Business Strategy & Performance Topics
Business strategy, competitive analysis, market opportunities, and strategic innovation. Includes market research, competitive positioning, and business planning.
OKR and Metric Definition
Covers translating strategic objectives into measurable key results and operational metrics that drive the right behaviors. Topics include writing clear objectives and specific, measurable key results, distinguishing leading and lagging indicators, defining primary metrics versus guardrail metrics, selecting absolute versus relative targets, avoiding perverse incentives, and ensuring metric hygiene through reliable instrumentation and data quality checks. Also addresses setting appropriate targets and time horizons, monitoring cadence, dashboard design and alerting for metric deviations, and using metrics to inform prioritization and continuous improvement without encouraging gaming.
Strategic Business Reasoning and Prioritization
Demonstrate structured business reasoning that goes beyond raw financial metrics to include competitive positioning, customer impact, operational feasibility, and organizational capabilities. Explain prioritization frameworks and how you would set and defend priorities given limited resources, including trade offs and opportunity costs. Interviewers look for balanced judgment that integrates quantitative analysis with strategic context and practical constraints.
Business Metrics Definition and Strategy
Emphasizes defining meaningful metrics and measurement frameworks that answer business questions and drive decisions. Candidates should be able to distinguish between count metrics, ratio metrics, and rate metrics; select appropriate observation windows and time alignment for retention, churn, and conversion analyses; account for multiple user touch points and events when attributing actions; and identify leading versus lagging indicators. This topic covers designing metric definitions that avoid double counting, selecting denominators and numerators that match the business question, segmenting users for insight, and documenting business logic to ensure consistency. At senior levels expect discussion of trade offs between simplicity and fidelity, governance of metric definitions, and how to prioritize which metrics matter for different stakeholders.
Problem Structuring and Analytical Frameworks
The ability to convert ambiguous business problems into clear, testable, and actionable analytical questions and frameworks. Candidates should demonstrate how to clarify the decision to be informed and success metrics, break large problems into smaller components, and organize thinking using hypothesis driven approaches, issue trees, or mutually exclusive and collectively exhaustive groupings. This includes generating hypotheses, identifying key drivers and uncertainties, specifying required data sources and any necessary transformations, choosing analytical methods, estimating effort and impact, sequencing and prioritizing analyses or experiments, and planning next steps that produce evidence to guide decisions. Interviewers also assess evaluation of trade offs, recommending a decision with a clear rationale, effective communication of structure and findings, and comfort operating with incomplete information. The scope includes applying general case structuring as well as specialized frameworks such as growth funnel analysis that maps acquisition, activation, revenue, retention, and referral, audience segmentation and competitive assessment frameworks, content and channel strategy, and operational step by step approaches. For more junior candidates the emphasis is on clear structure, systematic thinking, strong rationale, and prioritized next steps rather than exhaustive optimization.
Competitive Analysis and Positioning
Comprehensive skills and frameworks for researching competitors, assessing market landscapes, and defining defensible positioning and differentiation strategies. Candidates should be able to identify direct and indirect competitors, map competitor strengths and weaknesses, benchmark product features, pricing, messaging, distribution and go to market approaches, and evaluate moats and vulnerabilities. Expect techniques such as competitor profiling, perceptual mapping, feature comparison matrices, win loss analysis, market segmentation, customer and persona development, jobs to be done analysis, hypothesis driven opportunity sizing, and white space identification. Strong answers translate analysis into actionable recommendations for product direction, pricing, messaging and go to market alignment, including prioritization of where to compete or avoid and anticipation of competitive responses. Candidates should also be able to recommend partnership and ecosystem strategies, create battle cards and executive summaries, and communicate competitive insights effectively to product, marketing, sales, partnerships and leadership to influence strategy and execution.
Company Research and Knowledge
Demonstrates that a candidate has researched the specific employer and can discuss its mission, products or services, business model, market position, competitive landscape, recent announcements, and any relevant technical or regulatory considerations. Interviewers look for concrete references such as product features, strategic initiatives, engineering signals, or public communications and expect candidates to tie that research to how they would add value in the target role. Preparation includes building informed questions, understanding target customers and metrics of success, and knowing role specific context such as likely projects, typical deliverables, or relevant parts of the technology stack.
Business Problem Solving and Recommendations
Frameworks and skills for taking ambiguous business questions through analysis to clear, actionable recommendations. Includes decomposing complex problems into analyzable components, identifying key drivers, selecting focused analyses, synthesizing data backed findings, and articulating specific next steps and implementation considerations. Emphasizes communicating recommendations in business terms, estimating potential impact when possible, acknowledging trade offs and limitations, prioritizing among multiple actions, and tailoring communication to different stakeholders. Covers translating research or analytic results into feasible product or operational changes and defending choices with evidence.
Netflix Business Model, Revenue & Cost Structure
In-depth analysis of Netflix's business model, revenue streams, pricing strategy, content costs, operating expenses, and profitability drivers, along with competitive positioning and platform economics within the streaming industry.
Spotify Business Model & Metrics
Examines Spotify's business model, including revenue streams (subscription plans, advertising, and partnerships), pricing strategy, freemium versus premium dynamics, licensing considerations, and platform economics. Covers key performance indicators such as monthly active users, subscribers, churn, ARPU, customer lifetime value, growth metrics, and competitive positioning, along with strategic decisions around content licensing, podcasts, and monetization diversification.