How to Answer “Tell Me About a Time You Failed” in an Indian Interview

“Tell me about a time you failed.”

Most Indian candidates hate this question. They’ve grown up in an education system that rewards success and punishes failure. Many interviewers in India are also uncomfortable asking it—yet it appears in almost every senior-level interview across consulting, banking, and tech companies.

The reason interviewers ask this question is not to trap you. It is to find out who you really are. And if you prepare well, it becomes one of your strongest answers.

What the Interviewer Is Actually Measuring

When a hiring manager at McKinsey India, Goldman Sachs Bengaluru, or Razorpay asks about failure, they want to see:

Quality AssessedSignals They Look For
Self-awarenessDo you take ownership without deflecting?
ResilienceHow did you recover? Did you learn?
MaturityCan you discuss mistakes without getting defensive?
Growth mindsetWhat did you change as a result?
JudgementWas it a genuine failure or just bad luck?

The failure itself is almost irrelevant. How you narrate it is everything.

The Modified STAR Framework for Failure Questions

Use this structure, which is a slight modification of the standard STAR method:

S — Situation: Set the context (project, role, team size, stakes)

T — Task/Target: What were you supposed to achieve?

A — Action: What did you do, and crucially, what went wrong?

R — Result: What happened? Be honest about the outcome.

L — Learning: What did you change as a direct result?

The key addition is the L (Learning)—this is what transforms a failure story into a strength story.

Examples of Strong Failure Answers

Example 1: Project Delay (for engineering or PM roles)

“In my second year at [Company], I was leading a feature release for our payments module. I underestimated the complexity of our third-party vendor integration and didn’t flag risks early enough. We missed the deadline by three weeks, which affected a client’s launch. I owned the outcome in the post-mortem, and more importantly, I redesigned how we assess integration risks before every project. Since then, my team has shipped the next four releases on time or ahead of schedule.”

Example 2: Communication Failure (for leadership roles)

“I once managed a cross-functional project where I assumed two teams were aligned on timelines—without explicitly confirming. Three weeks before the deadline, we discovered they had completely different expectations. We salvaged the delivery but with significant last-minute effort. Since then, I use a written alignment document at every project kickoff. It’s saved my teams from similar surprises multiple times.”

Example 3: Early Career Mistake (for freshers or mid-level)

“In my first internship, I sent a report to a client without getting it reviewed by my manager. The data was accurate but the framing was off, and it caused some confusion in their team. My manager addressed it, but I understood how important internal review is before client-facing communication. I now treat every external communication as a collaborative effort, not a solo task.”

What Makes Indian Candidates Struggle With This Question

Three common patterns to avoid:

  1. Blaming others: “Our team didn’t deliver, so my project failed.” Even if true, this signals you can’t take ownership.
  1. Choosing a fake failure: “I worked too hard and burned out” is not a failure. Interviewers see through this immediately.
  1. No learning: Ending the story at “so the project failed” with no learning or action change signals you didn’t grow from the experience.

How to Choose the Right Failure Story

Pick a failure that:

  • Is genuinely yours to own (not someone else’s mistake)
  • Had a real consequence (but not catastrophic—don’t pick the time you lost a ₹50 crore client)
  • Led to a concrete, demonstrable change in how you work
  • Is not about the core skill required for the role you’re interviewing for

One Line to Start and One to End

Start with: “This was one of the clearest lessons of my career…”

End with: “Looking back, that failure taught me more than most successes have.”

These frames signal reflection and maturity—qualities Indian interviewers in consulting, banking, and senior tech roles deeply value.

References

  1. Harvard Business Review: Failure Interview Question — https://hbr.org/2018/05/the-right-way-to-answer-tell-me-about-a-time-you-failed
  2. Naukri.com HR Interview Preparation — https://www.naukri.com/blog/hr-interview-questions-and-answers/
  3. AmbitionBox Interview Experience — https://www.ambitionbox.com/interviews
  4. LinkedIn India: Behavioural Interview Tips — https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/behavioral-interview-india-star-method/
  5. Indeed India: Common Interview Questions — https://in.indeed.com/career-advice/interviewing/common-interview-questions-india

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