
Are you struggling to pass competency-based interviews? Do you keep getting frustratingly low scores — 2s or 3s — and you’re not sure why?
Here’s the good news straight away:
Most candidates don’t fail competency interviews because they lack experience or aren’t good enough.
They fail because of a small number of repeat mistakes — mistakes that quietly destroy scores even when the experience is strong.
I’m Joe from InterviewGold, and after 20 years of coaching candidates into top UK roles, I can tell you this with confidence: once you recognise these mistakes and fix them, your answers become clearer, stronger, and far more effective almost immediately.
Let’s break down the top competency interview mistakes in 2026 — and exactly how to fix each one.
Mistake 1: Using a Weak or Irrelevant Example
This is one of the biggest score killers.
Candidates often choose examples that are:
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Too small or routine
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Only loosely linked to the competency
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Missing the behaviours the interviewer is actually scoring
Sometimes the example isn’t bad — it’s just not strong enough.
Remember:
👉 Interviewers don’t score effort. They score behavioural evidence.
✅ How to fix it
Choose examples that:
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Are based on a real task or achievement
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Clearly relate to the competency being tested
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Include challenge, risk, pressure, or obstacles
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Show what you did — not just what the team did
A focused example that clearly demonstrates the right behaviours will always outperform a vague or “nice” story.
Mistake 2: Poor Structure — Too Much Situation, Not Enough Action
This one is incredibly common.
Candidates spend most of their answer explaining:
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Background
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Context
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The organisation
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The team structure
And by the time they get to the action, time has run out.
But here’s the truth:
👉 Interviewers score actions, not backstory.
✅ How to fix it
Use this simple balance:
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15% Situation & Task
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70% Action
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15% Result
If you’re short on time, cut background — not actions.
Your score lives in what you did, how you did it, and why.
Mistake 3: Lack of Focus — Positive Behaviours Aren’t Clear
This mistake is subtle, but damaging.
Candidates tell a story that sounds good —
but the interviewer can’t clearly identify:
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Leadership
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Problem-solving
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Communication
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Decision-making
So even though the answer flows well, nothing is clearly scorable.
✅ How to fix it
Signpost behaviours clearly.
Say things like:
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“The key behaviour I demonstrated here was leadership…”
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“This shows how I delivered at pace…”
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“This is an example of effective stakeholder communication…”
Never assume interviewers will infer behaviours.
👉 Make it obvious.
Mistake 4: Answering the Wrong Behaviour
This is one of the most misunderstood reasons candidates fail.
It happens when candidates:
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Misinterpret the competency being tested
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Answer a different behaviour to the one asked
For example:
You’re asked about teamwork, but you give an answer focused entirely on leadership.
Even if it’s a great leadership example,
👉 it will not score well for teamwork.
✅ How to fix it
Before answering, quickly ask yourself:
“What behaviour are they really testing here?”
Then shape your answer around that behaviour, not just the surface wording.
Top tip:
If you’re unsure — ask the interviewer to clarify.
That’s far better than taking a gamble and answering the wrong thing.
Mistake 5: Panicking and Making Something Up
This happens more than people admit.
A question is phrased slightly differently than expected.
You freeze.
You panic.
And then you either:
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Invent an example
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Ramble
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Talk yourself into a corner
Interviewers can usually tell.
And made-up examples tend to collapse under follow-up questions.
✅ How to fix it
Stick to your prepared examples.
You can say:
“I haven’t dealt with that exact situation, however here’s a recent example where I demonstrated strong communication skills…”
This approach still allows you to score most of the available marks — without damaging credibility.
Mistake 6: Poor Delivery (Especially in Virtual Interviews)
With so many interviews now online, this mistake has become more common.
Candidates:
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Read directly from notes
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Recite memorised scripts
It sounds unnatural and reduces credibility.
Interviewers are listening for:
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Authenticity
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Ownership
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Real understanding
✅ How to fix it
Prepare bullet points, not scripts.
Know your example well enough to explain it naturally.
If you truly understand your evidence, you won’t need to read it.
Why These Mistakes Keep Happening
Here’s the key insight most candidates miss.
Most interview advice focuses on:
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What to say
Very little explains:
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What actually loses marks
Once you understand how interviewers score competency answers, the process becomes far less mysterious — and far more predictable.
If you find it difficult to create strong, high-scoring answers, the InterviewGold platform can help.
It builds clear, tailored STAR examples for your role and level — showing the exact behaviours interviewers want to see.
Calm. Control. Confidence.
If you’ve been making these mistakes, let me reassure you:
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They are common
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They are fixable
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They have nothing to do with intelligence or experience
When you avoid these errors and structure your answers properly, competency interviews become one of the most controllable interview formats there is.
And that’s when confidence really starts to show.
