. 

Personal statements 

A personal statement (sometimes called a statement of purpose) describes your motivation, background, interests, and abilities. We have guidance on how to write a strong personal statement, which will involve thoroughly researching the course you are applying to. 

References 

You will generally need to submit references who can vouch for your approach to study and who can recommend you as a strong candidate for your chosen course. Usually this would include your personal tutor, project supervisor or other departmental academic.  

Research proposals 

If you are applying for a PhD, you may be requested to submit a research proposal in addition to the above-mentioned documents. Essentially this is an outline of your proposed project and should include a clear research question and an approach to answering it. You should try to highlight the significance of the research (impact) and how it adds to, develops, or challenges existing work. These documents vary in length. 

Useful information to support with this can be found through: 

Postdoctoral applications

Targeting your application

If you're applying for a postdoc position you will need to audit and review your unique selling points - your expertise, experience, skills and attributes - and emphasise these in your application. The "Researcher careers" page on the Vitae website contains some excellent resources on making applications. Having researched the employer and the job, the next step is to emphasise what is relevant to the position applied for.

Further information

  • Think about what the target reading audience will be seeking in an application.
  • For academic applications, you will need to emphasise your research, teaching and administrative experiences. The Vitae website has a detailed section on making applications and there are a range of resources on the Postdoc and Fellows Development Centre website.
  • For applying to employers outside academia and targeting applications, the Doctoral careers outside higher education page on the Vitae website also contains useful information.
  • Consider what evidence you can provide that demonstrates you have the skills and attributes required.
  • Structure your answers to respond to each part of the question or to deliver evidence for each of the 'essentials' and 'desirables' listed along with the job description.
  • Convey your enthusiasm.

Applications and disability

Some students choose to discuss their disability, neurodivergent condition or other health condition in the application form. The main reason for this is to ask for adjustments during the recruitment process. For further information and guidance on doing this, see our page on careers and disability