Why interviewers ask this question
This question assesses prioritisation ability, organisation, and how you handle competing demands without losing quality. Interviewers ask it when the role involves managing multiple workstreams simultaneously — which is most roles above entry level. They want to see a real system or approach, not platitudes like "I just stay organised" or "I make a to-do list." The follow-up they are listening for: what do you do when two equally important things are both due at the same time?
How to structure your answer
Describe your actual system for managing multiple projects: how you track what needs to happen when, how you prioritise when two things compete, how you communicate when you are at capacity, and how you handle changing priorities. Then give a specific example of a time you had to manage multiple competing priorities and what the outcome was.
Strong example answer: "I use a single consolidated view of all my current projects in Notion — each project has a weekly milestone and I update it every Monday. I prioritise by a combination of deadline and consequence of delay: something with an external client deadline or a dependency that blocks others goes to the top. When I am genuinely at capacity, I surface it to my manager early rather than silently letting something slip. [Example:] Last quarter I was running two product launches simultaneously with overlapping creative timelines. I mapped every deliverable for both on one shared calendar, identified the three weeks where both were most demanding, and brought in a contractor for the heaviest two weeks. Both launched on time."
Handling the follow-up question
"What do you do when you genuinely cannot do everything?" This is the real question. Strong answer: "I surface it early and bring options rather than just problems. I would say to my manager: 'Here are my five current priorities. If X lands on my plate this week, something else will slip. Which of these should we defer or reassign?' I would rather have that conversation on Monday than apologise on Friday for a missed deadline. Proactive communication when at capacity is, in my view, a professional responsibility."