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Here’s what nobody prepares you for: a portfolio review is not a presentation. You’re not presenting your work — you’re defending it.
What Is a Portfolio Review, Really?
A portfolio review is a 30–90 minute meeting between you and one or more senior designers. The best preparation is to understand the reviewer’s mental model. They’re not trying to find reasons to reject you. They’re trying to find the few designers they can actually hire.
Every question they ask is designed to answer one of three things:
- Can you design? — Raw creative ability. Is the work good?
- Do you understand the industry? — Do you know what automotive design actually involves?
- Would I want to work with you? — Can you take feedback? Can you explain your decisions?
The 4 Stages of a Portfolio Review
Stage 1: The Introduction (5 minutes)
Who you are and why you’re here
Keep it brief — 2 minutes maximum. Cover: your background, your journey into automotive design, and why you’re interested in this specific studio or role.
Stage 2: The Portfolio Walkthrough (20–40 minutes)
Your work, project by project
You’ll walk through your portfolio project by project. Common patterns: “Walk me through this project,” “What was your role on this?” “Why did you choose this direction?”
Stage 3: The Live Sketch or Design Challenge (10–20 minutes)
30 minutes to solve a design problem on paper
More and more Indian automotive studios are adding a live sketching component to portfolio reviews.
Stage 4: The Conversation (10–15 minutes)
Culture, fit, and questions for them
This is also your chance to evaluate them. Ask about the team, the projects, the tools they use, the career path.
What Reviewers Actually Look For
- Complete project narratives. Reviewers look for projects that show the full process: brief → exploration → decision → outcome.
- Alias surface work. If your portfolio has even one strong Alias surface model, the reviewer immediately categorizes you differently.
- Design rationale, not just output. “I made it look sporty” is not a design rationale.
- Honesty about skills. If you don’t know Alias yet, say so — and show you’re learning it.
- EV-specific work. Any project that shows EV thinking signals you’re paying attention to where the industry is going.
1. Portfolio shows no process
2. Can’t explain design decisions
3. No Alias or surface modeling work
4. Overconfidence about skills they don’t have
5. No questions for the reviewer at the end
How to Prepare in 7 Days
Day 1–2: Narrative Preparation
Write a 3-minute and a 90-second version of your portfolio walkthrough. Practice out loud — not in your head, out loud.
Day 3–4: Alias Preparation
If you have Alias work in your portfolio, re-open those files. Be ready to explain your surface quality: why this curve, why this continuity.
Day 5: Live Sketch Practice
Set a timer for 30 minutes. Design a vehicle type you haven’t worked on before. Sketch it from concept to a final render.
Day 6: Review Questions
Write answers to every common question listed above. Practice saying them out loud.
Day 7: Portfolio Final Check
Read every word in your portfolio. Can you explain everything in it? Does every project show your tools used?
After a portfolio review, a reviewer makes a gut call: “Yes, I’d work with this person” or “I’m not sure.” The difference between those two verdicts is often not the work — it’s the confidence, clarity, and honesty with which you present it.
Practice your portfolio review with a TDI mentor
TDI mentors offer portfolio review sessions for aspiring automotive designers. Get feedback on your work and understand exactly what studios look for.
