It was a very easy and friendly interview overall. The tone felt relaxed and conversational, which helped reduce pressure and made it feel more like a dialogue than a formal interrogation. The interviewers focused mainly on standard, expected questions, so nothing came as a surprise.
Most of the questions were fairly typical behavioural and introductory prompts—such as walking through who I am, describing my background, and explaining my strengths. There was also an emphasis on how I manage competing priorities and juggle multiple tasks at once, likely to understand how I handle workload and time management in a practical setting.
Overall, it felt like they were trying to get a well-rounded sense of my personality, communication style, and basic working approach rather than testing highly technical knowledge. I would say the key to preparing for this type of interview is being comfortable speaking about yourself clearly, having a few solid examples ready for multitasking and teamwork, and being able to articulate your strengths in a grounded, authentic way.