成为测试专家的99种方法

http://www.ministryoftesting.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/99ThingsEbook.pdf

 

1. Get to know your customers - Chris George

2. Work first line support for a while - Chris George

3. Never stop learning - Chris George

4. ...and recognize that you will never know everything - Amy Phillips

5. Learn when to automate and when not to - Chris George

6. Question the way you work every day - Kinofrost

7. ... and have the courage to share your findings with whoever is in charge 

as well as fight for key changes - Erick Brickarp

8. Pair with developers. - Gareth Waterhouse

9. Test as early as possible - Gareth Waterhouse

10. Remember it is about people. - Tony Bruce

11. Learn to question. - Tony Bruce

12. Learn to explain. - Tony Bruce

13. Understand the business model and business challenges/context before 

determining the testing challenges. Its not all clicks and buttons. - 

Mohan Panguluri

14. Keep your eye on the ball (the end goal) - Kate Paulk

15. Get an understanding of Systems Thinking - Martin Huckle

16. Also get an understanding of mental modelling, the scientific method 

and design of experiments - Kinofrost

17. Be critical but do not criticise - Kim Knup

18. Create a MindMap - Rosie Sherry

19. Learn from other Tester mistakes - Mantas

20. True, but learn from your mistakes first :-) - Mauri Edo

21. Attend or even better speak at Software Testing and Programming 

conferences (there are free/low cost one that provide great value) - 

Stephan Kämper

22. Take the Association for Software Testing "Black Box Software Testing" 

course(s) - Stephan Kämper

23. Follow other testers on Twitter - Stephan Kämper

24. Addition to Stephan's suggestion: Follow testers on Twitter is a good 

start but make sure you don't stop there. Twitter is a great way to share 

ideas and experiences, get feedback and practice your debating skills 

not to mention getting in contact with other passionate testers. - Erik 

Brickarp

25. For non-native English speakers: Improve your English. For native 

English speakers: Learn another language. - Stephan Kämper

26. Teach testing. - Stephan Kämper

27. Learn to program, some lines can help so much - Stephan Kämper

28. Start a test blog - Erick Brickarp

29. And comment on others - Amy Phillips

30. Read Articles, Blogs, Forum posts. - Haplerinko

31. Join an open source project you like as tester. - Erick Brickarp

32. Is "Join Software Testing Club!" taken? I couldn't see it... or maybe it is 

too obvious :-) - Geir Gulbrandsen

33. Listen to what your client has to say. This is, by far, the most important 

(and underrated) Testing skill, in my humble opinion. - Marcelo 

Cordeiro Leite

34. +1 for listening. Being really, really good at listening helps you not only 

to understand your client, but to pick up on areas where the team is 

confused or unsure about what we're building - a slight hesitation in 

speech because the dev keeps getting two different entities muddled up, 

perhaps.

35. Read the ISTQB syllabus from start to end - then use it as a map of the 

box you need to be thinking outside of! - Geekonomicon

36. Do not avoid technical discussions/information - Boipelo Mawasha

37. Every year or 2 - Refresh on basics - Read ISTQB Syllabus, TheTestEye 

SW Quality Characteristics, BBST material, etc. again. (Every time you 

have different perspective thus gain different insights from same 

material) - Halperinko

1038. Always use the best methodology invented - Common Sense. Then 

choose your testing methodology... - Gil Bloom

39. Build a good relationship with the developers. - David Wardlaw

40. Resist the temptation to go after bogus certifications. Take the risk of 

thinking for yourself. I've got 99 ideas on how to become a better tester, 

but certification ain't one. - Johan Jonasson

41. Learn how to use testing techniques such as boundary value analysis, 

equivalence partitioning etc - Amy Phillips

42. Explore your ideas through blog posts, discussions, or by speaking at 

events. Listen to others opinions and use to broaden your own - Amy 

Phillips

43. Read the release notes for products you use (or even ones you don't 

use), many list the bugs they've fixed. Test whether the same bugs exist 

in your product. - Amy Phillips

44. Learn from bugs that end up in production. Try to work out how your 

testing missed them. - Amy Phillips

45. Listen. And then form your own opinion. - Amy Phillips

46. Keep your mind open to new techniques and tools - Graham Perry

47. Come up with three ways that your boss, your co-worker, and your 

trainee can become better at their jobs ... then apply it to yourself. - Jeff 

Lucas

48. Read as much as you can about testing. Then read as much as you can 

about things outside of testing; product design, software development, 

psychology, anthropology etc - Amy Phillips

49. When you analyse a system, don't forget the parts of it that are not 

made of code, but living, breathing, fickle, forgetful, quarrelsome, 

cooperative, adaptable, lovely human beings. - Anna Baik

50. Explore the system!! - Vishu Udayan

51. Look at Competitor products and benchmark the differences - Sandeep 

Maher

52. Trust no one! In sense that what people say is not always what they 

REALLY mean. So the more you conversate, the more you trust. But 

your trust level is always less than 95% - Oleksii Burdin

53. Ask yourself (and answer) the fundamental questions like "why do we 

need testers?","what is good testing?", "what should I document, why 

and for who?"... The greatest value in questions like these is not the 

answer but the thought process of getting to an answer. - Erik Brickarp

54. Understand what your customer wants, what he needs, communicate 

the needs, agree with needs and deliver both of them. -Teemu Vesala 

55. But remember that people don't always need what they think they need. 

Be prepared to think around the problem to deliver a solution to the 

problem, not just what was explicitly asked for. - Joseph Brannan

56. If it doesn't exist: Start a community of practice or other forum there 

you and colleges can talk testing, share ideas/experiences and improve 

as testers together. - Erik Brickarp

57. Utilise your courage (and display it) and stand up for what you believe 

in. Don't bend on your morals and ethics. Test the best way you know 

how, despite being told otherwise. Before doing this... make sure you 

have mortgage insurance. ;0) - David Greenlees

58. Embrace quality as a lifestyle, not only during work hours. - George 

Motoc

59. Breathe as a tester, Live as a tester, Be a tester. Be a tester in all areas of 

your life whatever it is at work, private life, relationships, hobbies or 

14others, 24/7, 365/year ( I give you 1 day rest on leap year :) ). - Gabrielle 

Klein

60. Never stop trying to become a better tester - Mauri Edo

61. Try to provide the solutions as well as finding the problems. - 

Geekonomicon

62. Think about as many different perspectives as possible!! - Dan Ashby

63. When reporting, try not to be seen as the enemy; assign blame to 

systems and applications rather than individuals and stick to the facts. 

Equally, emphasize the positives, and the efforts made to correct issues; 

this time ignore the systems and applications and focus on the 

individuals who got the defects fixed. - Joseph Brannan

64. Learn the difference between Severity and Priority - Dan Ashby

65. Would add to that and recommend that everyone in the company knows 

what they mean by severity and priority. If people have different 

understanding of these words then there's no actual communication. - 

Kinofrost

66. Accept that not all bugs you raise will be prioritised to be fixed - Steven 

Cross

67. Everyone within the project team is responsible for quality - Steven 

Cross

68. Testing should be fun so remain positive and get everyone within the 

team enthused about the merits of testing - Steven Cross

69. Accept that Developers have a different mindset - Steven Cross

70. Be brave. You're possibly the only person(people) saying "Are you sure 

you want to release this now because...?" - Vernon Richards

71. Don't repeat yourself. I learned this from the Pragmatic Programmer 

although it means something different for testers: don't repeat the same 

actions, don't follow the same path, the same order. Break your habits. - 

Philippe Antras

72. Ask experienced testers for feedback/help - Erik Brickarp 

73. Flip that, and experienced testers should help less experience testers as 

much as they can. It will help you and help the other tester. - Gareth 

Waterhouse 

74. Good point and to keep 'em coming: experienced testers can benefit 

from asking less experienced testers to get a new/fresh view of a 

problem, especially true when experienced includes very use to the 

product being tested (in that case as a means to fight bias). - Erik 

Brickarp 

75. Use the box itself to help you. Look at the edges of your box. Create a 

bigger box, look at what is now in the box and decide what you might 

17want to follow up. Look at the edges again, can you push any of them 

out a bit? What would you find if you did? Do quick, cheap, experiments 

on stuff that seems unlikely to surprise you - because sometimes it will.

76. Use another pair of eyes to help - pair with someone, or try to grab 

someone for a quick debrief if your team doesn't "do" pairing. - Anna 

Baik

77. Leave your ego at home - maybe that amazing bug won't get fixed before 

go-live. Trust that the person making the decision knows better than 

you. - Amy Phillips

78. When you say, you're a tester, play your position, that position could 

involve much more than just testing in a start-up. It might even involve 

giving an opinion on the go/no-go decision. - Matt Archer

79. Respect programmers, designers, product owner and others involved.

80. Earn respect back by doing a great job and learn how to communicate 

your results. - Erik Brickarp

81. +1 to this, specially do not feed the anger between testers and 

developers, if you face it at some point in your career.

82. Go to non-testing technology events - Rosie Sherry

83. Reduce biases & unintentional blindness. - halperinko

84. Learn to take effective notes and document your testing in different 

ways - models, mind maps, sketches and other approaches will all help 

you gain insights and new perspectives on the system you are testing.

85. Build personal development time into your week - 5-10% or 

approximately half a day a week sharpening your skills by reading, 

practicing or learning a new skill will pay dividends. 

86. See the bigger picture. How does your testing add value to your team, 

project, organisation?

87. Learn how to use regex.

88. Learn how to use the command line. Shell and batch scripts too. 

89. Learn a scripting language. Use it to automate repetitive tasks or 

processes. Manipulation of text or data files for example. 

90. Become an Excel power user. Functions, logic and conditional 

formatting can all be used as powerful analysis and test tools. 

91. Stop following test scripts and think - Stephen Blower

92. Hang out with developers, designers, managers - Rosie Sherry

93. Understand your business and customer needs, not just the 

requirements - Mike Hendry

94. Understand your domain fully and as importantly your competitors - 

Stephen Blower

95. Do not try to find errors or bugs - try to find problems and victims. 

Testing is more than checking. - Thomas Lattner

96. Be prepared, you won’t catch all the bugs, but keep trying - Mauri Edo

97. Be prepared, all the bugs you raise won’t get fixed - Rosie Sherry

98. Test what matters - Rosie Sherry

99. Question the veracity of 1-98, and their validity in your context - 

Kinofrost

100. Try always what happens when you violate the rules. So here's the 

second sentence also.- Teemu Vesala

 

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