Definition
The STAR method is a behavioral interview technique based on the principle that past behavior is the best predictor of future behavior. Instead of hypothetical questions ("What would you do if...?"), the interviewer requests real experiences narrated in four parts: Situation (the context), Task (the candidate's specific responsibility), Action (what the candidate actually did, in first person), and Result (the measurable impact of that action).
How it's used
A typical STAR question sounds like: "Tell me about a time when you had to make a difficult decision with incomplete information." The interviewer then uses follow-up questions to ensure the response covers all four parts:
- Situation: what was the context? What company, project, or time period?
- Task: what was your specific responsibility in that situation?
- Action: what did you do exactly? ("We" is a red flag — the interviewer needs the "I")
- Result: what happened? How did you measure it? What did you learn?
Vague answers in the Action section or ones without data in the Result section are signals that the candidate is generalizing rather than narrating a real experience.
When to apply
STAR is used in selection interviews for any level of seniority and in any industry. It is especially useful for evaluating specific behavioral competencies: leadership, conflict management, results orientation, adaptability. It also applies in performance review interviews and in professional development conversations.
Historical origin
The STAR method is an evolution of the behavioral interviewing technique developed by Tom Janz in the 1980s, based on research showing that past situational questions have higher predictive validity than hypothetical ones. The STAR acronym was popularized by recruiting organizations in the 1990s as a way to teach the method to both interviewers and candidates.
How CauceOS supports it
CauceOS offers a STAR interview template that, during the session, allows the interviewer to label in real time whether the candidate's response is covering the four parts. The post-session report consolidates STAR responses by assessed competency and generates a structured summary for the selection team.
Related terms
- Structured interview — broader methodology within which STAR is framed
- Bias reduction — STAR reduces bias by standardizing questions and evaluation criteria
References
- Janz, T. (1982). Initial comparisons of patterned behavior description interviews versus unstructured interviews. Journal of Applied Psychology.
- Campion, M. A., Palmer, D. K., & Campion, J. E. (1997). A review of structure in the selection interview. Personnel Psychology.
- Highhouse, S. (2008). Stubborn reliance on intuition and subjectivity in employee selection. Industrial and Organizational Psychology.