Private-sector interviews are often a conversation. Federal interviews are usually a scored evaluation — a panel works from a structured rubric, and each answer gets rated against specific criteria tied to the position’s competencies. Candidates who don’t know this walk in prepared for the wrong kind of conversation.
Why STAR isn’t optional here
The STAR method — Situation, Task, Action, Result — isn’t just a nice way to organize an answer. In a scored federal interview, each part of STAR usually maps to something the panel is specifically listening for and rating:
| STAR Component | What the panel is scoring |
|---|---|
| Situation | Whether you can concisely frame relevant context without rambling — panels are often timed. |
| Task | Whether you understood your specific responsibility, not just what the team or office did. |
| Action | The specific competency being tested (leadership, problem solving, communication) — usually where the most points are assigned. |
| Result | Whether you can quantify impact or outcome, not just describe activity. |
The mistake that costs the most points
The single most common mistake: answering with what “we” did as a team, instead of what you specifically did. Panels can only score your individual contribution. If your answer is full of “we,” a strong panel will ask a follow-up to isolate your role — and if you can’t answer that cleanly, the score drops.
Build a story bank before the interview, not during it
Don’t try to improvise STAR answers live. Before the interview:
- List 8–12 significant projects, challenges, or accomplishments from your career.
- Write each one out in full STAR format, with a specific, quantified result.
- Match each story to the competencies likely to be tested for the position (leadership, teamwork, problem-solving, communication, adaptability are common ones).
- Practice delivering each story in 90 seconds to 2 minutes — long enough to be complete, short enough to respect the panel’s time.
Know the practical details too
Scoring isn’t only about your answers. Know the GS grade and step structure for the position you’re interviewing for, and be ready to discuss salary expectations in those terms — federal panels notice when candidates clearly haven’t done this homework.
This post reflects common federal interview panel practices and is general guidance, not a guarantee of any specific agency's process.