Using the STAR technique Job interviews
Employers are looking for you to evidence your skills and experience and the STAR technique can help you to structure your answers.
How to use the STAR technique:
- describe the Situation and when did it take place
- explain the Task and what was the objective
- give details about the Action you took to achieve this
- close with the Result of your action.
Below is an example of how an employer has used competencies on an application form. We've used the STAR technique to answer the question. You'll notice that Task is implicit in the first question.
The scenario
Social workers need to be able to show resilience in the face of adversity and handle difficult situations with calmness and confidence. Think of an occasion where you were involved in a difficult, confrontational situation with friends, family, colleagues or members of the public.
Situation and Task
What was the situation and why was it difficult to handle?
I was working as a receptionist at a leisure centre. I had to deal with a member who was not happy with one of the centre's rules. This rule did not allow children under 10 years to swim without an adult. Yet she wanted to leave her 7-year-old son with us to swim while she went shopping. It was difficult because she became angry when I did not want to sell her a swimming ticket for her son.
Action and Result
What did you do to address the situation and what was the outcome?
I clearly explained the rule regarding children under 10 years requiring adult supervision in the pool. I explained that this rule was there to ensure children's safety, as the centre did not have the facilities to be able to look after young children swimming without an adult. I did suggest that she could leave her son in the centre's supervised play area, and that she could go swimming with her son once she returned. The woman calmed down, and agreed to leave her son in the play area.
Follow-up
If you had acted differently, what could the outcome have been?
If I had not explained the reason behind the rule, or offered her an alternative, the woman would probably have felt that the centre was unreasonable and not customer-friendly. She might have cancelled her membership. She might also have asked to speak to the centre manager. She would no doubt have done so if I had been impatient with her, or changed my tone and become rude.
You may have more than one example to consider; choose the one that:
- is relevant and describes the skill being asked for
- demonstrates action and is something you actually did, as opposed to what you learned, or what you might do in a hypothetical situation
- is personalised by stating what you did, as opposed to saying what other people did or what happened
- has a positive outcome
- is appropriate and gives you something you can talk comfortably about if asked for more detail
- is specific - if the question asks for an example, then you should only describe one.
Keep your examples specific, recent and relevant. We want to hear how you have used skills and behaviours in a positive way, so that we can see how you would apply them in the work place.
Co-operative Group