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Posted October 30, 2019

How to Get Your Developers to Think Like QA

Greg Sypolt argues that it's important for developers and QA to come together as ambassadors of our products to improve and move the business forward as a strong unit.

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It's our responsibility as quality ambassadors to get developers to think holistically – from a user perspective, as well as positive and negative scenarios in which quality does not impact overall customer experience.

It's straightforward. In the agile world, we need to tear down "them vs. us" silos, so every member of the team – product managers, developers, and designers – think like QA. The quality of the product should be everyone’s responsibility and not rest only on the shoulders of QA. We need to come together as ambassadors of our products to improve and move the business forward as a strong unit, and as fast as possible.

Building a quality mindset

It has always been the tester's job to find the quality gaps in the system, and then the developer’s job to fix them when time permits, unless it’s a critical issue. Now, developers are being asked to develop and test their code. This practice has gotten mixed reviews, particularly in cases where developers don't thoroughly test their code because they don’t have the capacity, or they'd prefer to pitch the testing over the wall to QA.

Should developers do their own testing? In my opinion, Yes! I believe it's a myth that developers are unable to get into the tester's mindset of destroying instead of building. Every day developers use critical thinking and problem-solving skills to develop complex systems. They should be responsible for their code and write the relevant unit tests; think like QA throughout the development lifecycle; focus on the quality, not the testing activities. No one's code is flawless.

How do you ensure developers are thinking holistically about the application – like traditional testers and business analysts? As ambassadors, it's our responsibility to mentor developers to think about both the positive and the negative scenarios; to think about how users will work with the system (and how they will abuse it!); to analyze the product being tested, and to look for the quality gaps.

What does success look like?

Everyone on the team, along with QA, should assist in testing the whole system. To get developers and others to think like QA, provide them with a guide that helps them recognize the signs of a “No Quality Mindset,” and offers recommendations for shifting to a process that focuses on quality and cultivates a mindset for achieving it.

Focus Areas

Signs of No Quality Mindset

Recommendation

Success Look Like

Culture

No shared quality ownership; siloed development and quality assurance, and losing sight of the larger quality picture

Identify and define specific levels of quality involvement for individuals on teams to be aware of; enable them to share the responsibilities for them

Teams are finding problems together, and finding quality solutions together

Coordination

Teams are not aligned on quality priorities, and dependencies are not always clear

Prioritize testing activities for any given project and ask the team to review them with respect to the deadline (definition of done); get buy-in from all members involved

Initiative tickets guide the overall priorities and are a place where stakeholders and team members identify the quality strategy

Roles

Members of the team are not aware of each other or their function in the development and quality processes

Encourage team members to build out their Confluence profile: list projects they've worked on, areas of expertise and specialized knowledge, and hobbies. Make these a resource for getting to know colleagues

Team members’ profiles are updated with information relevant to their work and interest. Confluence is used as an onboarding tool for new employees to get to know the teams and team members

Communication

Lack of communication about changes to systems and features that can have downstream effects on automated testing

Think deeply about who is connected to the team and how to communicate new announcements, progress, knowledge, and more. (How we make and test things, JIRA/Confluence, Lunch and learn, Internal newsletter)

Fewer quality surprises when products and features are rolled out

Tools

Inconsistencies on tickets and in documentation make information unreliable; there is no confidence in them as a source of truth

Lunch-and-learns and training focused on quality, automated testing techniques, types of testing, and processes

Documentation reflects information shared between team members during the discovery and execution stages and becomes more of a source of truth

Conclusion

Yes, QA should continue to be the gatekeepers. But the quality of the product should be the responsibility of everyone on the agile team – starting with developers who don’t even consider it an option to pitch testing activities over the wall to an isolated QA team. So begins the process of breaking down silos between development and testing.

Greg Sypolt, Director of Quality Engineering at Gannett | USA Today Network, maintains a developer, quality, and DevOps mindset, allowing him to bridge the gaps between all team members to achieve desired outcomes. Greg helps shape the organization’s approach to testing, tools, processes, and continuous integration and supports development teams to deliver software that meets high-quality software standards. He's an advocate for automating the right things and ensuring that tests are reusable and maintainable. He actively contributes to the testing community by speaking at conferences, writing articles, blogging, and through direct involvement in various testing-related activities.

Published:
Oct 30, 2019
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