How do you manage workload at work?
- Take time for planning. ...
- Get to know your resource availability. ...
- Estimate tasks and set achievable deadlines. ...
- Allocate tasks fairly and evenly. ...
- Split tasks into subtasks & make to-do lists. ...
- Plan your capacity. ...
- Draw task dependencies. ...
- Measure utilization rates.
- Understand the question. Asking how you would deal with a large amount of work can be classified as a behavioral interview question. ...
- Be a STAR. ...
- Know what to say. ...
- Offer an example. ...
- Know someone looking for a job?
- Determine your priorities. ...
- Itemize your work responsibilities. ...
- Know your limits. ...
- Develop an organizational strategy. ...
- Take a break. ...
- Collaborate and communicate with your team. ...
- Focus on one thing at a time. ...
- Schedule your tasks.
...
Problems with your workload
- Ask your manager for help. Discuss your workload with your manager, if you have one. ...
- Try to balance your time. You might be doing too much at once. ...
- Reward yourself for achievements. ...
- Be realistic.
- Create a list of everything that must be done. ...
- Estimate tasks. ...
- Analyze your resource capacity. ...
- Prioritize tasks. ...
- Build a timeline. ...
- Allocate tasks smartly and fairly. ...
- Make room for changes. ...
- Keep tabs on work progress.
- Analyze the workload of your team. ...
- Divide projects into tasks and subtasks. ...
- Visualize progress and set realistic deadlines. ...
- Set priorities for faster execution. ...
- Plan for challenges. ...
- Motivation. ...
- Conflict resolving.
- "I work well under pressure because I use the pressure to help me work more efficiently."
- "I enjoy working under pressure because I believe it helps me grow. ...
- "I work well under pressure because I don't panic. ...
- "To tell you the truth, I think I work the same if there's pressure or if there's no pressure.
- Schedule a meeting with your boss. ...
- Prepare what you are going to say. ...
- Provide specific examples. ...
- Focus on your work experience. ...
- Offer thoughtful solutions. ...
- Offer to help in smaller ways. ...
- Consider your goals. ...
- Remain calm.
the amount of work to be done
large amount: busy, challenging, demanding, enormous, excessive, heavy, huge, increasingNurses have to fight for their wages and always face heavy workloads.
Example Answer #3
I actually work better under pressure, and I've found that I enjoy working in a challenging environment. As a writer and editor, I thrive under tight deadlines and multiple projects. I find that when I have to work to a deadline, I can produce some of my most creative work.