Situational questions.
408 situationalquestions from the bank — open to read. Pick one and practice it out loud; a coach note comes back in seconds.
Learn the ideas first
Escalating well: when to raise it and howFive conflict styles and when each winsDecision rights: RACI and who really holds the vetoEthical gut-checks: front-page, harm, and spirit-of-the-rule testsOne-way vs two-way doors: deciding at 60% informationPrioritizing when everything is urgentThe first hour of a crisis: stabilize, learn, communicate
All 408 questions
You’re on-call. A deploy 20 minutes ago is causing a 2% error-rate spike and customer complaints are spiking on social. Your deploy engineer is out sick. Rollback will take 40 minutes; a forward-fix might take 15 but you’re not sure. Walk me through your next 30 minutes.You're head of customer success at a SaaS company. Your largest customer, 18% of ARR, just emailed your CEO saying they're canceling in 30 days over a data pipeline failure that's corrupted their dashboards for two days. Your CEO forwards it to you at 8am. What do you do today?You lead safety at an AI lab. A researcher just showed you that your newest model reliably produces a specific class of harmful outputs that your internal evals missed. Launch is in six days and marketing is pre-briefed. Walk me through the next 48 hours.You're an eng manager. Your on-call pages you at 2am: a database migration is 40% complete, has stalled, and the rollback script has a bug. The senior engineer who wrote both is on a flight. Your SRE lead is on the line. What do you do in the first 20 minutes?You're VP product. The mobile team just shipped an update that's bricking Android devices for about 0.5% of users. Support tickets are piling up. Google is asking questions. The team lead wants to push a hotfix in three hours. What do you approve and what do you escalate?You lead security at your company. A journalist emails at 6pm Friday with a detailed, accurate story about a red-team finding your company hasn’t publicly disclosed. They’re publishing Monday morning. Your head of comms is on PTO. You report to the CTO. What do you do tonight?You're a director of infra. A cloud provider you depend on for 60% of traffic is having a regional outage that's now 45 minutes in with no ETA. Your CEO wants to know if customers will notice by market open. What do you tell her and what do you put in motion?You lead data. An analyst just realized a KPI dashboard the CEO uses in every board meeting has been double-counting for four months. Next board meeting is in nine days. What do you do first, and what do you communicate to whom?You're a project manager on a six-week diagnostic. Your senior partner calls from a flight: the client CFO just told him their audit committee is meeting in four days and wants preliminary findings, not the three-week interim you planned. Walk me through how you replan tonight.You're an engagement manager on a post-merger integration. Day nine of integration, your synergy model is missing $40M that the client CFO just found in his own spreadsheet. Steering committee is tomorrow morning. Your partner is in the air. What do you do before she lands?You're running a client workshop in 90 minutes. The client just emailed that the CEO will now attend unannounced and wants a strategic reframe before the content you prepared. Your associates are finalizing slides. What do you do in the next 30 minutes?You're the manager on a cost transformation. Your analyst just told you the baseline data you used for last week's steering committee was pulled from the wrong period — the actual numbers make your recommendation look 20% weaker. Next meeting is in 48 hours. What do you do?You're a VP on a sell-side. Management presentations start Monday; it's Friday night. Your associate just found the CIM has the wrong customer concentration on page 23. Confidentiality agreements are already with 40 buyers. Walk me through the next two hours.You're an associate. Your MD just realized the fairness-opinion committee is meeting in 90 minutes and the comps output has a formula error that shifts the valuation range by 8%. He's on a call with the client. What do you do before the committee starts?You're a VP on a live IPO. Pricing call is at 4pm today. At noon, an analyst covering a peer published a note that's dragged the comp set down 6%. The issuer CEO is furious. Walk me through what you tell your MD in the next 15 minutes.You're a portfolio-operations partner. Your portco CEO calls at 7am: their largest customer, 30% of revenue, just gave 60 days' notice citing quality issues that haven't shown up in diligence reports. Investment committee is Tuesday. What do you do today?You're a sector PM. A core holding just pre-announced a guidance miss after hours and is down 22% in futures. Your largest client is calling your head of distribution for an explanation. Markets open in 45 minutes. What do you prepare and who do you call first?You're a principal. A newly hired CFO at a portco just flagged what might be revenue-recognition issues at a subsidiary going back two quarters. Annual audit is in six weeks. Your MD is on a family vacation. What do you do this week?You're leading clinical operations for a Phase III trial. A site reports an unexpected serious adverse event. The medical monitor thinks it may not be drug-related but can't confirm for 48 hours. Your CMO asks whether to pause enrollment. What do you recommend and why?You're the ED attending on overnight call. A patient your team discharged four hours ago has returned with worsening symptoms that suggest a diagnosis you missed on initial workup. Family is distressed and asking questions. What do you do first, and what do you communicate to whom?You're the commercial lead on a drug in year two. A physician KOL has just posted on LinkedIn describing an off-label use that, if it takes off, could trigger FDA scrutiny. Your medical affairs head is in Europe. What do you do in the next few hours?You're the COO of a regional hospital. A ransomware alert just hit your EHR. IT has isolated three systems but can't confirm if patient data was exfiltrated. Surgeries are scheduled to start in 90 minutes. Walk me through your first calls.You're second-chair on a high-stakes deposition. Your senior partner is asking a line of questions that you believe is about to break a privilege you identified in prep last night. You have 10 seconds to decide whether to interrupt. What do you do?You're a senior associate. A partner has just filed a brief that cites a case she's asked you to Shepardize, and you're now noticing the case was overruled two months ago. Filing was 45 minutes ago. What do you do in the next hour?You're the brand lead. A viral TikTok has just posted video of your product appearing to malfunction — two million views in three hours. Your supply chain team says there's no manufacturing issue they can identify. Your CMO is asking what to post in the next hour. What do you recommend?You're a managing editor. At 9pm, your lead reporter tells you a source for tomorrow's front-page investigation has just recanted a key on-the-record quote. Presses run in five hours. Your editor-in-chief is at dinner. Walk me through your next decisions.You're head of fraud ops. In the last 90 minutes you've seen a 40x spike in a specific card-not-present pattern targeting accounts opened in the last 30 days. Turning off the pathway cuts legitimate volume 8%. Your CRO wants an answer in 20 minutes. What do you do?You're running a town hall in 30 minutes for 400 people. Five minutes ago, the CEO told you he needs to add an announcement you disagree with and haven't prepared for. You have the mic. What do you do in the next half hour and during the town hall itself?You're a PM. Engineering says a feature needs six more weeks; sales has promised a launch in four; your GM wants to hit the quarter. All three are in your 1:1s tomorrow. How do you walk into each conversation?You're a design director. The head of sales wants to add a configurable module for a $2M deal that your team thinks pollutes the product. Your VP product is deferring to you. The deal closes in two weeks. What do you do?You're a research lead. The product org wants to ship a model version your safety team flagged as acceptable but borderline. Your VP research is on your side; the CEO is leaning toward shipping. Launch decision is Monday. How do you approach the next three days?You lead platform engineering. Two product teams are each demanding their feature be prioritized on the migration roadmap, and both have CEO sponsorship. You can only do one this half. How do you run the decision?You're a director of CS. Your head of sales wants you to commit to a custom SLA for a strategic prospect that would triple on-call burden for your team. Your team has already told you they're stretched. Sales pushes back. What do you do?You're an eng manager. Your staff engineer and a partner team's staff engineer are in an open conflict over an API design, both with legitimate points, and it's stalled the roadmap for three weeks. Both escalate to you in the same week. How do you resolve it?You're head of policy. Comms wants to announce a new capability next week; your safety team says responsible disclosure requires 30 days of external testing first. Both are in your meeting tomorrow. Walk me through how you frame the conversation.You're a VP engineering. Finance has just cut infrastructure spend by 15%. Your reliability lead says this risks a second outage like the one you had in Q2; your CFO says the cuts aren't negotiable. How do you brief each of them?You're an engagement manager. Three weeks before final readout, your senior partner tells you the client CEO privately wants a different recommendation than what your analysis supports. The partner asks what you want to do. What's your answer?You're the manager leading workstream two of four. Your partner and the client COO disagree on scope. Both want you to support their view in Friday's steering committee. What do you do between now and Friday?You're a project leader on a digital transformation. The CIO sponsors you; the CFO blocks you. Your partner wants to escalate to the CEO. Your instinct is that's premature. How do you make your case?You're a senior manager. A junior partner is pushing a bold recommendation the rest of the team thinks is under-baked. The team is demoralized. Steering committee is next week. How do you handle the partner and the team?You're running a workshop with 12 client executives. Two of them are openly contradicting each other on what the problem even is. Your partner is watching. You have 45 minutes left. What do you do in the room?You're a VP on a sell-side. Your MD wants to push a bidder your client privately told you he doesn't want to work with. The MD doesn't know that yet. Round two bids are due in a week. What do you do?You're an associate. The client's GC keeps pushing back on disclosures your MD thinks are non-negotiable, and emails are getting tense. Your MD asks you to smooth it over before a Monday call. How do you approach the GC?You're a VP on a financing. The CFO wants aggressive projections; the independent directors want conservative. Both call you separately the same afternoon. Prospectus draft is due Wednesday. What do you do?You're a portfolio-operations VP. Your portco CEO and the founder-led chairman have been at odds for months about a strategic pivot, and the board is now split. Your MD asks you to get them aligned. What's your approach?You're a senior analyst. Your PM and your head of research disagree about a name you've recommended. The PM wants to size up; the HoR wants to halve. Both ask for your view. How do you respond to each?You're a principal. An LP wants a separately managed account with terms your IR team loves and your GP partners hate. Your MD asks you to broker. How do you run the next two weeks?You're a commercial VP. Medical affairs wants a six-month launch delay for additional education; marketing wants to hit the quarter; legal is neutral. The CEO asks for your recommendation by end of week. How do you get to an answer?You're a service-line chief. Two of your senior attendings want opposite staffing models for overnight coverage, and residents are caught in the middle. Open enrollment for schedules is in three weeks. How do you lead the decision?You're leading an asset team. R&D wants a bigger Phase IIb; commercial wants to go straight to Phase III. Your CDO wants your recommendation in a week, and she'll be the tiebreaker. How do you run the process?You're a senior associate on a deal. Your partner wants to sign a markup tonight; the client's GC hasn't reviewed it. Your instinct is to slow down; the partner is impatient. How do you handle the next 60 minutes?You're a mid-level litigator. Co-counsel from another firm is taking positions in joint-defense calls that embarrass your client. Your partner is on vacation. Next call is in two days. What do you do?You're a lateral senior associate. Two partners from different practice groups each think you owe them priority on a Friday filing, and have both put you on the clock. What do you do in the next hour?You're a brand director. Your CMO wants a bolder creative turn; your CEO just told you to dial back after reading early work. The agency is shooting in 10 days. How do you navigate the next week?You're a features editor. A senior writer and a senior editor are in an ongoing dispute about a piece that's now two weeks late. Both have asked you to side with them. The editor-in-chief wants resolution by Friday. What do you do?You're a product lead at a fintech. Compliance wants a four-week delay; growth wants Monday launch; engineering is ready now. CEO office hours are tomorrow morning. How do you prepare each of them for the conversation?You're a senior PM. Your director asks you to reframe a metric in the board deck in a way that's technically defensible but, you believe, actively misleading. She says we always do this and the board meets in 48 hours. What do you do?You're a data scientist. You've discovered that a ranking model your company is about to launch has a measurable disparate impact on users over 55. Legal says it's probably fine. The launch is in two weeks. What do you do?You're a research scientist. Your team is under pressure to publish a benchmark result that, after a closer look last night, you think is real but cherry-picked in ways reviewers won't catch. Submission deadline is in 18 hours. What do you do?You're an eng manager. A peer manager asks you to slow-roll a security finding on her team's service because she wants to hit a launch milestone. Both your director and her director would want to know. What do you do?You're head of CS. A strategic customer has asked for access to another customer's usage patterns, presented as benchmarking. Your CEO is interested in the relationship. What do you recommend?You're a policy lead. You've just learned that a government customer is using your API in a way that arguably violates your own published use policy. Sales closed the contract last month. What do you do next?You're an engagement manager. Your senior partner has billed a day to the client last week that you're pretty sure was spent on another project. The client is about to approve this month's invoice. What do you do?You're a manager on a market entry. Your research shows the client's planned product violates a regulation in the target market; your partner wants to let the client figure that out. Steering committee is Thursday. What do you do?You're a senior consultant. You've found that a source your team has been citing in client materials for two weeks turns out to be a blog post that misrepresents the underlying data. Final readout is in five days. What do you do?You're a project leader. The client CEO asks you, off the record, whether he should fire his head of digital based on your workstream observations. Your partner isn't in the room. What do you say?You're a VP. During diligence, your analyst found an internal email suggesting the target has knowingly inflated a KPI in pitch materials. Your MD says let the buyer's diligence catch it. Bids are due in 10 days. What do you do?You're an associate. Your MD has asked you to prepare a pitch page that compares your firm's league-table ranking in a way you know is technically true but materially misleading. Pitch is tomorrow. What do you do?You're an associate. Your MD took the client to a dinner and charged part of it to another client's engagement. It's sitting in your queue to approve. She's your reviewer next week. What do you do?You're a principal. An LP advisory committee member has privately offered to help your fundraising in exchange for a side deal on an upcoming transaction. Your IR head is eager to close the fund. What do you do?You're a senior analyst. Your PM has asked you to shift the rationale in your research note to better match a position he's already built. You think the analysis is weaker the new way. Publication is tomorrow. What do you do?You're a VP. A portco you helped acquire is using aggressive accounting that's technically compliant but, you believe, misleading to the lender. Your partner is aware. What do you raise and with whom?You're in medical affairs. A sales rep has been using a slide deck that cites data in a way your medical team considers off-label promotion. The quarter ends Friday. How do you handle this?You're a department chief. A senior attending's outcomes are trending worse than peers and a nurse has quietly raised concerns. Credentialing is next month. What do you do between now and then?You're a clinical program lead. A site PI wants to enroll a patient who, you believe, doesn't clearly meet inclusion criteria — but borderline. The sponsor wants enrollment up. What do you recommend and to whom?You're a senior associate. During doc review you've found a memo that's clearly damaging and, you believe, outside the scope of production. The partner is overseas and hard to reach. Production is due in 48 hours. What do you do?You're a mid-level. A client has asked you to send a demand letter that, in your judgment, crosses into threatening language unsupported by the record. The partner has signed off. What do you do before sending?You’re second-chair on a trial. Opposing counsel made a factual representation to the judge that you’re pretty sure is wrong — and the error favors your client. Your lead counsel wants to stay silent. What do you do?You're an in-house counsel. An executive asks you to redraft a policy in a way you believe makes future whistleblowing harder. The CEO is supportive. What do you do?You're a senior editor. A reporter's story is based partly on a source who insists on anonymity for reasons that seem more about career protection than safety. Publication is in 24 hours. What do you do?You're a compliance lead. Your head of sales has closed a deal with a client whose beneficial ownership your team flagged as needs more review. She says she needs the revenue this quarter. What do you do?You discover that a peer has quietly taken credit for a piece of work you did last quarter in a message to senior leadership. You have evidence. You also have a review cycle in six weeks. What do you do, and in what order?You're an eng director. Finance just cut your headcount budget by three engineers. You have four open roles, two in final stages. You have to decide by end of week what goes and how to tell the team. Walk me through your call.You're a product lead. Your engineering partner just lost two of six engineers to a reorg and the CEO hasn't changed your commitments. You have three bets on the roadmap. How do you recut?You're a research manager. Compute allocation for Q3 just got cut 20%. You have five projects, two of which the CEO has publicly named. Your team is demoralized. How do you decide what to pause and how do you tell them?You're a design director. Your CMO has told you that you need to cut three roles within your 15-person team but has left the choice to you. Performance is uneven but everyone's above bar. How do you make the call?You're a VP engineering. Your CFO has pulled forward the launch date by six weeks; scope is unchanged. Your architect says quality will suffer. Your team will be asked to crunch. What's your plan for the next 72 hours?You're a PM. Your launch is next month and your eng partner just told you your backend dependency team is behind by three weeks. Scope is fixed; sales is pre-briefed. What do you do?You're a tech lead. Your team of seven just lost its senior IC to a reorg. Your roadmap had two flagship launches and one infra migration. Your VP wants all three. How do you push back and what do you propose?You're head of support. Ticket volume just grew 40% after a launch; your headcount is frozen. Your CS director wants a tiered model you think is risky. CEO wants CSAT to hold. What do you propose this week?You're a manager. A client has cut the engagement scope 30% mid-project but wants the same level of insight. Your partner wants you to make it work. You have three analysts. What do you say to the partner and what do you change tomorrow?You're an engagement manager. Two of your four analysts just got pulled to a bigger engagement. The client doesn't know yet. Final readout is in five weeks. How do you handle the week and how do you position to the client?You're a senior consultant. Your partner agreed to a pro-bono scope that's now eating 30% of your time on top of your billing project. The billing client's midterm is next week. What do you do?You're a project leader on a large transformation. The client just informed you their subject-matter expert you've been relying on is going on medical leave for eight weeks. You're in week three of 12. What do you do?You're a manager. Your partner's partner asked you to staff a quick week-long add-on that your whole team knows is at least three weeks of work. Staffing is at full utilization. What do you do?You're a VP on a sell-side. The client just shortened the timeline by four weeks citing market conditions. Diligence lists aren't out yet. Your analyst is already on three live deals. How do you replan?You're an associate on a financing. Your MD has added a second pitch for a different client this week while your live pitch is tomorrow. You have one analyst. What do you do between now and tomorrow?You're a VP on an M&A deal. The client's CFO has cut the working group access to half the data room you'd requested, citing deal fatigue. Bids are in two weeks. How do you adjust?You're a portfolio-operations principal. Your portco CEO just announced a hiring freeze, but your value-creation plan assumes 20% commercial headcount growth. IC checkpoint is in six weeks. What do you do?You're a PM. Your analyst covering a sector where you have concentrated exposure is leaving with two weeks' notice. You have a key earnings call next week. What's your plan for the next 10 days?You're a VP. Your fund has decided to cap advisor fees at a level that won't support the external team you'd planned for diligence. IC is in four weeks. How do you adjust?You're a clinical program lead. CMC has pushed the next batch back by five weeks; your pivotal trial timeline assumed this quarter. CMO wants an answer this week. What do you propose?You're a clinic medical director. Two physicians are out unexpectedly this week and you're fully booked. No locums available. How do you run the next 72 hours?You're a commercial director. Your marketing budget just got cut 25% two months before launch. Your agency contracts are largely locked in. What do you do first?You're a senior associate on a trial team. Your lead partner lost a third-year to another matter and didn't replace. Trial is in six weeks. What do you triage in the next 48 hours?You're a mid-level on a deal. Your client has asked you to review three additional acquisition targets in parallel — just high-level. Your current deal is in diligence. How do you respond and what do you propose?You're a brand director. Your launch media budget was cut 30% and the CMO still wants the same reach. Your agency is asking for direction in 48 hours. What do you propose?You're a buyer. A supplier just told you a key SKU for the holiday set will be 40% short on units. Product is on order books and in circulars. What do you do this week?You're a risk-ops director. The board cut onboarding headcount right before a new product launch that will double application volume. Compliance expectations haven't changed. What do you propose and to whom?You've just taken over a 40-person engineering org from a respected predecessor. Morale seems fine on the surface; attrition is slightly up; your boss says figure it out. What do you do in your first 30 days?You're a new VP product at a Series C. The CEO wants a revised roadmap in six weeks. You inherit four PMs, one of whom expected to get your job. Walk me through your first two weeks.You've just been hired as head of applied research at a fast-growing AI company. Your team of 12 hasn't shipped in five months; the CEO wants a product win this half. What do you do in your first 30 days?You've just been promoted to senior director and inherited a peer's org on top of your own. The peer was fired. You've got a skip-level tomorrow with a team that's been told almost nothing. What do you say?You're a new eng manager on an infra team. Your first standup is tomorrow. Your predecessor was a beloved IC who was promoted reluctantly. How do you handle the first week?You've just rotated into a new BU as a senior PM. The top-line metric you now own has been flat for two quarters and the GM is under pressure. You have a 1:1 with her Thursday. What do you want to have figured out by then?You're a new research lead. Your team has been working on a direction the company is about to deprioritize; the decision will land in three weeks and you've been asked to prepare the team. What do you do in the meantime?You've just joined as head of data at a growth-stage company. Your first week you realize the single source of truth dashboard the CEO quotes is built on a flaky pipeline. Board is in five weeks. What do you do?You're a new engagement manager rotating onto a project in week four of 12. The client is frustrated; your predecessor was pulled; your partner is short on detail. Your first client meeting is in 48 hours. How do you prepare?You've just been promoted to partner. You've inherited a two-year-old client relationship where the economics are thin and the client loves your predecessor. You have a relationship dinner in three weeks. What do you do beforehand?You're a new senior manager staffed on a CFO-sponsored engagement. The team of four has been together for months and treats you politely but distantly. Your partner wants a point of view from you in two weeks. How do you establish yourself?You've just been put on a turnaround at a family-owned retailer. The patriarch CEO is suspicious of consultants. Your first meeting with him is Monday. What do you do between now and then?You've just joined as a VP lateral from a boutique. Your MD is handing you a live sell-side in week two. The existing associate has strong views and has been running the model. How do you land in the first 30 days?You've just been promoted to MD. You've inherited two legacy clients that are low-fee and time-consuming. Your senior partner expects you to build a book. What do you do in your first 90 days with these two clients?You've just moved coverage groups from TMT to healthcare. You're in your first pitch prep in week two. The associate assumes you know specific deal-comp conventions you don't. What do you do before the pitch?You've just been hired as a portfolio-ops partner. Your fund wants you to add value on eight portcos. Your first board rep is in three weeks. How do you prioritize your first 60 days?You're a new sector PM. Your predecessor left, the team is demoralized, and half the book is in names you'd short. Your CIO gave you 100 days with a light touch. What do you do in the first 30?You've just become CEO of a portfolio company after the founder was let go. Employees are skeptical. Your sponsor wants a 100-day plan. What do you do in your first two weeks?You've just joined as head of research covering six analysts. Your predecessor had a distinctive framework the team loved. Your boss wants refresh, not revolution. How do you show up in your first month?You're a new commercial VP for a launched brand in year two. Sales is soft; your marketing lead was hired by your predecessor; the CEO wants a plan in 60 days. Walk me through your first 30 days.You've just been named chief of service. The prior chief ran the department for 12 years and was beloved. Two senior attendings are openly skeptical of you. How do you lead your first 60 days?You've taken over a Phase III clinical program five months into execution. The timeline is stretched, the CMO is impatient, and the prior lead left under a cloud. What do you do in your first two weeks?You've just made partner and inherited a client relationship from a retiring senior partner. Billings are strong but the GC has asked if anything will change. Your first call is Tuesday. What do you want to convey?You've just lateraled into a senior associate role. Your new supervising partner has assigned you a bet-the-company case she's clearly anxious about. Your first team meeting is tomorrow. What's your approach?You're a new general counsel at a 600-person company. The CEO has asked you to clean up the compliance program your predecessor ran. The team reports to you. What do you do in the first 60 days?You're a new marketing VP at a mid-size CPG. Your first campaign launches in three months. The agency has been there 10 years and your CMO wants a fresh perspective. How do you approach the first month?You're a new managing editor at a legacy publication. Digital is declining; print is loyal; your editor-in-chief wants evolution not revolution. What do you do in your first 30 days?You're a new head of risk at a growth-stage fintech. The prior head left after a regulatory issue. Leadership is nervous. Your first audit committee is in 45 days. What do you do first?You're a product director. A weekly retention chart shows a two-point drop over the last three weeks — not dramatic, but your instincts say something's real. Your PMs are focused on launches. What do you do this week?You're a VP sales. One of your strongest AEs has missed quota for two quarters in a row after years of top performance. No obvious life changes, no customer complaints. You have a 1:1 Monday. How do you walk into it?You're an eng manager. A code-review bot just flagged 30% more comments from a specific reviewer on a specific junior engineer's PRs. It could be many things. What do you do over the next week?You're head of CS. Three mid-tier customers in the last 10 days have independently mentioned the same concern about a product edge case. None have escalated. What do you do with this signal?You're a design lead. Your engagement metric for a flagship feature dropped 8% last week. Product analytics says nothing changed; your designer thinks a new competitor may explain it. What do you do before your next review?You're a policy lead. A watchdog just published a critical blog post about your product with two misleading claims and one fair one. Social is picking up. What do you do tonight?You're a VP engineering. Your on-call dashboards are green, but two engineers in the last week have independently told you they're worried about tech debt in a specific service. Leadership is launch-focused. What do you do?You're a manager. An analyst on your team has produced work that's technically fine but has clearly been going through the motions for three weeks. Feedback is mild; utilization is flat. What do you do this week?You're an engagement manager. You've just spotted that the primary client sponsor has been less responsive to emails for 10 days and missed the last check-in. Final readout is in four weeks. What do you do?You're a senior partner. Your engagement survey scores from a strategic client just came in 1.2 points below last quarter with no qualitative comments. What do you do before your next client meeting?You're a project leader. Two members of your team have quietly told you a junior partner's behavior in meetings is demoralizing them. Both asked to remain anonymous. What do you do this week?You're a VP. Your analyst's last three models have had small but recurring errors you've had to catch in review. She's one of the strongest juniors in the class. What do you do in your next 1:1?You're an MD. A strategic client has been slow to engage on three of your last four pitches after years of responsiveness. No explicit change. What do you do in the next two weeks?You're an associate. You've noticed your VP skip you for three straight weekend staffings you'd expected to be on, and instead go to another associate. She hasn't said anything. What do you do?You're a portfolio-ops principal. Your portco's last two monthly packs have shown margin compression the CEO is downplaying as timing. IC review is in five weeks. What do you do?You're a PM. An analyst on your team has had two of his last three calls go the wrong way by meaningful margins. Conviction was high each time. What do you do in your next review with him?You're a VP. A portco CFO has been increasingly defensive in board prep calls and has quietly declined to provide detail on two specific line items. Board is in three weeks. What do you do?You're a clinical program lead. A specific site's AE reporting rate is running 3x the other sites. The PI insists there's no pattern. What do you do in the next 10 days?You're a hospital quality director. A specific unit's patient-satisfaction scores have quietly declined 10 points over six months. The unit chief attributes it to case mix. What do you do?You're a regulatory affairs director. An FDA contact has sounded less warm on the last two calls without citing a specific issue. Your filing is due in eight weeks. What do you do?You're a senior associate. A fourth-year on your team has missed two minor filing details in the last three weeks. No harm yet. What do you do before your next staffing call?You're a partner. A long-term client's assistant GC has been copying new lawyers on emails and asking you slightly more pointed questions than usual. What do you do before your next planned check-in?You're a brand director. Your hero SKU has had two extra returns per 1,000 in the last six weeks — small, but consistent. Supply chain says specs haven't changed. What do you do?You're a store-operations director. A specific region's shrinkage has crept up 40bps over three months. Your regional manager is a long-tenured favorite of leadership. What do you do?You're a compliance director. Your BSA transaction monitoring has flagged slightly elevated alerts from a specific corridor over six weeks. Your ops team thinks it's seasonal. What do you do?You notice that a peer — one you've gotten along with for years — has been subtly excluding you from meetings where you'd normally be included. You have a review in eight weeks. What do you do in the next two weeks?A major competitor just announced a feature that makes your core differentiation less obvious. Your CEO posted a Slack message asking how are we responding at 10pm. You lead the relevant product. What do you post by morning?A Series A startup has just raised $80M claiming to build an AI-native version of your product. You have 200 enterprise customers. Your CEO wants a POV in a week. Walk me through how you approach it.An open-source model just released that matches your paid product on benchmarks you use in marketing. Customers are asking in your sales calls. What do you do in the next two weeks?A regulator just signaled a rulemaking that will directly constrain a feature that drives 15% of engagement. Competitors face the same rule. Your CEO wants a plan in six weeks. What's your approach?A new entrant with a 50%-lower price has just won a logo from your top-10 customer list. Your CRO is rattled. What do you recommend at Monday's exec meeting?A big-tech peer has just poached your distinguished engineer with a package you can't match. He starts leaving in three weeks. What do you do with his team and his work in the meantime?A foreign lab has just released capabilities that briefly lead on a benchmark your company had owned for 18 months. Media is asking your comms team for comment by tomorrow. What do you recommend saying?A big-4 firm has just won a major scope at your firm's strategic client for work you had pitched. Your partner is furious. Your next check-in with the client is Thursday. What do you do?A boutique has just hired two of your senior managers who were on the partner track. Associates on your team are asking questions. Leadership hasn't addressed it. What do you do this week?A client CEO tells you in passing that he's been approached by a competitor to do the same work you're doing. Your engagement is in month two of six. What do you do between now and your partner's next visit?A new AI-native consultancy is pitching your clients with 10x cheaper, 3x faster. Two of your clients have asked about them this month. Your partner wants a POV for the next practice meeting. How do you build it?A strategic client has just hired a senior in-house strategy team that overlaps with your work. Your MD is uneasy. Your next SOW is up for renewal in five months. What do you do?A boutique just got mandated on a deal your team had been building toward for 18 months. The client gave a polite reason. Your MD is furious. What do you do in the next two weeks?A fintech has just announced a product that disintermediates part of your ECM franchise. It'll take years to matter, but your junior bankers are asking. How do you frame it for the team?A rival bank has just issued league-table marketing that claims #1 in a sub-sector where your team is legitimately #1. Your head of group asks for a response. What do you do this week?A strategic has just made an all-cash bid for a portfolio company at a price 15% below your modeled exit. Your MD wants your read. IC is in three weeks. What do you recommend?A new passive ETF has just launched in a category where your actively-managed fund is one of the leaders. Two advisors have asked about redemptions. What do you do this quarter?A tier-1 fund has just outbid you on two auctions in a row with prices your model wouldn't support. Your IC is questioning your sourcing strategy. What do you do?A competitor has just published Phase II data that looks meaningfully better than your asset on the same indication. Your CMO wants a POV by Friday. What do you build?A new ambulatory surgery center has opened three miles from your hospital and is taking commercial volume. CFO wants a plan in six weeks. What do you do first?A biosimilar has just launched for your blockbuster, two years earlier than your brand team modeled. Erosion is steeper than base case. What do you do in the next quarter?A competing firm has just hired your anchor partner away with a team. Three of your clients have asked what it means. What do you do in the next two weeks?A legal-tech product is being adopted by two of your key clients for work your firm used to bill. Your executive committee wants a POV in 30 days. What's your approach?A DTC upstart has just hit shelves at your key retailer with a product 30% cheaper. The buyer is asking what you'll do on price. What do you recommend this quarter?A tech platform has just launched a competing product leveraging AI summaries of your reporting. Legal is exploring options; your editor-in-chief wants an editorial response by Friday. What do you recommend?A neobank has just launched a product targeting your core SMB segment at half the fee. Your head of SMB wants a pricing response in two weeks. What do you recommend?You've just learned that a peer competitor is actively recruiting your star hire. She hasn't said anything. You suspect an outside offer is coming in 30 days. What do you do in the meantime?A senior engineer on your team is producing high-quality code but has been silent in your last four standups, and two junior teammates have separately asked you if they're okay. You have your weekly 1:1 with them tomorrow. Walk me through your approach.Your strongest PM just told you she has an offer for 40% more at a pre-IPO competitor. She's asking for a counter. Your VP will match but thinks she's flight risk anyway. What do you do in the next 48 hours?A researcher on your team has publicly criticized a company decision on a personal blog in a way that's technically within policy but causing internal tension. Your VP wants a conversation. What do you do before you meet with him?Two senior engineers on your team are in a cold conflict that's now showing up in code reviews and architecture decisions. Both are critical to Q4. What do you do in the next two weeks?A junior engineer has come to you in tears saying a tenured peer's feedback is constant and brutal. The peer is a top performer. You have their 1:1s back-to-back Thursday. How do you handle it?A staff engineer you inherited has been increasingly territorial over a system she built. Other engineers are routing around her. Your skip is noticing. What do you do in the next month?A member of your team has come to HR about a climate issue on an adjacent team that your peer manages. HR has looped you in. Your peer doesn't know yet. What do you do in the next 48 hours?An analyst on your team has been putting in heroic hours for six weeks and you can see the strain. Final readout is in three weeks. She hasn't asked for anything. What do you do in the next week?A senior manager on your engagement has complained to your partner about the quality of a peer's work in a way that your partner now expects you to deal with. What do you do before your next 1:1 with each of them?A client-side mid-level has begun routinely criticizing one of your associates in meetings. The associate is avoiding the client. Your partner isn't fully aware. What do you do this week?A high-potential consultant on your team just asked for an unscheduled 1:1 and you suspect she's going to tell you she's leaving. It's Thursday afternoon. What's your approach to the conversation?An associate on your deal team has been quietly poor for three weeks — timing off, work slightly careless. His father had surgery last month. Live deal is at a critical stage. What do you do in your next 1:1?A second-year analyst has come to you distraught about a comment an MD made to her in a meeting she found demeaning. She doesn't want HR involved. What do you do in the next 72 hours?Your strongest VP is asking for a group change. He's central to your biggest live deal. You have two weeks before your boss expects a recommendation on his promotion. What do you do?A portco CEO you sponsored into the role has been underperforming for two quarters. Your MD is losing patience. The CEO has a three-year contract. What do you do in the next six weeks?A senior analyst on your team has been openly dismissive of a junior analyst's work in a way that's affecting her output. HR hasn't been looped in. Review cycle is in five weeks. What do you do?A principal on your team, on track for partner, has told you confidentially that he's considering leaving if he doesn't get clarity on the timeline. Partner decisions are eight months out. What do you do in the next month?A senior scientist in your team has been increasingly disengaged over three months. Her output is still strong; her mentoring and reviews have dropped off. She has options elsewhere. What do you do?A nurse on your floor has filed an informal complaint about a long-tenured physician's bedside manner. Three prior complaints were closed informally. You're the new unit director. What do you do this week?A medical affairs director is pushing hard for publication of data that your commercial lead considers commercially risky. Both are on your team. CMO has asked you to figure it out. How do you run the next two weeks?A mid-level associate has come to you saying a partner's consistent late-night emails are affecting his mental health. The partner is a major rainmaker. What do you do in the next two weeks?A creative director on your team has a distinctive vision but has clashed with three different cross-functional partners in six months. Leadership is noticing. You value her work. What do you do?A senior reporter has publicly feuded with a subject of his reporting in a way your editor-in-chief thinks crossed a line. He's refusing to apologize. What do you do this week?A senior underwriter you manage has been flagged by two junior analysts for making decisions inconsistently on the same fact patterns. Compliance hasn't been notified. What do you do in the next week?A branch manager at one of your retail locations has been accused anonymously of creating a hostile environment for two tellers. HR is engaged; she's a 20-year veteran. You're her boss. What do you do in the next 48 hours?Your head of customer ops just told you that one of his team leads has been routinely approving exceptions above her limit — within outcomes, but outside process. Audit is in six weeks. What do you do?A peer manager you like and respect has just sent you a long Slack message criticizing a decision you made in a leadership meeting. The tone is warm but the critique is sharp. You have a 1:1 with your boss tomorrow. What do you do tonight?You're leading commercial strategy for a pipeline drug. You just learned that a rival firm has unexpectedly received Priority Review designation from the FDA for a competing molecule, effectively reducing their time to market by four months. How do you rapidly reassess your launch strategy?You're a senior associate leading a high-stakes transaction. Your most critical junior associate, who has been working 90-hour weeks, requests an immediate, unplanned leave of absence for burnout two days before the closing. You cannot miss the deadline. Walk me through your immediate actions.You're the Chief Compliance Officer. You've just discovered a sophisticated cyberattack has resulted in a breach of sensitive customer PII, traced to an unpatched legacy system. The breach requires regulatory notification across multiple jurisdictions. It is 8 AM. Walk me through your next two hours.You're a portfolio manager. A sudden, unexpected spike in inflation has triggered severe market volatility, and nervous institutional clients are demanding immediate rebalancing and threatening redemptions. You need to defend your long-horizon allocation without losing AUM. How do you manage this client meeting?You're a junior software engineer. You just merged a code change that passed all tests, but 10 minutes later a colleague Slacks you that it's causing a bug in a feature you didn't know was connected. Your team lead is in back-to-back meetings for the next two hours. What do you do?You're a marketing coordinator. Your manager asked you to schedule a campaign launch for next Tuesday. Sales just told you they need it moved up to Thursday this week to support a big pitch, but moving it requires design resources you don't control. Your manager is out on PTO until Monday. How do you handle this?You're an associate product manager. During user testing, you notice participants are confused by a feature, but they eventually figure it out. Your PM wants to ship on schedule and says the data shows completion rates are acceptable. You think the confusion could hurt reviews. What do you do?You're a junior data analyst. Your manager asked for a report by Friday that normally takes a week. You're already committed to finishing a dashboard for another team by Thursday. Both managers think their project is the priority. You're the only analyst who can do both. How do you approach this?You're a new customer support specialist. A customer is asking for help with a workflow that involves a product area you weren't trained on yet. Your onboarding buddy is out today, documentation is incomplete, and the customer says they need an answer within the hour for a meeting. What do you do?You're a junior designer. You just presented mockups to your team. Your design lead gave positive feedback, but a senior engineer said the design will be very difficult to build and suggested a simpler approach that you think compromises the user experience. The engineer seems frustrated. How do you handle this?You're an entry-level recruiter. A hiring manager just told you a candidate you're scheduling has a typo in their resume and isn't worth interviewing. You've spoken to the candidate and think they're strong. Your manager has told you to trust hiring managers' judgment. What do you do?You're a junior financial analyst. You're preparing a monthly report and notice one department's spending is tracking 30% over budget. You've never seen this before and don't know if it's an error or a real issue. Your manager is traveling and hard to reach. The report is due to leadership tomorrow morning. What do you do?You're an associate account manager. A client just mentioned in passing that they're also talking to your main competitor about a project similar to what you're proposing. Your account lead is on vacation this week, and you have a check-in call with the client tomorrow. How do you handle this?You're a new team lead for a group of interns. One intern has missed two deadlines and seems disengaged in meetings. Another intern privately told you the first intern said they're overwhelmed and don't feel supported. You've never managed anyone before. What do you do?You're a junior operations associate. Your team uses a manual process that takes you three hours daily. You found a way to automate it that would save time, but it requires a tool purchase your manager hasn't budgeted for. Your manager has said the team needs to cut costs this quarter. How do you approach this?You're a content coordinator. You just published a blog post and a reader commented that one of your statistics is incorrect. You double-checked and they're right—you misread the source. The post has been shared widely on social media in the past hour. Your editor is in meetings all afternoon. What do you do?You're reviewing a peer's section of a client report the day after it shipped, and you recognize the prose as AI-generated — including one citation you can't find anywhere. Your firm requires AI-use disclosure, and the deliverable went out under both your names. What do you do in the next 24 hours?Your VP, fresh from an AI summit, has just told the client your team can now deliver in three weeks instead of six — “because of AI.” Your actual tooling saves maybe 15% of the work, and the client has already replanned around the new date. How do you handle your VP, and what do you tell the client?You learn that your company's new internal AI assistant was trained on your team's private drive — including candid performance notes and an unannounced strategy memo — and it will quote them to anyone who asks the right question. It launched company-wide yesterday. What do you do first, and who do you involve?A vendor your product depends on quietly enabled an AI feature that, you've now confirmed, has been sending your customers' data to a third-party model without consent — for three weeks. Your contract with this vendor renews next month. Walk me through your first 48 hours.A first-year on your team produces fast, polished work — but in a client meeting yesterday they couldn't explain a number in their own analysis. You suspect they're outsourcing the thinking to AI. Their first performance review is in a month. How do you handle the next few weeks?A peer privately tells you they've seen convincing evidence that a fully remote engineer on your team is holding a second full-time job. The engineer's output is adequate — never great. You have no confirmed policy violation, just the tip. What do you do?Your CEO told investors last quarter that the company is on track to halve its carbon footprint by 2028. Your new analysis — the most rigorous yet — shows the current trajectory misses by a wide margin. Your boss suggests “refining the methodology.” The next investor update is in six weeks. What do you do?Your finance team just took a video call from someone who looked and sounded exactly like your CFO, authorizing an urgent wire. An analyst sent $300K before anyone flagged it as a likely deepfake. You run treasury operations, and the real CFO is unreachable on a flight for five hours. What do you do right now?After a reorg, you and a peer director both believe you own the same charter — and each of your new VPs agrees with their own report. Planning season starts in two weeks, and both teams are drafting roadmaps for the same territory. How do you resolve it without burning the relationship?A remote engineer you onboarded eight weeks ago hasn't asked a question in three weeks, and their last two PRs quietly rebuilt something that already exists in the codebase. In 1:1s they say everything's fine. What do you do this week?You're a junior analyst. You just watched a teammate paste a client's confidential financials into a free public AI chatbot to summarize them. They're senior to you, and they did it casually — like it's routine. What do you do?You're a new graduate engineer. Your manager encourages the team to lean on AI coding tools for speed; your onboarding buddy privately warns you that depending on them will stunt your growth and that reviewers can tell. You have your first feature due Friday. How do you decide your approach?You're a junior social media coordinator. A post you scheduled last week just went live featuring a celebrity who, an hour ago, became the center of a serious public scandal. The comments are turning fast. Your manager is unreachable for two hours and you have posting access. What do you do?The AI API powering your product's flagship feature just announced a 4x price increase effective in 60 days — enough to erase the feature's margin entirely. The feature drives a third of new signups. What do you do in the first two weeks?Two days before your company's flagship conference, the CEO adds a keynote line announcing your product's “autonomous AI agent” — which is a prototype your team rates at 70% reliability. Customers will try it the same day. You own the product. What do you do before the keynote?An AI meeting notetaker was left running after a leadership call ended, transcribed two executives candidly discussing an unannounced layoff — and auto-emailed the transcript to all attendees, including two employees on the list. You're the HR business partner, and the email landed 20 minutes ago. What do you do in the next two hours?Your company quietly routed 60% of support chats to an AI agent that signs with a human name. CSAT is flat, costs are down — and a journalist just asked your comms team whether customers know they're talking to a bot. You own support. What do you recommend the company say, and what do you change?Three weeks after your org moved a core workflow to an AI agent, the error rate looks flat — but your most experienced analyst tells you she's been quietly catching and fixing the agent's mistakes before they're counted, and she's drowning. The rollout was your VP's initiative. What do you do?An hour ago, a customer posted a proof-of-concept on social media showing a prompt-injection attack against your AI assistant that appears to expose other tenants' data. Your security team can't reproduce it yet. The post is gaining traction. What do you do in the next two hours?Your company just announced a three-day return-to-office mandate. Two of your best engineers — both hired as fully remote, both two time zones away — tell you they'll resign rather than comply. Your VP expects you to enforce the policy with no exceptions. What do you do in the next two weeks?Your top competitor just launched an AI assistant trained partly on your public documentation — and prospects are telling your sales team its answers about your own product are better than your docs. Your CEO asks what you'd do about it this quarter. What do you propose?A two-person startup is shipping weekly what your 30-person org ships quarterly, and your CTO just forwarded their changelog to your whole team with the note “why can't we move like this?” Morale dips immediately. You lead the org. How do you respond — to the CTO and to your team?You learn that the AI screening tool your recruiting team has used for a year has, per a new internal audit, been disproportionately filtering out older applicants. Legal wants to fix it quietly and move on. You keep thinking about the candidates already rejected. You own talent acquisition. What do you do?Your CFO has mandated a 20% AI-driven productivity gain this year and wants the equivalent headcount handed back from your org in the annual plan. Your team's pilots show real but uneven gains — dramatic in some workflows, negligible in others. The planning template is due in three weeks. What do you submit?You've just inherited a team whose previous manager championed heavy AI use with no review standards. The team is proud of its speed; partner teams are quietly complaining about quality. What do you change in your first 30 days — and what do you deliberately leave alone?You're an intern on a fully remote team. You've been stuck on your project for four days, standups are async, and the one question you posted in the team channel went unanswered. Your mid-point review is next week. What do you do?Two days before launch, new tariffs hit your only manufacturing partner for a flagship product, doubling your landed cost overnight. Pricing is already printed, and retail partners have committed shelf space. Your CEO wants options by tomorrow morning. What do you bring her?Your manager asks you to mark a milestone “complete” in the tracker before the quarter closes. The work is 90% done and will certainly finish next week — and team bonuses key off the quarter. Everyone on the team seems fine with it. What do you do?Legal wants every AI feature reviewed before launch; product teams call the review a three-week tax and have started shipping “experiments” to route around it. You chair the company's new AI governance council, and both VPs report to your boss. How do you fix this?Usage of the feature your team spent two quarters building looks healthy on the dashboard — but digging in, you find most of it is one internal team's automated tests. Real adoption is near zero, and the launch was celebrated company-wide last month. What do you do with this finding?You're a product manager at a fintech company. Your team just discovered that a rounding error in the interest calculation engine has been underpaying 12,000 customers by an average of $3.47 each over six months. Legal says disclosure isn't required. Finance says proactive refunds will cost $41K plus engineering time. Your CEO asks for your recommendation by end of day.You're leading talent acquisition for a fast-growing startup. Your hiring manager for engineering just told you she's rejecting a candidate who passed all technical rounds because of a 'culture fit' concern that sounds like bias to you. She's your top performer and threatens to quit if overruled. The candidate is from an underrepresented background. Your CEO wants the role filled this week.You're a management consultant three weeks into an eight-week engagement. Your team just found evidence that the client's CFO has been systematically overstating EBITDA in board materials. Confronting him risks the project; staying silent feels wrong. Your engagement manager is on vacation until Monday. The client has another board meeting in five days.You're director of ops at a pharmaceutical manufacturer. A supplier just called: the raw material you need for next week's production run is contaminated. Switching suppliers will delay your largest hospital contract by three weeks. Your COO is asking if you can use existing inventory that's two weeks past internal quality guidelines but still within regulatory limits.You're a mid-level associate at an investment bank. You just noticed that the financial model for tomorrow's live deal has a formula error that overstates synergies by $18M. Your VP built the model and is presenting to the client in 14 hours. He's impossible to reach and notoriously defensive about mistakes. The MD on the deal is in back-to-back meetings until the presentation.You're head of communications at a consumer brand. A viral TikTok (4M views, growing) shows your product failing dangerously, but your engineers confirm it only happens when heavily modified against instructions. Legal says don't acknowledge. Your CEO wants a response in two hours. Customer service is overwhelmed. Retail partners are calling.You're a project lead at a design agency. Your creative director just presented work to the client that incorporates concepts from a pitch your team did for their competitor last month. The client loves it. Your CD says it's fine because the competitor passed. Your junior designer who created the original concept looks uncomfortable. Contracts are being drawn up.You're VP of engineering. Your security team just detected that a contractor who left three weeks ago still has production database access and made queries yesterday. You can't reach him. You don't know what he accessed or why. Your CISO is on a plane for six hours. You're bound by GDPR and have enterprise customers with strict SLAs.You're a senior analyst at a private equity firm. During diligence on a healthcare acquisition, you found that the target's revenue growth is entirely from upcoding billing practices that look legal but ethically questionable. Your principal is excited about the deal. The partner wants your recommendation tomorrow. Walking away costs six weeks of work and strains the portfolio strategy.You're a product manager. A competitor just launched a feature you've been building for four months. Yours is better but still three weeks from launch. Your CEO wants to ship a minimal version this week to 'show momentum' to investors. Engineering says the fast version will be buggy and create tech debt. Your biggest prospect is evaluating both products right now.You're an engagement manager at a consulting firm. The client just told you they're using your draft recommendations to justify layoffs you specifically advised against. Your analysis shows the cuts will hurt long-term performance. The partner on your project says client decisions aren't your concern. You have friends at the client company in affected departments.You're leading platform engineering. AWS just announced a price increase that adds $340K/year to your infrastructure costs, effective in 60 days. Your CFO says the budget is locked. Migration to another cloud would take four months minimum and cost $200K in engineering time. Your CEO asks if you can 'optimize our way out of this' without cutting features.You're head of data science at a lending platform. Your model has a 3% approval rate gap between demographic groups. It's statistically explainable by legitimate credit factors, passes legal review, but the optics are terrible. A journalist is asking questions. Your CEO wants to know if you can 'adjust' the model. Your data ethics board meets in three days.You're a senior account manager. Your largest client just asked you to fly to their office tomorrow for an 'urgent strategic discussion.' Your internal champion there just texted you privately that they're being pressured to switch vendors and tomorrow is your last chance. You're supposed to be at your own company's sales kickoff that your VP said is mandatory.You're director of clinical trials at a biotech. A trial site just reported adverse events that meet reporting thresholds but your medical director thinks they're unrelated to the drug. Reporting pauses the trial and likely kills the program. Not reporting risks patient safety and regulatory violation if he's wrong. The FDA deadline is in 36 hours. Your CEO is traveling in Asia.You're an engineering manager. Your top engineer just gave notice to join a competitor. In her exit interview, she says she's leaving because you promoted someone less qualified due to favoritism. Two other engineers told HR the same thing last week. Your director wants to counter-offer her. You know the promotion decision was complicated but defensible.You're VP of sales. Your enterprise team just closed a $2M deal, your biggest ever. During legal review, you notice the contract includes a feature your product team canceled last month and won't build. The rep is your top performer and says the client mentioned it once but it wasn't a dealbreaker. Backing out tanks the quarter. The client signature is dated yesterday.You're leading a digital transformation for a retail client. Three months in, you realize the vendor your firm recommended (and has a partnership with) can't actually deliver what was promised. Switching vendors restarts the project and makes your firm look bad. Your client is already frustrated with pace. Your partner says to 'make it work.' The client CEO wants a progress update Friday.You're head of trust and safety at a social platform. A coordinated disinformation campaign is spreading on your platform about a candidate in an election happening in 72 hours. Your rules don't clearly cover it. Taking it down will trigger accusations of bias from one political side. Leaving it up risks real-world harm. Your CEO and legal team are split. Press is asking for comment.You're a senior associate at a law firm. A partner just asked you to file a motion you believe misrepresents facts from discovery. When you raised concerns, he said it's 'aggressive lawyering' and the other side can object. You're up for partner review in two months. The client is the firm's third-largest. The filing deadline is tomorrow morning.You're director of research at an asset manager. Your team's model says a major position should be sold, but doing so would realize a loss that kills the fund's performance for the year and likely costs bonuses. Your PM says the model might be wrong and wants to wait one quarter. You've seen him override models before when convenient. Investors get the quarterly report in three weeks.You're a tech lead. A critical service your team owns is getting 10x normal traffic from a new partnership that marketing launched without engineering input. It's holding for now but you're at 85% capacity. Scaling properly takes two weeks. Your manager wants to 'ride it out' to avoid looking unprepared. You're on-call this weekend and the partnership press release goes out Monday.You're head of people ops at a startup. Your CEO just told you to lay off 15% of the company tomorrow for runway. You think 10% is enough and the extra cuts are because he overhired his favorite exec's team and won't touch them. You've seen the numbers. Doing 15% means losing critical people. Pushing back risks your own job. The exec team meets in 90 minutes to finalize the list.You're a product designer. User research clearly shows your new feature confuses elderly users, but your PM says the target demo is 25-45 and shipping this makes the roadmap. Your company's mission statement emphasizes accessibility. The CEO's mother is in the beta and complained to him, but he hasn't said anything publicly. Launch is in four days.You're a strategy consultant presenting to a hospital system's board. Mid-presentation, the CEO interrupts to say your cost-cutting recommendations would close a rural clinic that's his pet project and 'not on the table.' The clinic loses $2M annually and your whole business case depends on it. The board is looking at you. Your firm partner is in the room and says nothing.You're the duty manager at a hub when a line of thunderstorms triggers a ground stop. Nine diversions are inbound to your station, three of your own departures are boarded and holding, and crew scheduling says two of the diverted crews will time out on the ground. Gates are full. Walk me through your first hour.You're a station manager. An FAA inspector doing a ramp check finds that a logbook entry doesn't match the MEL placard on an aircraft scheduled to board in 40 minutes. The captain believes the paperwork is fixable; the inspector hasn't yet said what happens next. What do you do?You run maintenance operations at a station. An aircraft has an open MEL deferral that expires tomorrow, and the fix needs a part arriving tonight — probably. Ops control wants the aircraft flying its full schedule today, which is legal, but your lead technician tells you the intermittent fault has become more frequent than the deferral assumed. What's your call?You're a ramp agent. Pulling a belt loader away from the aircraft, you feel it bump the cargo door frame. You can't see any damage, nobody else noticed, and the flight pushes back in 20 minutes. What do you do?You lead network planning. Your redesign of the afternoon bank at your main hub adds 40 minutes of connectivity for the highest-value international flows, but it strands three spoke cities with near-unusable connections — and the stations, the sales team, and a state transportation department are all escalating. The schedule loads in six weeks. How do you land this?Jet fuel is up 35% in four months. Your CFO wants to lock in hedges covering 70% of next year's consumption at today's prices; your treasury team argues you'd be hedging at the top, and your two biggest competitors are largely unhedged. You own fuel procurement. What do you recommend?A winter storm hits your hub overnight. Two of your five deicing trucks are down for repairs, holdover times are short in freezing drizzle, and 55 departures are scheduled before 10am. Ops wants your plan by 5am. How do you build it?It's 9pm in your ops center. A mechanical delay means the crew on tonight's last transcontinental flight will exceed their duty-time limits before landing if it pushes after 10:15. Reserve crews at this station are exhausted, deadheading a crew in arrives too late, and the aircraft is needed for a full morning schedule on the other coast. What do you work through?You're a revenue management analyst. A route you manage runs a 91% load factor, but unit revenue is down 9% year over year and the route has slipped below its profitability target. Your manager asks what's going on. How do you dig in?An ultra-low-cost carrier just announced service on three of your hub's top ten leisure routes at fares roughly 40% below yours, starting in four months. You lead commercial strategy for the region. What's your response plan?You've just been named general manager of an outstation with the network's worst on-time departure rate and a mishandled-bag rate twice the system average. The team has had three GMs in four years. Walk me through your first 30 days.Your fastest ramp lead consistently beats the 35-minute turn standard, and other crews copy his methods. Walking the ramp, you notice his crew skipping FOD walkarounds and positioning equipment before the aircraft is chocked. He's also the most respected lead on the shift. How do you handle it?You're the superintendent on a structural deck pour. Two hours in, the testing lab flags that the last three trucks' batch tickets show the wrong mix design — lower strength than specified. Concrete from those trucks is already placed and the pump is still running. What do you do in the next fifteen minutes?You're the project manager on a mid-rise job. An OSHA compliance officer arrives unannounced at the gate — an employee complaint about fall protection — while crews are decking the fourth floor. Your superintendent is off site and your safety manager covers three projects. Walk me through how you handle the visit.You're a project engineer. The 28-day cylinder breaks for two columns placed last month came back 15% under design strength. Your PM says to sit on the results until the 56-day breaks come in — "it always gains" — and not mention it to the owner or the structural engineer yet. The floors above are already being formed. What do you do?You're a senior design engineer. Reviewing shop drawings, you realize a transfer girder in your firm's issued-for-construction set is undersized — a design load was entered wrong. The steel is fabricated and erection starts in three weeks. Your principal says to wait until he's had time to think about the client relationship. What do you do?You're the GC's project manager. Your RFI about a ceiling conflict comes back from the architect with a response that adds scope — new blocking and a revised soffit detail. You price it as a change order; the owner refuses to pay, saying the architect should have caught it, and the architect insists the response is clarification, not change. Drywall crews reach that area in eight days. How do you get this unstuck?You're the program director for a city roadway reconstruction. A utility relocation has slipped four months, pushing paving into the next construction season, and tonight's council meeting has the project on the agenda with frustrated business owners signed up for public comment. The utility isn't contractually answerable to you. How do you handle the next two weeks?You're the PM on a distribution center. Your steel fabricator just told you delivery slips six weeks — their mill order got bumped. Steel starts your critical path, the owner has a hard turnover date tied to a tenant lease, and your contract carries liquidated damages. What are your next moves?You're the field engineer and the only person on site who does layout. This morning three crews need you at once: the concrete sub wants anchor-bolt locations checked before a noon pour, the plumber needs underground sleeve locations to keep his crew working, and your superintendent wants you receiving a steel delivery. You can realistically do two before noon. How do you decide?You're the GC's project manager. Your mechanical sub's crew has quietly shrunk from twelve to five over three weeks, their PM has stopped returning calls after lunch, and this morning one of their suppliers phoned you asking whether the sub's invoices are being paid. Ductwork is 40% complete. What do you do?You're the superintendent. Your best concrete foreman — fastest crew on site, never misses a pour date — has skipped the written pre-task plan three mornings running, and today a new laborer on his crew was nearly struck by a swinging form panel. The foreman tells you the paperwork is for people who don't know what they're doing. How do you handle him?It's your first week as a project engineer on a site where the superintendent has run jobs for thirty years and openly calls the trailer staff the paperwork department. You've been handed the RFI and submittal logs, and both are weeks behind. How do you establish yourself?You lead preconstruction. The owner on a negotiated project calls: a competing GC has promised the same building three months faster, and they want you to match the schedule or lose the job. Your scheduler says three months is only achievable if every permit lands on time and the winter is mild. How do you respond?You're a principal. Your district IT director calls: a teacher uploaded a class roster — student names, ID numbers, and special-education status — to a free AI lesson-planning tool to save time. Nobody knows what the vendor does with the data, and no families have been told. Walk me through your next 24 hours.You're an assistant principal. At 7am you learn a video of yesterday's hallway fight is circulating among students and parents on social media, with names attached. One family is threatening to call the local news by 9am. What do you do this morning?You're a district curriculum director. Your adoption committee has recommended a new evidence-based phonics program, but a vocal parent group and several respected veteran teachers are campaigning to keep the current balanced-literacy materials. The board votes in three weeks. How do you spend them?You're a classroom teacher. Six weeks before state testing, your principal directs grade-level teams to focus all intervention time on 'bubble students' just below the proficiency cutoff — which means pulling support from your lowest readers. Scores were flagged by the district last year. What do you do?You're a principal. The district has cut your building budget and you must submit a staffing plan in three weeks that eliminates the equivalent of two positions. Your reading interventionist is on a year-to-year contract, your arts program is one full-time teacher, and class sizes are already at the contract cap. How do you build the plan?You're a principal. Your strongest second-year teacher tells you she has an offer from a neighboring district paying $7,000 more, and she has to answer in two weeks. You have no authority over salary. What do you do?You're an instructional coach. Your district bought a one-to-one device program over the summer and rollout is in six weeks. A third of your teachers have never used the LMS, the union has flagged workload concerns, and you've been given exactly two professional development days. How do you plan the rollout?You're a special education coordinator. At tomorrow's IEP meeting the parents are bringing an advocate and a private evaluation recommending a one-to-one aide. Your team's data doesn't support it, and your director has reminded you that aide requests are under budget scrutiny this year. How do you run the meeting?You're a program director at a regional university. Your master's program's enrollment is down 30% over three admissions cycles — inquiries are flat but yield is collapsing — and the provost wants a viability plan in a month or the program goes on the sunset list. What do you do?You're a middle school principal. A new charter school opening a mile away next fall is actively recruiting your incoming families with smaller class sizes and a personalized-learning pitch. Enrollment projections say you could lose 60 students, which would trigger a staffing reduction. What's your plan for the spring?You're a high school teacher. The athletic director stops you in the hallway and asks whether there's 'anything that can be done' about a star player's 58 average before eligibility is certified on Friday. Your late-work window for that student closed last week. How do you respond?You're the assistant principal who owns attendance. October data shows chronic absenteeism at 24%, up five points from last year, and the district has put your school on a corrective timeline. Robocalls and letters home aren't moving the number. What's your 90-day plan?You run distribution operations for a mid-size electric utility. An ice storm has knocked out power to 40,000 customers, damage assessment is maybe a third complete, and the mayor's office is demanding restoration times for the evening news. Mutual aid crews are eight hours out. What do you do in the next two hours?You're the shift supervisor at a refinery. Pressure on a distillation unit has been creeping toward its safe operating limit for the past hour. Your board operator thinks it's a faulty transmitter — though the backup reading is also elevated — and the unit is loading a shipment that's due out tonight. Shutting down means missing it. What do you do?You're preparing your utility's rate case testimony. The commission staff's data requests signal they see your grid-modernization capital plan as gold-plating and will likely recommend disallowing a third of it. The plan funds a reliability program your executives have publicly committed to. Hearings are in six weeks. How do you respond?You're an asset manager at an electric utility. Next year's O&M budget just came back 12% lower. Your two biggest line items are cycle-based vegetation management and replacing a set of aging substation transformers your inspection program has flagged. Leadership wants your recommendation by Friday on what gets cut. What do you recommend?You're the HSE manager at a gas processing plant. A contractor's technician took seven stitches for a hand laceration last week. Your plant manager — two weeks away from celebrating one million hours without a recordable injury — suggests the case could be 'managed as first aid' since a doctor might have closed it differently. What do you do?You manage environmental compliance at a power plant. This quarter's wastewater samples show an exceedance of a discharge permit limit. Your boss says the sample was probably contaminated and wants you to resample and report only the clean result. Permit renewal discussions with the state agency begin next month. What do you do?You're a distribution engineer three months into your first utility job. You've written a switching order for planned work, and a foreman with twenty-five years in the field calls to say step six will backfeed the section his crew will be working on. The outage window opens in an hour. What do you do?You're developing a 200 MW solar-plus-storage project. The interconnection cluster study just came back: your share of network upgrades is $40 million higher than you modeled, and your PPA carries a commercial operation deadline with damages. The offtaker doesn't know yet, and you have 30 days to post security or withdraw from the queue. What's your plan?It's day four of a storm restoration. Your best foreman wants his crews to keep working past your utility's fatigue-management limits to finish a hard-hit neighborhood tonight — the crews are willing, the customers are desperate, and mutual aid relief is thin until morning. What's your call?You're responsible for substation assets. Dissolved-gas analysis on a critical transformer with no available spare shows combustible gases trending upward across three consecutive samples. The manufacturer's rep says levels are still within acceptable limits and recommends routine monitoring. Summer peak is ten weeks away. What do you do?You're managing a plant turnaround with a fixed 28-day window. Inspection has found unexpected wall thinning on a set of exchanger bundles that weren't in scope. Repairing them adds five days and significant cost, and the next turnaround is four years out. Commercial is already asking about the overrun. What do you recommend?You lead commercial strategy at an electric utility. Three of your ten largest industrial customers have signaled they're evaluating behind-the-meter solar-plus-storage that would sharply cut their purchases, and an economic development prospect just asked for a 100% renewable supply option you don't offer. What do you propose to your executive team?You run digital services for a state agency. It's the final week of benefits open enrollment and the online application portal has been down for three hours. The legacy vendor says a fix is 'in progress' with no ETA, the call center is over capacity, and a local TV station just called your public information officer. What do you do in the next two hours?You're the project manager for a proposed transitional housing facility. Last night's public hearing ran four hours, mostly in opposition, and this morning a council member who had backed the site asks you privately whether staff could 'find another location.' The comment period closes in two weeks and your grant requires site control by the end of the quarter. What's your plan?You're on the evaluation panel for a competitive contract award. Mid-evaluation, a fellow panelist mentions they had dinner last week with one of the bidders — an old colleague — and 'may have talked shop.' Scores are due Friday and the program office is pushing hard to award before the fiscal year closes. What do you do?Your federal program is operating under a continuing resolution at last year's funding level, with no authority to start the new initiatives the appropriations committees have signaled they want. Leadership asks you to 'be ready to launch the day the appropriation passes.' You can't obligate funds or hire against money you don't have. How do you spend the next 90 days?A new administration has taken office, and the incoming appointee's transition memo lists the program you've run for four years as 'a candidate for wind-down.' You believe the evidence supports the program — and you work for the new leadership. You have 30 minutes for your first briefing with the appointee next week. How do you prepare, and what do you say?A reporter has filed a public-records request for emails about your program, and the responsive set includes a thread where a staffer mocks a vendor's failures in unprofessional terms. Counsel says most of it must be released. The story will likely run next week. What do you do between now and then?You supervise a bargaining-unit team. One long-tenured employee is missing deadlines and the rest of the team is quietly absorbing the work. The employee is well liked, the union steward sits ten feet away, and your predecessor left no documentation of any performance conversation. A major reporting deadline is six weeks out. How do you handle it?You're leading the replacement of a 30-year-old case-management system. Cutover is set for a holiday weekend, the legacy vendor's contract ends the following month, and this morning's final data-migration rehearsal showed a 2% record-mismatch rate in benefits histories. Your systems integrator says the errors are 'edge cases.' Go or no-go?Your agency and a sister agency both need each other's data to run a joint eligibility pilot the governor has announced. Four months in, the data-sharing agreement is stuck — each side's counsel wants the other to carry breach liability — and the pilot's federal grant expires in five months. Program staff on both sides want to just start emailing spreadsheets. What do you do?You process permit applications in date order. An aide from a council member's office calls and asks you to 'take a quick look' at a constituent's application that's three weeks back in the queue, mentioning that the council member is 'very interested.' Your supervisor is out until Monday. What do you do?You manage business permitting for a mid-size city. A neighboring city has launched a 10-day permit guarantee, your average is 45 days, and this week a third significant employer cited permitting delays in a relocation announcement. The city manager wants a response for council in two weeks — but most of your review steps are set by ordinance and state law. What do you propose?You staff the front counter at a county housing office. An hour before closing, a resident arrives holding an eviction notice, and you can see in the system that their voucher renewal stalled because of a data-entry error made by your office. The assigned caseworker has left for the day and your supervisor is in a meeting. What do you do before the office closes?You're the front office manager on a sold-out Saturday. At 9pm you're six rooms oversold with twelve arrivals still due — including two top-tier loyalty members and four rooms on tomorrow's wedding block. The nearest comparable hotel has availability at $60 above your rate. Walk me through your next two hours.You're the hotel director on a 3,000-guest cruise ship, day two of a seven-night sailing. Medical reports forty gastrointestinal cases in the last twelve hours and the count is climbing. Your next port call is tomorrow morning. Walk me through your response.You're a regional operations director for a hotel brand. One of your largest franchisees is two years overdue on a property improvement plan, guest scores are dragging the market's brand average down, and other owners are starting to grumble. The franchisee says the capital isn't there and hints they'll take the property to a competitor flag if pressed. How do you handle it?You're director of revenue at a convention hotel. Sales brings you a 400-room-night group at 30% below transient ADR for a week when city demand looks strong. The sales director argues the banquet spend closes the gap and it's her biggest account of the year. The GM wants a recommendation by Friday. Walk me through your analysis.You're the F&B director. Two days before a scheduled health inspection, you discover a sous chef has been backfilling the walk-in cooler temperature logs to paper over a compressor failure last week. Product may have spent hours out of safe range. What do you do?One of your restaurant's highest-spending regulars — he books the private dining room monthly and has a $40,000 holiday party on the books — made comments tonight that a server has reported to her manager as sexually inappropriate. He's mid-dinner with eight guests. The server is in the back, shaken. What do you do tonight, and what do you do after?You're the rooms division director at a seasonal resort. Peak season opens in three weeks, you're 30% short in housekeeping after a seasonal worker visa program fell through, and occupancy is forecast in the mid-90s. What's your plan?You're the GM of a full-service restaurant in a multi-unit group. Food cost has climbed from 28% to 34% over two quarters, and ownership wants margin restored within ninety days without a guest-visible drop in quality. Where do you start?You've just been promoted into your first AGM role at an 800-room unionized convention hotel after five years at a non-union boutique. In week one, a shop steward mentions that your predecessor 'did things a certain way' around scheduling. How do you establish yourself in the first sixty days?You're a shift manager at a casual-dining restaurant. Going through the weekly reports, you notice comps and voids on your closing shifts are running double the other shifts, concentrated around two servers. What do you do?You're director of revenue for an independent 180-room hotel. OTA share has crept to 55% of room nights at commissions of 18 to 25%, and a branded competitor with a large loyalty program opens across the street in six months. Ownership asks how you'll defend net RevPAR next year. What's your strategy?Your banquet captain — your most reliable leader through wedding season — has been assigning the best-paying plated events to the same small circle of servers. A gratuity-distribution grievance has just been filed under the union contract, and two newer servers say they're ready to quit. Wedding season peaks in six weeks. How do you handle it?You're an HR business partner. An employee tells you in confidence that a skip-level leader has been harassing them, then begs you not to do anything because they're afraid of retaliation. Walk me through your next 24 hours.A hiring manager wants to offer 15% above the band maximum to close a finalist for a role that's been open five months. Comp says no exceptions. You own the offer process. What do you do?It's notification day for a reduction in force. An hour before meetings begin, one manager tells you they refuse to deliver the news to their three affected people and believe the selection is wrong. You're running the HR side. What do you do?You're an HR manager. Regretted attrition in one 120-person org has doubled over two quarters. Exit interviews all say 'career growth' and little else. The VP insists it's market noise. How do you find the real cause, and what do you bring back?You lead talent acquisition. Engineering leadership wants to put six hard-to-fill roles with a contingency agency at a 22% fee; you believe an in-house sourcer could fill them slower but far cheaper. The CFO asks for your recommendation by Friday. What do you propose?Your investigation just substantiated expense fraud by the company's top salesperson. The CRO wants it handled with a quiet warning — it's the last month of the quarter, and he says 'everyone rounds up receipts.' You ran the investigation. What do you do?You're the HRBP for an org where a manager — a strong engineer promoted eight months ago — has three of eight directs flagging micromanagement in engagement comments. The manager gets defensive at any hint of feedback, and their VP just told you to 'fix them.' What's your plan for the next 60 days?You lead people operations. Your HRIS migration went live over the weekend; it's Monday morning and about 6% of employees report wrong pay amounts or missing direct deposits. The vendor says the data-mapping fix will take a week. What do you do in the next 24 hours?You're a senior recruiter. The panel loves a finalist and the hiring manager wants to extend an offer today, but your slate never met the company's diverse-slate requirement. The manager says the policy is slowing the business down and threatens to escalate. What do you do?You're a recruiting coordinator. A final-round candidate emails you directly: five interviews over seven weeks, two same-day reschedules by the panel, and now silence. They ask pointedly whether the company actually intends to fill the role. The offer decision is genuinely two weeks out, pending headcount approval. How do you respond?Your candidate verbally accepted last week. Today they call: a competing offer came in 12% higher, and they ask you to match within 48 hours. Comp already set the original offer at band midpoint and the hiring manager is at budget cap. Walk me through what you do.You're a new HR generalist at a 200-person company, four days into the job. An employee walks in shaking and says their manager just screamed at them in front of the whole team, and they want to file a formal complaint. Your HR director is on vacation all week. What do you do?You're the operations director of a human-services nonprofit. Your largest funder, a state contract paid on reimbursement, is 90 days behind on payments. Payroll is in three weeks, the line of credit is nearly maxed, and most of your other cash is restricted. Walk me through your next two weeks.You're a development associate. You discover this morning's acknowledgment-letter mail merge went out with the wrong gift amounts to about 80 donors, including several major donors, and the tax-receipt language is incorrect. Your manager is out all day. What do you do?You're the development director. Your analysis shows the annual gala nets almost nothing once staff time is counted, while your grants and major-gift channels raise far more per hour invested. The board loves the gala, and the board chair's spouse runs the gala committee. The next board meeting is in three weeks. How do you handle it?You're the executive director. A major foundation offers a three-year grant that would grow your budget 30 percent, but it requires expanding into a neighboring county. Your program director says quality will suffer and staff are already stretched; your board is thrilled and wants to accept. The foundation wants an answer in a month. What do you do?You run a housing-justice nonprofit. A donor offers a transformational seven-figure naming gift — but his company is one of the region's largest landlords, with a public record of aggressive evictions in the neighborhoods you serve. Your reserves are thin and the gift would fund three years of programs. What do you do?You're the grants manager. Your executive director asks you to shift a portion of administrative salaries into program lines on a major funder's budget report so the program ratio looks stronger. The allocation is arguable but isn't backed by time records. The report is due Friday. What do you do?You've won a restricted grant to expand a program into two new sites, but it funds only direct program costs. Running the sites actually requires a coordinator, supervision time, and data systems you have no unrestricted money to cover — your operating reserve is under one month. What do you do?You're the volunteer coordinator for your organization's charity 5K, its biggest fundraiser of the year. Two hours before gates open, 12 of your 30 volunteers have no-showed — including two course marshals and half the registration table. What do you do?You've just been hired as development director. In week one you learn that 40 percent of revenue comes from a single major donor in her eighties, no one has done real stewardship with her in 18 months, and the donor database is a mess. What does your first 90 days look like?You're a program director. Your annual evaluation just came back: outcomes for your flagship program are flat for the second year, even though participant stories are glowing and demand keeps growing. Your renewal report to your biggest funder is due in six weeks. What do you do?A large national nonprofit just opened a local affiliate in your city, working your issue area. They're courting your two biggest corporate sponsors, and they've approached your best program manager. Your grant-renewal season starts in two months. What's your plan?Your best program manager has been doing two jobs since a colleague left eight months ago and wasn't replaced. She just told you she's exhausted and has an offer from a larger organization paying 25 percent more. Your budget has no raise money until the next fiscal year, nine months away. What do you do?You manage a 180-unit apartment building. At 11pm a supply line bursts on the fourth floor and water is coming through the ceilings of the three units below. Two of them are occupied. Walk me through your next two hours.You represent a buyer whose loan was just denied four days before closing — the lender flagged a debt-to-income problem in final underwriting. The sellers have already moved out and their agent is furious. What do you do today?The appraisal on your listing just came in $40,000 under the contract price. The buyer's agent says their client won't bring extra cash; your seller says they won't drop a dollar. The financing contingency expires in ten days. How do you save this?Your comparative market analysis supports listing a house at $650,000. The sellers want $725,000 because another agent told them she could get it. They're interviewing both of you. How do you handle the pricing conversation?A landlord client hands you their rental criteria and adds, verbally, that they'd prefer you not show the unit to families with young children because of noise complaints in the past. How do you respond?While preparing a listing, the seller mentions the basement flooded two springs ago — then says the repairs held up fine and asks you to leave it off the disclosure since it's 'fixed.' What do you do?You're the landlord's leasing representative on a retail center. The anchor tenant you've courted for a year wants $85 per square foot in tenant improvements; ownership has capped you at $60. The tenant's broker says other landlords are offering more. How do you close this gap?Ownership just cut your property's capital budget 30% mid-year. Both chillers are at end of life, the elevator consultant recommends modernization, and you've publicly promised tenants a lobby refresh. You can't do all three. How do you decide, and what do you tell whom?You're an acquisitions analyst who has only ever underwritten multifamily. Your director hands you a self-storage deal and wants a full investment-committee memo in a week. You've never touched the asset class. How do you get to a defensible underwrite?You're the asset manager on a suburban office building at 83% occupancy. Tours have gone quiet for three months, a 6% tenant has given notice, and your loan has an 80% occupancy covenant tested next quarter. What's your plan?You're pitching a listing you've prepared for carefully. The sellers tell you a discount brokerage has offered a 1.5% listing fee and suggested a price $50,000 above your recommendation. They ask if you'll match both. What do you say?You're the managing broker. Two of your agents both claim the commission on a closed sale — one holds a signed buyer representation agreement, the other actually showed the property and wrote the offer while covering a vacation. Both are threatening to leave over it. How do you resolve this?You're the logistics manager at a food distributor. A reefer carrying $180k of frozen product alarms mid-route — the unit is cycling between −5°C and +4°C and the driver is four hours from your DC. Your QA lead is unreachable for the next hour. Walk me through your next two hours.Your primary LTL carrier — about 40% of your outbound volume — announces at 6pm that it's ceasing operations at midnight. You have 60 shipments in their network and tomorrow's pickups unassigned. What do you do tonight, and over the next week?It's the Monday of your peak week. Your staffing agency just told you they can fill 120 of the 200 temp positions you ordered, and inbound volume is tracking 15% over forecast. Overtime is already at its budget cap. How do you get through the week?You run S&OP. Sales is holding an upside forecast 20% above trend to protect their commit, finance wants inventory down 15% by year-end, and your copacker capacity is booked through Q3. The executive S&OP meeting is in one week. How do you bring a plan the room can sign?You're a transportation manager. A dispatcher tells you a driver can make tonight's must-deliver load for your biggest customer only if he 'finds' 90 extra minutes on his ELD — and hints this has happened before. The customer charges $5,000 per missed delivery window. What do you do?Your OTIF score at your largest retail customer has slipped from 96% to 89% over three months and chargebacks have started. Your DC says orders ship on time, your carrier scorecards look normal, yet the customer's compliance portal keeps logging failures. Where do you start?You have 35 import containers at the port accruing demurrage, a chassis shortage capping drayage at eight pulls a day, and your DC is at 97% storage utilization. Ten of the containers hold components for a promotion that starts in two weeks. Which levers do you pull, and in what order?You've just taken over transportation procurement. The routing guide is priced about 15% below current market, tender acceptance has fallen to 70%, and the annual RFP your predecessor launched closes in three weeks. How do you handle your first month?Your main competitor just launched next-day delivery in your top ten metros. You ship from three DCs with a 2.4-day average click-to-door; they run twelve forward locations. Your CEO wants an answer at Thursday's exec meeting: can we match, and what would it take? What do you bring to that meeting?Your night-shift supervisor runs the highest-throughput shift in the building — and has 30% higher attrition than any other shift, with exit interviews citing his management style. He's up for the senior supervisor promotion and believes he's earned it on the numbers. What do you do?You're a transportation coordinator. At 2pm a driver calls: traffic means he'll hit his 11-hour driving limit about 40 minutes short of the delivery, and the receiver closes at 5pm with no after-hours receiving. The load is a next-day-critical order for a key account. What do you do?Your WMS go-live is scheduled six weeks before peak. UAT just surfaced gaps in wave planning and cycle counting, and the integrator says fixes take four weeks — leaving a two-week buffer. IT leadership wants to hold the date; your ops leads want to push to January. You own the call. How do you decide, and how do you land it with both sides?