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Disability Interview Questions, Tips & How-To Guide

Job interviews are nerve-wracking for many people. If you have a disability, the anxiety often climbs another notch. Let’s look at strategies for successful interviewing with a disability.
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Disability Interview Questions, Tips & How-To Guide

Although people with disabilities may be just as gifted, just as skilled, and just as qualified as anyone else, a potential employer may not always recognize that this is the case, making the prospect of entering a job interview with your disability even more daunting

According to 2023 data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 26% of US adults have a disability. In spite of this statistic, stigma in some workplaces remains. The good news is, with preparation and practice, you can get interviewers to notice you for you, and not your disability.

In this article, we’ll give you some tips on how to approach interviewing if you have a disability, how and when to disclose it, and how to answer disability questions in an interview.

Project Confidence

One of the most important elements of interviewing, with or without a disability, is confidence. You may have to fake it at first if you struggle with feeling confident naturally, and that’s okay. Everyone feels unsure at times, and feeling nervous about your big interview is completely understandable.

However, make sure you enter your interview projecting as much confidence as possible, in your body language, strong handshake, and easy manner.

One way to bolster true, authentic confidence is to enter interviews as prepared as possible.

Think carefully about the following critical topics (Big Interview’s free course is a great way to get up to speed quickly on these basics):

Doing your research, preparing well for interview questions, and knowing how to conduct yourself verbally and physically will give you an advantage over most applicants and help you build baseline confidence.

Now that you’re prepared and feeling great, let’s turn to the matter of your disability.

Should You Disclose Your Disability?

Many people prefer not to disclose a disability before or during an interview if they don’t have to. In quite a few situations, however, non-disclosure may not be possible.

For example, if you are deaf, you may need to request an interpreter for an in-person interview.

For a phone interview, you may need to explain how a relay service functions or why live chat via a messenger service may be more effective.

If you use a wheelchair and are applying at a company that works out of a historic building that has no elevators, you may want to ensure that the interviews are on the first floor.

If you are blind, you may merely prefer not to catch an employer off guard or to make an interviewer feel misled.

In short, no matter your disability, there are many good reasons to disclose. There are, of course, good reasons not to as well. Use your judgment, and do what makes you most comfortable.

That said, the rule of thumb is that if you need accommodations for the interview, disclosing beforehand is a must. How you disclose makes a world of difference.

Again, confidence is key. Never apologize for your disability (i.e. for making a company go to “extra trouble”). Do remember that the Americans with Disabilities Act, or ADA, does not require that all employers provide accommodations. For example, a private employer that has 14 or fewer employees might choose not to, so be sure to take that into consideration.

Have a Backup Plan

Speaking of accommodations, having a backup plan is critical in maintaining your confidence. We live in an imperfect world where human resource personnel forgets to get in touch with interpreter agencies, or interpreters call in sick.

Likewise, an employer may forget to provide assistive technology for a test taken by a blind applicant, or interviewers forget to move meetings from the second floor to the first for a wheelchair user. As a person with a disability, you are probably used to envisioning everything that could go wrong.

It is crucial, however, that you do not overthink and tailspin into negativity. Yes, things may go wrong, but you will have a plan in case they do.

If you are deaf, make it easier on the hiring manager who is likely clueless about how to get an interpreter. Explain which agency he or she should contact, and express a preference for specific interpreters (give names).

If you will be doing the majority of your job without interpreters, you may even choose to forego an interpreter altogether for the interview.

This is more feasible for one-on-one setups rather than group interviews, so get the scoop on how interviews will be structured before the day arrives.

Envision what you will do if things start going wrong. Imagine yourself remaining cool, calm, collected, and providing solutions.

Your interview is an opportunity for you to figure out what working for this employer may be like, so take advantage of it. Remaining cool under pressure is a great mark in your favor and will not be lost on your possible future employer.

Recognize and Develop Strengths

A critical aspect of projecting confidence is knowing that you have what it takes to be the right fit for the job.

To that end, cultivate at least one strength that you will use to position yourself as especially qualified during interviews. This strength (or strengths) could be a soft skill such as communication, persistence, motivation, leadership or research. It could also be a hard skill such as unusual proficiency in a software program.

This strength is your ace card. It’s your key to maintaining confidence because you know, no matter what, you have this strength, and any employer would be lucky to benefit from it.

When faced with questions such as, “Why should we hire you?” or If we asked your current employer what stands out about you, what would they say?” you can answer with this particular skill or accomplishment that makes you uniquely qualified.

When you try to figure out what sets you apart from other applicants, it can be useful to look to your disability as a starting point.

Because of it, you may have met people you never would have otherwise, or it may have caused you to work hard to overcome challenges that other people cannot begin to fathom.

Persistence, patience, creativity, and thinking outside the box are great strengths that just might have their roots in your disability.

However, when discussing these strengths, take care to not make everything about your disability. Interviewing with a disability doesn’t need to be interviewing about a disability. You do not even need to bring it up during such a discussion if you would rather not.

Ultimately, understanding how your disability has contributed to your life helps you present yourself confidently.

Never Associate Your Disability with Your Weakness

There are many variations of the question, “Tell me about your greatest weakness”. They can even be situationally based (i.e. “Tell me about a situation where your greatest weakness tripped you up.”).

Whatever you do, never associate your disability with your weaknesses.

If you are deaf, your weakness could be that you are a bit of a perfectionist, and that caused you to almost miss deadlines on projects several years ago. Since then, you’ve worked on achieving a better balance between quality work and cutting it close.

Great! That is a perfectly understandable weakness. You do not want to say something such as, “I have trouble communicating with customers sometimes if they whisper on the phone.”

Show Emotional Intelligence

Emotional intelligence goes a long way toward showing interviewers that you are more than your disability. Avoid painting yourself as a victim, and do not overcompensate.

Put yourself in your interviewer’s shoes. What would you like to see? What would you like to know? What would turn you off?

Employers are not allowed to ask about your disability, but they certainly are wondering about your ability to perform with it.

One indicator of emotional intelligence is the ability to speak naturally and openly about what you do. For example, when asked about a project you have worked on, you can weave in bits of insight about how you excel at your job while having a disability.

Similarly, you may prefer to discuss in an honest and simple manner the realities of working with a disability. Show that it isn’t scary, that it’s very doable, and in fact, can benefit the company as a whole.

In other words, show emotional intelligence by discussing your disability as one of many parts that make up who you are. It need not be portrayed as a negative, simply a fact of life.

You can even inject humor or practicality into situations (i.e. “My manager chose me for the surprise project because of my ability to focus. Good thing I’m not bothered by people shouting at one another across the room!”).

You’ve Got This!

Your disability does not define who you are. You have every reason to enter your interview with confidence, knowing you are fully prepared, well presented, and ready to articulate your best self to your future employer.]

Pamela Skillings
Pamela is the co-founder of BigInterview and an expert interview coach on a mission to help job seekers get their dream jobs. As an HR authority, she also provides consulting services to companies wishing to streamline their hiring process.

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