Situational interview questions ask what you would do, not what you have done. "What would you do if your manager gave you a deadline you thought was impossible?" "How would you handle a conflict with a colleague?" They're testing your judgment, values, and problem-solving approach.
Most candidates either ramble through them or give a suspiciously perfect answer with no nuance. Neither approach is convincing. Here's how to handle them well.
Situational vs behavioral questions
Behavioral questions ask about your past: "Tell me about a time you..." Situational questions ask about hypothetical futures: "What would you do if..." Both test similar things, judgment, problem-solving, values, but they require different approaches.
For behavioral questions, you're retrieving a specific memory. For situational questions, you're demonstrating your thinking process in real time. The interviewer is watching how you reason through a problem, not just what conclusion you reach.
How to answer situational questions
- S: Situation Clarify your understanding of the scenario (ask a clarifying question if needed)
- P, Priorities: Name what matters most in this situation
- A: Actions Describe specifically what you'd do, step by step
- R, Rationale: Briefly explain why you'd approach it this way
The Priorities step is what separates strong answers from weak ones. It shows you understand the underlying dynamics of the situation, not just the surface-level problem. Before saying what you'd do, name what you're trying to protect or achieve.
Asking a clarifying question at the start is not a weakness, it's a strength. Real professionals ask clarifying questions before acting. "Can I ask, is there a hard deadline involved here?" or "Is this person someone I manage or a peer?" shows judgment.
Most common situational questions
- "What would you do if you disagreed with your manager's decision?"
- "How would you handle a situation where a deadline was impossible to meet?"
- "What would you do if a colleague wasn't pulling their weight on a team project?"
- "How would you prioritise if you had three urgent tasks and could only complete two?"
- "What would you do if a client was unhappy with work you'd delivered?"
- "How would you handle being asked to do something you thought was unethical?"
Sample answers
"What would you do if you disagreed with your manager's decision?"
"My first priority would be to make sure I understand the decision fully, sometimes what looks like a disagreement is actually an information gap on my side. So I'd ask for 10 minutes to walk through the reasoning. If after that I still disagreed, I'd share my perspective clearly and once, I'd lay out my concerns with evidence, make sure they'd been heard, and then ask if there was anything that would change the decision. If not, I'd implement it fully. I can disagree with a decision and still execute it well. What I wouldn't do is undermine it or comply half-heartedly."
"How would you handle a situation where two tasks both needed to be done urgently?"
"First I'd check whether both are genuinely equally urgent, or whether one is masking the other. Usually they're not actually equal, one has a harder consequence if it slips. I'd assess that quickly, do the higher-stakes one first, and then be transparent with whoever is waiting on the second one: here's where I am, here's when you'll have it. I'd rather set a realistic expectation than miss two deadlines trying to do both at once."