STAR method examples
A quick guide with examples
The STAR method is the most reliable way to talk about your work — in interviews, self-reviews, and promo packets. It forces you to land on the result, which is the part people actually weigh.
The four parts
- Situation — the context. What was going on?
- Task — what you were responsible for.
- Action — what you specifically did.
- Result — the outcome, ideally measurable.
Example — an engineer
Situation: Sessions were failing under load and support tickets were climbing. Task: I owned the auth service. Action: I designed and shipped token rotation with a sliding-window fallback, then migrated the legacy tokens safely on staging first. Result: The failures stopped, the backlog cleared, and the mobile team could ship on schedule.
Example — a designer
Situation: New users were dropping off at the permissions step. Task: Improve onboarding activation. Action: I ran usability sessions, then redesigned the flow to request permissions only when a feature needed them. Result: The confusion in testing disappeared and activation improved.
Where STAR answers fall apart
- Saying "we" the whole time. The interviewer is hiring you, not your old team. "We shipped it" hides whether you led it or watched it.
- Spending it all on Situation. Two sentences of context, maximum. The Action and Result are what get scored.
- No result. If the story ends at "…so I built it," it isn't a story yet. Even "the failures stopped" or "we hit the date" counts — say what changed.
Six stories cover almost every question
You don't need a story per question — you need six to eight strong ones that each prove two or three competencies. The same project rescue can answer "tell me about a conflict," "a tight deadline," and "influencing without authority," depending on which part you lead with. Prepare the stories, not the questions. And for senior roles, add one beat after the Result: what you'd do differently — reflection is the difference between someone who had an experience and someone who learned from it.
Build a library, not one-offs
The trouble with STAR is remembering the raw material months later. Nisshi keeps a running record of your work and turns real moments into STAR stories you can save — a library you can pull from for any interview, review, or 1:1, all kept privately on your Mac.