Master the collocations for assuming command, declaring incidents, assigning roles, and calling resolution.
0 / 5 completed
1 / 5
When the on-call SRE was unavailable, the team lead stepped in to ___ command of the P1 incident.
Assume command is the standard incident management and military-origin collocation for formally taking control of an incident response. 'Take over along' is informal. 'Grab around' and 'hold out' are not standard phrases.
2 / 5
The incident commander was the first to ___ a major incident when the payment service went down.
Declare an incident is the standard ITSM and SRE collocation for officially recognising that an incident is occurring. 'Announce out' is informal. 'Call around' implies contacting people. 'Name along' is not used in this context.
3 / 5
One of the first steps in incident response is to ___ roles so everyone knows their responsibilities.
Assign roles is the correct incident command collocation for designating specific responsibilities. 'Give out around' and 'hand to all' are informal. 'Allocate along' is not standard in an incident context.
4 / 5
The incident commander asked the communications lead to ___ updates every 30 minutes to stakeholders.
Issue updates is the standard incident communication collocation for formally sending status information to stakeholders. 'Send out around' and 'push along' are informal. 'Put across' implies persuasion rather than status reporting.
5 / 5
After the database failover succeeded, the incident commander was ready to ___ resolution.
Call resolution is the established incident management collocation for officially declaring that an incident has ended. 'Announce out' is informal. 'Declare away' is not standard. 'Signal along' is too vague.