STAR Method Overview

A simple methodology to structure your answers to behavioral-based interview questions

Laura Ascari avatar
Written by Laura Ascari
Updated over a week ago

Context

The STAR method is an Amazon based method aimed at answering behavioral-based interview questions. The STAR method does so through discussing the specific situation, task, action, and result of the situation you personally had and solved.

  • Situation: Describe the situation that you were in or the task that you needed to accomplish. You must describe a specific event or situation, not a generalized description of what you have done in the past. Be sure to give enough detail for the interviewer to understand. This situation can be from a previous job, from a volunteer experience, or any relevant event.

  • Task: What goal were you working toward?

  • Action: Describe the actions you took to address the situation with an appropriate amount of detail and keep the focus on YOU. What specific steps did you take and what was your particular contribution? Be careful that you don’t describe what the team or group did when talking about a project, but what you actually did. Use the word “I,” not “we” when describing actions.

  • Result: Describe the outcome of your actions and don’t be shy about taking credit for your behavior. What happened? How did the event end? What did you accomplish? What did you learn? Make sure your answer contains multiple positive results.

Make sure that you follow all parts of the STAR method. Be as specific as possible at all times, without rambling or including too much information. Oftentimes students have to be prompted to include their results, so try to include that without being asked. Also, eliminate any examples that do not paint you in a positive light. However, keep in mind that some examples that have a negative result (such as “lost the game”) can highlight your strengths in the face of adversity.

Samples STAR Response

  • Situation (S): Advertising revenue was falling off for my college newspaper, The Review, and large numbers of long-term advertisers were not renewing contracts.

  • Task (T): My goal was to generate new ideas, materials and incentives that would result in at least a 15% increase in advertisers from the year before.

  • Action (A): I designed a new promotional packet to go with the rate sheet and compared the benefits of The Review circulation with other ad media in the area. I also set-up a special training session for the account executives with a School of Business Administration professor who discussed competitive selling strategies.

  • Result (R): We signed contracts with 15 former advertisers for daily ads and five for special supplements. We increased our new advertisers by 20 percent over the same period last year.

How to Prepare for a Behavioral Interview?

  • Recall recent situations that show favorable behaviors or actions, especially involving course work, work experience, leadership, teamwork, initiative, planning, and customer service.

  • Prepare short descriptions of each situation; be ready to give details if asked.

  • Be sure each story has a beginning, middle, and an end, i.e., be ready to describe the situation, including the task at hand, your action, and the outcome or result.

  • Be sure the outcome or result reflects positively on you (even if the result itself was not favorable).

  • Be honest. Don't embellish or omit any part of the story. The interviewer will find out if your story is built on a weak foundation.

  • Be specific. Don't generalize about several events; give a detailed accounting of one event.

  • Vary your examples; don’t take them all from just one area of your life.

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