Learn the collocations used when writing, facilitating, and following up on incident post-mortems.
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1 / 5
After the production outage, the team was required to ___ a post-mortem within 48 hours.
Write a post-mortem is the standard SRE and engineering collocation. Post-mortems are written documents. 'Draft' is also acceptable, but 'produce along' and 'build' are not standard collocations in this context.
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The SRE on call was asked to ___ the post-mortem meeting to ensure a blameless culture.
Facilitate a post-mortem is the correct term — a facilitator guides a structured, blameless discussion. 'Lead around' is not standard. 'Control through' implies dominance. 'Host over' is not used in this context.
3 / 5
Once approved by the team, the incident post-mortem was ___ on the internal wiki.
Publish a post-mortem is the standard SRE practice of sharing findings openly. 'Released out' and 'pushed away' are informal or incorrect. 'Sent up' implies upward escalation, not broad sharing.
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The team decided to ___ on the post-mortem findings two weeks later to check progress on action items.
Follow up on post-mortem findings is the standard collocation for tracking whether recommended actions were completed. 'Check after' is informal. 'Review again about' is redundant. 'Come back at' is not a standard phrase.
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The most important outcome of the post-mortem was to ___ concrete action items with owners and deadlines.
Identify action items is the standard post-mortem language. Action items are 'identified' or 'defined' as specific tasks to prevent recurrence. 'List out all' is redundant. 'Name up' and 'find along' are not valid collocations.