Why interviewers ask about your leadership style
Interviewers ask this question to assess self-awareness, how you work with and through others, and whether your approach fits the team you would be joining. They are not looking for you to name a textbook leadership style (servant leadership, transformational leadership). They want to understand how you actually behave as a leader in practice and whether you have reflected on it.
The question is also a trap for candidates who lack self-awareness: people who cannot describe their leadership style clearly often do not have one — they react situationally without intention. The question is also a trap for candidates who describe an aspirational style rather than their actual behaviour. Interviewers will probe with follow-up questions and the examples need to support whatever you claim.
How to structure your answer
A strong answer has three parts: describe your approach in two to three sentences, give a concrete example that illustrates it, and acknowledge how you adapt your style in different situations or with different people.
Example answer for a manager role: "My approach is to set a clear direction and high expectations, then get out of the way and let the team work. I believe in coaching rather than directing: I ask questions before giving answers. [Example:] In my last role I had a high-performing team member who had been given no room to grow by a previous manager. Rather than assigning tasks, I gave her ownership of our entire client reporting process and met with her weekly to coach through any blockers. She delivered improvements that cut our reporting time by 40%. I do adapt my approach for newer team members or in a crisis — in those situations I am more directive until confidence or stability is established."
Common mistakes and what to avoid
Mistake 1: Describing an ideal style, not your real one. If you say "I always empower my team" but your example is about micromanaging a deadline, the answer falls apart under probing. Be honest about what you actually do. Mistake 2: Only one style, no adaptation. Effective leaders adjust to context. If you describe a single rigid approach with no variation, it signals inflexibility. Mistake 3: The buzzword answer. "I am a servant leader who leads with empathy and psychological safety" with no concrete example is meaningless. Anchor every description with a real situation.
Example answers by level
For senior individual contributors (no direct reports): "I lead through influence rather than authority. I build consensus by getting input early, then move quickly once a decision is made. I take responsibility for things going wrong in projects I am involved in, not just the ones I officially own." For new managers: "I am still developing my management style, but what I know about myself is that I set clear expectations and hate surprises: I hold weekly check-ins and create space for team members to raise blockers early rather than discovering them at deadline." For senior managers/directors: Focus on how you develop other managers, handle strategic ambiguity, and create the conditions for a team to perform — not on day-to-day task management.