"Tell me about a specific time you helped foster a culture of diversity and inclusion on your engineering team. What problem did you notice, what actions did you take, and what changed as a result?"
This question tests whether you treat inclusion as an active leadership responsibility rather than a general value statement. Interviewers want to understand if you can identify exclusion patterns, influence team norms, and make practical changes to hiring, onboarding, meetings, feedback, or career development. They are also looking for ownership: did you simply support an initiative, or did you notice a gap and drive improvement?
Strong answers usually show that inclusion work was tied to team effectiveness, retention, or decision quality — not just optics. Because this is a behavioral question, the interviewer wants one concrete example with clear stakes, actions you personally took, and measurable outcomes.
A strong response uses a specific example, explains the team dynamic or inequity you observed, and walks through the mechanisms you changed. The best answers include data or signals you used, how you brought others along, and what you learned about creating inclusive habits that lasted beyond a one-time intervention.