. Application & Resume Screening
What they look for:
Experience with customer service, marketing, or public speaking.
Social media presence or digital advocacy.
Passion for the brand or industry.
Tips:
Tailor your resume to highlight brand-related experience.
Include specific examples of advocacy, brand loyalty, or influencer work.
✅ 2. Phone or Video Screening (15–30 minutes)
Conducted by HR or a recruiter.
Common questions:
"Why do you want to be a Brand Advocate for our company?"
"How familiar are you with our brand/products?"
"Can you give an example of a time you influenced someone’s opinion on a product or service?"
✅ 3. First-Round Interview (with Hiring Manager or Team Lead)
Format: Video or in-person.
Focus:
Communication skills.
Passion and alignment with the brand.
Personal brand and social media savvy.
Sample questions:
“How do you build trust with an audience?”
“How would you handle a negative comment about our brand online?”
“What platforms do you use to engage with communities?”
✅ 4. Assignment or Role Play (Optional but common)
Examples:
Create a mock social media post promoting a product.
Record a short video talking about the brand.
Draft a response to a customer question/complaint.
Goal: Show creativity, tone alignment, and brand voice understanding.
✅ 5. Final Interview (Panel or Senior Leadership)
More strategic and focused on long-term potential.
Might include:
Cross-functional team members (marketing, product, customer success).
Deeper dive into performance metrics, brand loyalty, or ambassador programs.
They might ask:
“How would you measure the success of a brand advocacy campaign?”
“What are the most important brand values to communicate?”
✅ 6. Background Check & Offer
Depending on the company, they may check:
Social media presence and tone.
Past employment.
Public-facing communication.
Bonus Tips for Success:
Know the brand inside and out. Study their products, values, audience, and tone.
Be authentic. They're hiring someone to be the face of the brand, so authenticity and alignment matter more than buzzwords.
Show your communication skills. Both written and verbal — clarity, warmth, and confidence are key.
Highlight social media skills. If you have analytics data (engagement rates, follower growth, etc.), share it.
Bring energy and enthusiasm. Passion for the brand often outweighs technical skills in advocacy roles.