"Tell me about a time when your engineering team was losing energy, morale, or focus, and you had to motivate and inspire them. What was happening, what did you do, and what was the outcome?"
This question tests whether you can lead through low morale in a practical way, not just by giving encouraging speeches. Interviewers want to understand how you diagnose what is actually demotivating a team — unclear priorities, burnout, conflict, lack of recognition, weak execution, or uncertainty — and how you respond as a leader. They are also looking for whether you can inspire different people in different ways while still driving accountability and delivery.
A strong answer shows that motivation was tied to real business or team conditions, not vague statements like "I keep people excited." It should reveal how you listened, set direction, removed blockers, recognized contributions, and created momentum. The best responses are specific about team size, stakes, actions you personally took, and measurable results. Use a clear STAR structure and include what you learned about motivating engineers beyond surface-level morale boosting.