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Jim Grey's avatar

So spot on! I moved from QA to Engineering leadership about 10 years ago because I got tired of trying to test in quality when all my teams could do was test out bugs. I thought I was going to head off quality problems at the source. It took me several years to figure out that I was engineering the quality system.

Deepak Karn's avatar

I’ve always felt that quality problems are often discussed as testing problems because testing is where they become visible.

But visibility is not ownership.

Poor requirements, weak product decisions, communication gaps, rushed delivery, unchecked assumptions, and technical debt all show up during testing. That doesn’t mean testing created them.

Testing exposes quality problems. It doesn't own all of them.

Related reading:

https://www.lifeofqa.com/p/testing-is-a-social-activity-not

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