Practice the key verb+noun collocations used when coordinating a product or feature launch, from readiness reviews to post-launch monitoring in English.
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1 / 5
Fill in: 'The cross-functional team will ___ the launch across engineering, marketing, and support.'
We 'coordinate a launch' — 'coordinate' captures the multi-team synchronisation required for a launch. 'Manage' implies ownership by one person; 'organise' focuses on preparation rather than execution; 'plan' is a prior step, not the coordination of the launch itself.
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Fill in: 'The PM confirmed we will ___ a go-live date of the 15th, pending final QA sign-off.'
We 'set a go-live date' — 'set' is the standard collocation for establishing a target date officially. 'Fix a date' is British English for arranging, but less common; 'choose' and 'pick' are informal and imply arbitrary selection.
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Fill in: 'We always ___ a launch readiness review 48 hours before go-live.'
We 'conduct a launch readiness review' — 'conduct' is the professional collocation for a formal, structured review meeting. 'Run a review' is informal but acceptable; 'hold' collocates with meetings rather than reviews; 'do a review' is colloquial.
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Fill in: 'We decided to ___ a soft launch to 5% of users before the full rollout.'
We 'run a soft launch' — 'run' is the idiomatic collocation for executing a limited, controlled release. 'Do a soft launch' is informal; 'execute a soft launch' is too formal; 'start a soft launch' doesn't convey the managed nature of the rollout.
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Fill in: 'The team will ___ post-launch metrics for 72 hours to catch any regressions early.'
We 'monitor post-launch metrics' — 'monitor' is the operations collocation for continuous observation of live system behaviour. 'Track metrics' is also common but implies dashboards rather than active alerting; 'watch' is informal; 'check metrics' implies a one-time look.