How to plan resources across multiple projects

TL;DR

  • Planning resources across multiple projects requires visibility into shared capacity and priorities.

  • Teams must balance competing deadlines using realistic availability, not assumptions.

  • Effective multi-project planning focuses on tradeoffs, sequencing, and regular review.

  • Without explicit planning, conflicts and overload remain hidden until delivery is at risk.

Table of Contents

What multi-project resource planning means 

Multi-project resource planning is the process of assigning people to multiple projects while accounting for shared capacity, overlapping timelines, and competing priorities.

It answers questions such as:

  • Which projects can realistically run at the same time?
  • Where are people overcommitted across projects?
  • What needs to move if priorities change?

The goal is not to optimize every project individually, but to optimize delivery across the whole portfolio.

Why planning across projects is difficult

Planning becomes complex when:

  • People contribute to more than one project
  • Deadlines overlap
  • Priorities shift frequently
  • Work is planned in isolation by different teams

Without a shared view, conflicts are discovered late and resolved reactively.

What inputs you need 

1. Active and upcoming projects 

Include:

  • Start and end dates
  • Priority level
  • Rough effort by role
  • Key delivery milestones

Projects should be visible in one place.

2. Shared resource availability 

Account for:

  • Working hours per person
  • Part-time schedules
  • Time off and holidays
  • Non-project commitments

This defines real capacity across all projects.

3. Clear priorities 

When conflicts arise, priorities determine which work moves and which does not.

Step-by-step multi-project resource planning

Step 1: Create a single view of all projects 

Bring all projects into one timeline so overlaps are visible.

Step 2: Assign resources across the timeline 

Allocate people based on availability and role, not just project needs.

Step 3: Identify conflicts 

Look for:

  • People assigned to overlapping work
  • Periods of sustained overload
  • Projects competing for the same specialists

Step 4: Resolve conflicts through tradeoffs 

Options include:

  • Moving project timelines
  • Re-sequencing work
  • Reducing scope
  • Reassigning resources

Step 5: Review and adjust regularly 

Multi-project plans must be revisited as priorities change.

How to handle conflicts and tradeoffs

When conflicts occur:

  • Make priorities explicit
  • Decide which project wins and why
  • Communicate tradeoffs clearly
  • Avoid expecting people to absorb conflicts silently

Unresolved conflicts lead to burnout and missed commitments.

Common mistakes teams make 

Teams struggle when they:

  • Plan each project in isolation
  • Assume full availability everywhere
  • Ignore context switching costs
  • Delay conflict resolution
  • Treat plans as fixed commitments

Multi-project planning requires continuous adjustment.

Frequently asked questions 

How many projects can one person realistically handle? 

It depends on context switching and role complexity. Fewer parallel projects usually lead to better delivery quality.

Should teams dedicate people to projects full-time? 

Where possible, yes. Dedicated allocation reduces overhead and conflict, but is not always feasible.

How often should multi-project plans be reviewed? 

Most teams review weekly for near-term delivery and monthly for portfolio-level decisions.

Sources

PMI library: Multi-project resource planning
https://www.pmi.org/learning/library/resource-leveling-scheduling-projects-6007

Atlassian: Managing resources across projects
https://www.atlassian.com/work-management/project-management/resource-management

Harvard Business Review: Managing competing priorities
https://hbr.org/2018/06/managing-professional-services-firms

IBM: Project portfolio and capacity planning
https://www.ibm.com/topics/project-management