Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.
Search
Close this search box.

No QA? All QA!

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Pinterest
WhatsApp

One of the major topics that intimidate test engineers is the No-QA question or approach (depending on your view of it).

I heard such responses after the session “Fiverr delivering fast..No QA”, by Gil Wasserman, Fiverr VP R&D, at our Agile Israel 2016 event. QA members asked me if they should look for their next role, and I keep hearing this concern whenever this topic arises.

So, is it true? Should we eliminate the QA role? Or better say – merge it into the developer’s role?

I truly understand the motivation for a No-QA approach – We do want to have a shared team responsibility for quality. We want the team to own it. We want developers to develop quality code and quality products and not to hand over the code to someone else’s problem. But I found that the No-QA way of doing it provides a contradictory message. If we eliminate the QA how will we increase the quality? How will we focus the developer’s attention on quality? What do we expect them to do?

Does this mean that there is no need for QA as team members? No QA expertise that should be valued?

Well, if we eliminate the QA role we don’t leave much choice for the developers other than to tell them that there is no one else to test, so they have to.

It’s like homework, you can hate doing it, but if you don’t – how will you learn? And yes, developers resist doing testing, but if they won’t – how will they learn? How will they value their code, their solutions, and the user flow? How will they improve the product’s testability and support?

But No-QA? Can they just do it? Don’t they need guidance, or assistance? Someone that will help them make their environment more supportive for testing and quality improvements, someone that will help them criticize the product, its solutions, and technology, someone that will guide them in thinking from the customer’s point of view?
This is where the QA team member gets in.  In the webinar of Quality at Speed, How JIRA Does QA they call QA – quality assistance.

I really like this term, because test engineers should not be quality controllers, instead they should assist in building quality into the process, and grow their team’s quality consciousness and practices.

They should use their creativity to run exploratory testing, to better represent the user, by setting better test environments and assist in defining better user stories, MMFs (Minimum Marketable Features), and MVPs (Minimum Viable Products).

They should question if you are building the right it rather than if you built it right, as greatly discussed in GTAC 2011: Opening Keynote Address – Test is Dead.

They should inspire others by promoting test-first approaches, defining automation & TDD (Test Driven Development) as well as working closely with developers on defining UT (Unit Tests). They should assist in becoming an All-QA.

As such, the ratio of Quality Assistance doesn’t have to grow. You can keep a small community of QA to provide higher quality and the fastest speed. You can make the developers build AND also evaluate their outcomes, relieving the QA bottleneck, but without ignoring the QA added value. Instead, you leverage it.

In organizations that develop complicated products or projects, that require domain/field expertise, merging the QA role into the developer’s one is not an easy and sometimes not a doable path. In the same way that developers hold their main expertise and can do some in other areas, including testing (being more T-shaped members), there is a place in the team to hold test assistance that can be experts in a certain domain of testing and also guide others towards better quality and contribute to other team’s areas as automation, pairing with developers on UT and TDD and so forth. The magic word here is balance. Balancing dev-test work within the teams and balancing shared team ownership and individual distinctiveness.

In an HBR article of the-problem-with-rewarding-individual-performers, Jay Van Bavel and Dominic Packer wrote that “By balancing individuals’ need to belong with their desire to stand out, a leader can build a sense of “optimal distinctiveness” among group members”.

I find it a real art to keeping optimal distinctiveness in the team. To relieve the threat of a cross-functional team with T-shaped people and shared ownership of quality, and still keep the team members as individuals, that are being recognized for their distinct expertise that contributes to the team.

So, No-QA or All-QA? Yes, I think that words reflect and impact our mindset. Therefore, an ALL-QA approach is better than No-QA.

QA has lots to do with building quality, assisting developers to test, ensuring that quality can be enabled, qualifying that the organization is building the right it, and making quality an asset of ALL the team.

What do you think?

Subscribe for Email Updates:

Categories:

Tags:

Tips
Agile for Embedded Systems
GanttBan
Agile
Frameworks
Test Driven Development
Video
SPC
Coaching Agile Teams
Slides
System Team
Principles of Lean-Agile Leadership
Jira Plans
Applying Agile Methodology
RTE Role
Manage Budget Creation
Entrepreneurial Operating System®
Self-organization
A Kanban System for Software Engineering
Nexus
Artificial Intelligence
Certification
Value Streams
Certified SAFe
RSA
Lean and Agile Techniques
Scrum Master
User stories
ATDD vs. BDD
Code
Agile Testing Practices
Iterative Incremental Development
Scrum Master Role
Agile Release Planning
ART Success
Large Scale Scrum
RTE
Agile Games
Continuous Deployment
SA
Agile Assembly Architecture
Accelerate Value Delivery At Scale
Introduction to Test Driven Development
Agile in the Enterprise
Keith Sawyer
Lean and Agile Principles and Practices
Kaizen
Kanban 101
Perfection Game
Operational Value Stream
Nexus and SAFe
Limiting Work in Progress
Tools
PI Objectives
QA
Implementing SAFe
Lean-Agile Budgeting
Story Slicing
AgileSparks
Achieve Business Agility
Engineering Practices
Agile India
Agile Techniques
Agile Contracts Best Practices
Process Improvement
Agile Risk Management
Advanced Roadmaps
Jira
Spotify
Lean-Agile Software Development
AI Artificial Intelligence
Agile Project Management
Games and Exercises
speed at scale
Enterprise DevOps
Agile Delivery
Program Increment
agileisrael
ATDD
Atlassian
Lean Agile Organization
TDD
Agile Israel Events
Implementation of Lean and Agile
Scrum Primer
Kanban Game
Agile Development
SAFe DevOps
LAB
chatgpt
Nexus Integration Team
Scrum.org
Kanban Basics
Agile Games and Exercises
Risk Management on Agile Projects
Agile Mindset
POPM
Change Management
Software Development
Professional Scrum Product Owner
Scrum and XP
EOS®
WIP
LPM
Agile Community
Webinar
Sprint Planning
DevOps
Legacy Code
Team Flow
BDD
The Kanban Method
Nexus vs SAFe
Lean Agile Basics
Planning
predictability
SAFe
AI
Agile Product Ownership
Kaizen Workshop
Continuous Delivery
Product Management
Software Development Estimation
Release Train Engineer
IT Operations
Elastic Leadership
Scaled Agile Framework
Legacy Enterprise
Effective Agile Retrospectives
Agile Product Development
Professional Scrum Master
ROI
Lean Budgeting
Managing Risk on Agile Projects
Rapid RTC
Atlaassian
Built-In Quality
speed @ scale
Professional Scrum with Kanban
Acceptance Test-Driven Development
Agility
Agile Exercises
ScrumMaster Tales
ARTs
NIT
Scrum Guide
Reading List
Scrum Values
ALM Tools
Jira admin
Kanban
An Appreciative Retrospective
Agile Marketing
LeSS
Development Value Streams
Covid19
SAFe Release Planning
Hybrid Work
Portfolio for Jira
Product Ownership
Nexus and Kanban
Agile Basics
Quality Assurance
Sprint Iteration
Agile Program
Risk-aware Product Development
Jira Cloud
Introduction to ATDD
Risk Management in Kanban
System Integration Environments
Releases Using Lean
Agile Project
Amdocs
Continuous Integration
PI Planning
Lean Agile Management
The Agile Coach
Scrum With Kanban
Agile Israel
Lean Agile
Pomodoro Technique
Daily Scrum
Lean Agile Leadership
Kanban Kickstart Example
Agile Release Management
Agile and DevOps Journey
Continuous Improvement
Sprint Retrospectives
Lean Software Development
Systems Thinking
Lean Risk Management
lean agile change management
Continuous Planning
Agile Outsourcing
System Archetypes
Managing Projects
Lean Startup
Business Agility
Scrum
Presentation
AgileSparks
Logo
Enable registration in settings - general

Contact Us

Request for additional information and prices

AgileSparks Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter, and stay updated on the latest Agile news and events

This website uses Cookies to provide a better experience
Shopping cart