
Most interview candidates believe they are using the STAR method correctly.
They’re not — and that misunderstanding is exactly why so many strong candidates walk away with low interview scores.
Knowing what the STAR method is and using it properly under interview scoring conditions are two very different things.
In structured and competency-based interviews, that difference can quietly cost you the job offer.
I’m Joe from InterviewGold. For over 20 years, I have coached thousands of candidates into top jobs across the UK and beyond. Almost everyone I work with tells me the same thing:
“I already use STAR.”
But once we break their answers down, it becomes clear they’re missing the parts interviewers actually score.
In this guide, I’ll show you:
- How to use the STAR method correctly
- Why interviewers use STAR questions in the first place
- The most common mistakes candidates make
- How to structure high-scoring STAR answers
- How to score bonus points by expanding it to the STARR method
- A detailed, real example you can model your own answers on
By the end, you’ll know exactly how to make your answers stand out — and how to boost your interview scores into the job-offer range.
What Are STAR Method Interview Questions?
STAR interview questions are also known as competency-based or behavioural interview questions.
They ask you to describe a real situation where you demonstrated a specific skill or behaviour. These questions are usually phrased like:
- “Tell me about a time when…”
- “Give an example of when you…”
- “Describe a situation where you…”
Employers use these questions because they believe past behaviour predicts future performance. If you’ve handled a situation well before, you’re far more likely to handle something similar again — often even better.
STAR questions are different from technical or knowledge-based questions. The focus isn’t on what you know, but how you acted — how you made decisions, communicated, prioritised, solved problems, or worked with others.
That’s why structure and evidence matter so much.
What Is the STAR Method?
The STAR method is a structured way to answer behavioural interview questions clearly and convincingly.
STAR stands for:
- Situation – Set the scene
- Task – Explain what you needed to achieve
- Action – Describe what you did
- Result – Show the outcome and impact
Think of STAR as telling a short, focused story with a clear beginning, middle, and end.
This structure doesn’t just help you organise your thoughts — it makes it easy for interviewers to score you against the competency criteria.
And What Is the STARR Method?
Here is a top tip that will earn you bonus point.
Use the STARR method.
Many candidates stop at STAR — Situation, Task, Action, Result. But adding an extra R for Reflection can significantly strengthen your answer.
Reflection means briefly explaining what you learned, what you would do differently, or how the experience improved your skills. It shows self-awareness, growth, and professional maturity.
A short reflective sentence at the end demonstrates continuous improvement and strategic awareness, helping you stand out from candidates who simply describe past events.
What Each Part of STAR(R) Method Really Means
Many candidates know the headings but misunderstand how much detail each section needs. Here’s how interviewers actually interpret them.
Situation
Set the context briefly. One or two sentences is enough. Your goal is to explain why the situation mattered — not to tell a long backstory.
Task
Explain what you were responsible for. This shows the level of accountability you had and what was expected of you personally.
Action
This is the most important part of your answer.
Interviewers are listening here for clear evidence of the competency. You should walk them through the steps you personally took, in logical order, using “I” throughout.
Result
Finish with what happened because of your actions. Strong results include:
- Measurable outcomes
- Positive feedback
- Improvements made
- Lessons learned
This is what interviewers score against.
Reflection
Include a sentence detailing what you learned from your experience, what new skills you developed which you will you bring with you into this new role. This is a powerful way to end your example.
Why So Many Candidates Struggle With The STAR Method
Even candidates with excellent experience often score poorly because of three common issues:
1. Poor structure
Answers drift, ramble, or lose focus, making it difficult for interviewers to identify evidence.
2. Vague actions
Candidates talk about what the team did instead of what they personally contributed.
3. No clear result
Without outcomes, interviewers have nothing concrete to score.
Interviewers aren’t listening for stories — they’re listening for evidence of behaviour.
How to Make Your STARR Answers Stand Out
Good answers meet the criteria. Great answers make scoring easy.
Here’s how to elevate your STAR responses:
Choose the right example
Your example should be relevant, recent, and complex enough to demonstrate multiple behaviours.
Focus on your actions
Use “I” consistently. Interviewers can’t score what they can’t hear.
Show impact
Numbers, feedback, changes, and improvements give your answer weight and credibility.
Tell a clear story
Set the scene, build through your actions, and finish with a strong result.
STARR Method Sample Example: Communication Competency
Question:
Tell me about a time you communicated successfully with an individual or group.
Situation
Recently, in my current role as an administrative assistant, I researched, prepared, and delivered a presentation to my team.
Task
The objective was to inform and persuade the team about recent trends in social mobility and equality, and to provide recommendations on how we could use this insight to increase organisational turnover.
Action
I researched both online and offline sources and identified over 40 relevant articles. I created an Excel database to categorise and tag the information by themes such as gender pay gaps, urban and rural poverty, and age demographics.
I analysed the data to identify key messages and produced a clear commentary for each theme. I then tailored the content so it would be accessible to team members with varying levels of subject knowledge.
Knowing the team preferred visual information, I designed a PowerPoint presentation with charts and graphs. I used straightforward language, avoided acronyms, and ensured there were examples relevant to everyone in the room. I also highlighted the links between different issues, such as poverty and gender inequality, to strengthen understanding.
Result
The presentation received very positive feedback from both my manager and the wider team. Several of my recommendations were approved for implementation, and the experience improved my confidence in presenting complex information clearly and persuasively.
Reflection
From this experience, I leaned just how important it is to tailor my communication style to different audiences and this is something that I do now with all of my interactions with people.
Notice how most of the answer focuses on Action — this is where interview scores are won.
Tips for Choosing Strong STAR or STARR Examples
When preparing for interviews:
- Use real, relevant examples from work, study, or volunteering
- Choose situations where you overcame challenges or obstacles
- Look for examples that demonstrate more than one competency
- Match your examples directly to the job description
Preparation creates calm, confident delivery.
7 Key STARR Method Strategies to Remember
Top interview coaches consistently recommend the following:
- Use genuine examples — never invent stories
- Avoid generic or stock answers
- Keep answers relevant and detailed
- Review the job requirements before preparing
- Always use “I,” not “we”
- Mine your CV for strong examples
- Practise using bullet points, not scripts
These strategies consistently place candidates in the top scoring band.
Final Thoughts
Competency-based interviews are far more predictable than they appear — once you understand how they’re structured and scored.
When you master the STAR method properly, you stop merely describing what happened and start demonstrating how you perform.
That’s the difference between a decent answer and a job-winning one.
