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Are you worried about competency-based interviews?
Not sure how to answer them correctly?
Or wondering what interviewers actually want you to say?
You’re not alone.
I’m Joe from InterviewGold. For over 20 years, I’ve coached candidates across the UK and worldwide to successfully pass competency-based interviews — at all levels, in all sectors.
In this complete 2026 UK guide, I’m going to:
- Show you the top 10 competencies you are most likely to be asked about
- Give you real competency interview questions being used right now in the UK
- Explain exactly what recruiters expect to hear in your answers
- Teach you a clear, reliable formula for answering competency questions the way interview panels score them
And later in the guide, I’ll show you how to get brilliant, top-scoring competency answers, tailored to you, your experience, and your target job.
If you’ve got a competency-based interview coming up — with any employer, at any level — this guide will dramatically boost your chances.
What Is a Competency-Based Interview?
A competency-based interview is an interview where you are asked to prove your skills with real examples, not just talk about them.
Instead of asking:
“Are you good at teamwork?”
An interviewer will ask:
“Tell me about a time you worked with others to achieve something.”
Why?
Because anyone can say they are organised, hardworking, or calm under pressure. What employers really want to know is how you behave when it matters.
These interviews focus on what you’ve done before, because past behaviour is one of the most reliable indicators of future performance.
You’ll hear phrases like:
- “Tell me about a time when…”
- “Give me an example of…”
- “Describe a situation where…”
That’s your signal that the interviewer wants a short, clear story, not an opinion.
A strong answer explains:
- The situation
- What you were responsible for
- The actions you took
- The result
In simple terms, competency-based interviews are about showing, not telling, using real-life examples to prove you can do the job.
What Is a Competency?
A competency is simply a skill you can use in real life, not something you only understand in theory.
It describes:
- How you behave
- How you work
- How you handle situations
For example:
- Teamwork is about how you work with others
- Problem solving is about how you deal with issues when things go wrong
- Communication is about how clearly you share ideas and information
Employers care about competencies because they show what you actually do, not what you say you can do.
Two candidates might have the same qualifications, but the one with stronger competencies usually performs better at work.
When an employer asks about a competency, what they are really asking is:
“Can you show me a real example of this skill in action?”
What Are Competency-Based Interview Questions?
A competency-based interview question asks you to give a real example from your past to prove you have a specific skill.
Instead of asking what you would do, interviewers ask what you’ve already done.
These questions usually start with:
- “Tell me about a time when…”
- “Give me an example of…”
- “Describe a situation where…”
Each question focuses on one competency — such as teamwork, communication, planning, or problem solving.
Interviewers listen carefully to:
- The situation you describe
- The actions you personally took
- The outcome
In simple terms, these questions show how you behave in real situations — because that’s one of the best predictors of how you’ll perform in the role.
How to Answer Competency-Based Interview Questions
To answer any competency question well, you need a clear, repeatable structure.
- Listen carefully and identify the skill being tested
- Choose a real example that clearly shows that skill
- Avoid opinions or hypotheticals — interviewers want something that actually happened
- Focus on your actions, not just the team’s
Start by briefly explaining the situation and your responsibility. Keep this part short.
Then describe the actions you personally took. This is the most important part of your answer. Use “I”, be specific, and explain why you did what you did.
Finally, explain the result — what changed, what was achieved, or what you learned.
In simple terms:
Pick the right story, focus on your actions, and clearly explain the outcome.
Why Employers Use Competency-Based Interviews
Employers use competency-based interviews because they want to make fairer and better hiring decisions.
Anyone can say they are hardworking or organised. Real examples are much harder to fake.
These interviews:
- Allow fair comparison between candidates
- Reduce guesswork and personal bias
- Focus on real behaviour rather than confidence
Competency questions also show how candidates:
- Handle pressure
- Solve problems
- Work with others
- Learn from mistakes
In short, they help employers move beyond confident talk and focus on real evidence of performance.
3 Things You Must Know Before Any Competency Interview
There are three rules that separate high-scoring candidates from everyone else.
First: every question needs a real example.
No story = low score, no matter how confident you sound.
Second: the focus is on you.
Interviewers want to know what you did. Use “I” more than “we”.
Third: structure matters.
Clear, logical answers are easier to follow — and easier to score.
If you remember these three things, you’re already ahead of most candidates.
The Top 10 Competencies You Need to Prepare For
Below is a countdown from 10 to 1, with 1 being the most commonly assessed competency in almost every interview.
10. Self-Development & Learning
Recruiters want candidates who never stop improving.
Typical questions:
- Tell me about something you learned recently and how did it improve your performance.
- Give an example of a time when you responded to feedback, perhaps criticising your performance.
- Tell me about a time when you identified a development need in yourself or someone else, and took deliberate action to address it.
What recruiters expect:
- Self-awareness
- Ownership of development
- Evidence of improvement
Strong examples include learning new skills, reflecting on mistakes, and acting on feedback.
Avoid generic training lists.
Explain why you chose to develop — not just what you learned.
9. Change Management / Adaptability & Flexibility
Change happens constantly at work — and recruiters know it can be difficult.
This competency assesses how well you:
- Respond to change
- Stay calm and productive
- Help others adjust
Typical questions:
- Tell me about a time when you had to adapt quickly to a significant change at work. What changed, and how did you respond?
- Describe a situation where plans or priorities changed unexpectedly. How did you adjust your approach and still deliver results?
- Give an example of when you helped others adapt to change. What actions did you take to support them through it?
High-scoring answers show acceptance, adjustment, and positive action — not just tolerance.
8. Customer Service / Customer Focus
This applies even if your role isn’t customer-facing — colleagues and stakeholders are customers too.
Typical Competency-Based Interview Questions
- Tell me about a time you dealt with a difficult or dissatisfied customer. How did you handle the situation and what was the outcome?
- Describe a situation where you had to balance customer expectations with organisational policies or limitations. How did you approach it?
- Give an example of when you improved the customer experience. What did you identify, and what actions did you take?
Recruiters look for:
- Empathy
- Clear communication
- Sound judgement
Strong answers show how you managed expectations, handled complaints, or improved service — without promising unrealistic outcomes.
7. Planning & Organising
This competency is about how you stay in control when work is busy or unpredictable.
Typical Questions
- Tell me about a time when you had to plan and organise a piece of work with multiple deadlines. How did you manage it?
- Describe a situation where your plans changed at short notice. What did you do to reorganise and keep things moving?
- Give an example of how you decide what to focus on when everything feels urgent. How do you prioritise?
Strong answers show:
- Prioritisation
- Structured planning
- Flexibility
Avoid saying you “just worked longer hours”.
Instead, show how you organised your workload and adapted plans.
6. Achieving Results / Delivering Results
This competency is about outcomes, not effort.
3 Competency-Based Interview Questions
- Tell me about a time you were given a challenging target or objective. How did you make sure it was delivered?
- Describe a situation where things didn’t go to plan, but you still achieved the result. What did you do?
- Give an example of when you had to keep performance up under pressure or tight deadlines. How did you stay on track?
Interviewers want to hear:
- What you were trying to achieve
- The obstacles you faced
- How you kept delivery on track
Strong answers show ownership, determination, and focus on results.
5. Problem Solving
Everyone faces problems. What matters is how you approach them.
3 Competency-Based Interview Questions
- Tell me about a problem you didn’t know how to solve straight away. How did you approach it?
- Describe a time you had to make a difficult decision with limited information. What did you do?
- Give an example of when you improved a process or fixed something that wasn’t working. How did you go about it?
High-scoring answers explain:
- The problem
- Your analysis
- The options considered
- The outcome
Don’t jump straight to the solution — interviewers score your thinking process.
4. Leadership (At All Levels)
Leadership isn’t about job titles.
3 Competency-Based Interview Questions
- Tell me about a time you had to lead or influence others without formal authority. What did you do?
- Describe a situation where you motivated others to achieve a shared goal. How did you approach it?
- Give an example of when you took responsibility during a challenging situation. What impact did that have?
It’s about:
- Stepping up
- Taking responsibility
- Positively influencing others
Strong examples include leading small projects, guiding colleagues, or providing clarity during uncertainty.
3. Decision Making
This competency assesses judgement under pressure.
Competency-Based Interview Questions
- Tell me about a difficult decision you had to make at work. How did you approach it?
- Describe a time when you had to choose between competing options or priorities. What did you base your decision on?
- Give an example of a decision you made that didn’t go perfectly. What did you learn from it?
Recruiters look for:
- Balanced reasoning
- Accountability
- Learning
Even decisions that didn’t go perfectly can score well if you reflect honestly.
2. Teamwork
Teamwork is about how you work with others — especially under pressure or disagreement.
Typical Interview Questions
- Tell me about a time you worked as part of a team to achieve a shared goal. What was your role?
- Describe a situation where you had to deal with conflict or tension within a team. How did you handle it?
- Give an example of how you supported a colleague or helped improve how a team worked together.
Show:
- Your role in the team
- How you communicated
- How you handled conflict
Top tip: Don’t disappear into “we”. Make your contribution clear.
1. Communication Skills
The most important competency in almost every job.
Whether you are working in a back office or dealing with customers every day, you will need good communication skills.
Competency-Based Interview Questions
- Tell me about a time you had to explain something complex to someone who wasn’t familiar with it. How did you do it?
- Describe a situation where you had to adapt your communication style for different people or audiences. What did you change?
- Give an example of when good communication helped prevent a problem or misunderstanding.
Strong answers show:
Interviewers aren’t just listening to what you say — they’re listening to how you communicate.
A strong answer shows:
- That you understood your audience
- How you structured your message
- How you chose the right tone, language, or format
- And what impact your communication had
Good examples include explaining technical information, managing difficult conversations, presenting ideas, or clarifying expectations.
Avoid vague phrases like “I kept everyone informed.”
Be specific about what you said, how, and why it worked.
How to Answer Competency Questions Using STAR
The structure most employers expect is STAR:
- Situation – the context
- Task – your responsibility
- Action – what you did (the most important part)
- Result – what changed or what you learned
Think of STAR as a clear, focused story. Keep the situation brief, spend most time on your actions, and finish with a clear result.
If your answer is easy to follow, it’s easy to score — and that’s exactly why STAR works so well.
Final Advice
If competency-based interviews are holding you back, two actions will change your results quickly.
First, stop relying on instinct alone. Competency interviews are about structure, relevance, and scoring.
Second, understand the subtle mistakes that quietly cost marks. Many strong candidates fail not because of weak experience — but because of how they present it.
Your experience already has value.
You just need to present it in a way interview panels can score.
Good luck with your interview.
