---
title: How to Answer 'How Do You Define Success?' (2026 + Examples)
description: How to answer 'how do you define success?' so it reveals genuine values that fit the role — the approach, example answers, and the responses that fall flat.
url: https://usegreenroom.app/blog/how-do-you-define-success
last_updated: 2026-06-20
---

← Back to blog

Answers

# How to answer 'how do you define success?'

June 20, 2026 · 6 min read

![How to answer how do you define success — cover from Greenroom, the AI mock interviewer](/assets/blog/how-do-you-define-success-hero.webp)

"How do you define success?" is a **values** question. There's no single right answer — the interviewer is learning what drives you, and whether your definition of success aligns with how the team works. The key is to be genuine and connect it to impact and growth. Here's how.

## What they're really asking

They want to understand your motivation and values, and check fit. Someone whose only definition of success is "my own promotion" fits differently than someone who defines it as "the team shipped something users love." Both can be valid — but reveal the one that's true *and* fits the role.

## Strong angles to define success

- **Impact** — building something that genuinely helps users or the business.
- **Growth** — continuously learning and improving.
- **Goals met** — setting clear objectives and delivering them.
- **Team** — contributing to a team's shared win.

![Answer scaffold for defining success — values that align with the role](/assets/blog/pool-star-structure.webp)

Reveal genuine values — ideally ones that fit how this company measures success.

## Example answer

> "For me, success is impact plus growth. I feel successful when something I built actually changed an outcome — fewer support tickets, a faster system, a happier user — and when I've grown in the process and can do something I couldn't before. Hitting a goal feels good, but it only counts to me if it moved the needle for real people."

## Answers that fall flat

- Only money or title — reads as transactional.
- A generic platitude with no substance.
- A definition that clearly clashes with the role or culture.
- "I don't really think about it." — No self-awareness.

**The core truth:** This is a values-and-fit question with no single right answer. Be genuine, anchor your definition in impact and growth, and let it align with how this team measures success — that's what makes it land.

## How to deliver it

An authentic answer beats a polished generic one — rehearsing helps you sound genuine, not scripted. Greenroom asks it in a real voice interview and tells you whether it sounded genuine and connected. Pair it with our guides on "what motivates you" and career goals.

## Frequently asked questions

### How do I answer 'how do you define success?'

Be genuine and anchor your definition in impact and growth — for example feeling successful when something you built changed a real outcome and you grew in the process — and let it align with how the team measures success. It's a values question with no single right answer, so reveal what truly drives you while showing fit with the role.

### What is the interviewer looking for with this question?

They're learning your underlying motivation and values and checking whether your definition of success fits how the team and company operate. Someone motivated purely by personal promotion fits differently than someone motivated by team wins or user impact, so they want an authentic answer that also aligns with the role's culture.

### What are good ways to define success in an interview?

Strong angles include impact (building something that genuinely helps users or the business), growth (continuously learning and improving), goals met (setting and delivering clear objectives), and team success (contributing to a shared win). Combining impact and growth is a well-rounded, widely resonant definition, as long as it's genuinely true for you.

### What answers about success should I avoid?

Avoid defining success purely by money or title (sounds transactional), generic platitudes with no substance, a definition that clearly clashes with the role or culture, and dismissive answers like 'I don't really think about it,' which signal a lack of self-awareness. Aim for genuine, substantive and aligned with the role.

This is a values-and-fit question — practise an authentic answer. Greenroom asks it out loud and tells you if it sounded genuine and connected. Free to start.