Guide
Run a Retrospective
Capture the incident clearly enough that follow-up work does not depend on memory or chat archaeology.
Before you start
- Make sure the incident timeline is reasonably complete.
- Gather the responders who can explain what happened and what should change.
Do this
- Open
Retroand choose the incident. - Start the retrospective if it has not been started yet.
- Fill in the summary, root cause, what went well, what went wrong, and action items.
- Review the incident metrics and override detected, acknowledged, mitigated, or resolved timestamps only if the measured values need correction.
- Add follow-up tasks as you identify concrete actions.
- Complete the retrospective when the write-up and task list are ready for handoff.
Check it worked
- The retrospective explains the incident without relying on meeting notes.
- Action items are captured as tasks instead of hidden in prose.
- The retrospective state moves from
Not startedtoIn progresstoCompletedas work advances.
If it does not work
- If the team is still debating facts, save the retro in progress and come back with the missing context.
- If action items are vague, rewrite them as specific tasks with one owner or team.
- If the metrics are misleading, fix the timeline inputs before you finalize the retro.
