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230 E. van Veenendaal
1 TheFutureofTesting
Before looking at answers and solutions regarding the knowledge and skill set
requiredfora tester, let’sfirstbrieflylookatwhereweare todayandwhat thefuture
of the testingprofessionlookslike(ifatallpossible).MostpeopleperceiveAgileas
somethingthat is thecommonwayofworkingaroundtheglobe.However, thereare
alsocountrieswere thenumberofpeopleororganizationsactuallypracticingAgile
are still aminority.Perhaps these countriesare just “behind”and theywillbeAgile
a fewyears fromtoday,but it canalsobe thecase thatAgiledoesnotalwayshavea
perfectfit withineveryculture.
There are keynotesat international testing conferencesclaiming that testers will
soon disappear. According to them, there will be no more, or at least very few,
dedicated testers in the near future. Interestingly, numbers from survey reports,
e.g. the World Quality Report, show exactly the opposite. Also test certification
schemessuchasISTQB
®
andTMMi
®
arestill showingastronggrowthanduptake.
Surprisinglycontradictingtalks, signalsandfacts.Whichof themare true,andwhat
is the future for thesoftware testingprofession?
InmostwesternsocietiesAgile seemstobeagoodfit.Generallyspeaking, there
aremanypeoplewhotendtobecommunicative,liberal,openminded, loveworking
in a team and less focused on formalities. Mind you, not all parts of the world
andculturesare like this. Evenwithin Europe therearehugedifferences, sometime
evenbetweenneighbouringcountries.Agile has shown to delivermanyadvantages
over the years, but also in a traditional environmentdelivering a quality product is
certainlynot impossible.
With all of these opposite and different trends it is quite difficult to accurately
predict the future of the testing profession. However, I strongly believe it is safe to
state that with the current state of the practice in terms of software quality being
delivered and its criticality, the need for testing as a discipline and as a profession
will remain (at least for short to medium term). Looking at testing today and
tomorrow,there is a firmtendencytowards twomainoptionsfor the tester:
• Become a so-called T-shaped person (tester), by changing your attitude and by
broadeningyourknowledgeandskills.Knowledgeandskillswill beachallenge
in the near future for many testers. It is just not good enough anymore to
understand testing and hold an ISTQB certificate. Testers will most often not
work in their safe independent test team environment anymore. They will work
moreclosely togetherwith business representativesanddevelopershelpingeach
other when needed and as a team trying to build a quality product. Besides
strong soft skills, it is also expected from testers to have knowledge of the
business domain, requirements engineering, scripting, etc. Become a “tester
plus”, someone who can test, but also organize testing and support others in
testing.A tester that candomuchmore than just test.
• Become a test specialist. As products are becoming more and more complex,
andare integratedinanalmostopenenvironment,manyso-callednon-functional
testingissueshavebecomeextremelychallenging.At thesametimethebusiness,
The Future of Software Quality Assurance
- Titel
- The Future of Software Quality Assurance
- Autor
- Stephan Goericke
- Verlag
- Springer Nature Switzerland AG
- Ort
- Cham
- Datum
- 2020
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-030-29509-7
- Abmessungen
- 15.5 x 24.1 cm
- Seiten
- 276
- Kategorie
- Informatik