In software development it’s usually used to describe the situation after an incident was resolved. The team that’s responsible for the feature usually performs a postmortem to find out the root cause and find out what they can do to avoid another incident.
Oh, “incident post-mortem” was ambiguous. I read “Incident that happened after death” not “analysis after incident”.
I thought OP had a necrophiliac blowjob fantasy.
In software development it’s usually used to describe the situation after an incident was resolved. The team that’s responsible for the feature usually performs a postmortem to find out the root cause and find out what they can do to avoid another incident.