According to the PMBOK Guide, a retrospective meeting is a process of reviewing and analyzing the past performance of a project team, especially in an agile or hybrid environment. The purpose of the retrospective meeting is to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the team, the lessons learned, and the improvement actions for the future. The project manager should facilitate the retrospective meeting and encourage the team to share their feedback, opinions, and suggestions. If the project team’s performance has declined for the last three iterations, the project manager should focus on remediation not merely on correcting symptoms. This means that the project manager should help the team to find the root causes of the performance issues, and implement effective solutions that address the underlying problems, not just the superficial symptoms. For example, if the team is facing communication challenges, the project manager should not just provide more communication tools, but also improve the communication processes, protocols, and skills of the team. Focusing on remediation not merely on correcting symptoms will help the team to improve their performance and prevent recurrence of the same issues. Comparing the team’s performance against other project teams is not a good option, as it may demoralize the team, create unhealthy competition, and ignore the unique context and challenges of each project. Identifying potential failure points based on the iteration workload is a useful technique, but it is not enough to improve the team’s performance. The project manager should also analyze the actual failure points and the reasons behind them, and take corrective and preventive actions accordingly. Motivating the team to perform better is a desirable outcome, but it is not a specific action that the project manager should do. The project manager should use various motivational techniques, such as recognition, rewards, empowerment, and feedback, to inspire the team and enhance their morale and engagement. References: PMBOK Guide, 6th edition, pages 18-19, 686-687, 723-724.