Considering a Career In Software Testing? A realworld experience based alternative view.

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024

Komentáře • 263

  • @DavidSmith-ox4tu
    @DavidSmith-ox4tu Před 2 lety +47

    I have been a Test engineer for over 27 years and regret nothing. It has taken me places I could not have imagined.

    • @yeetboi268
      @yeetboi268 Před rokem

      what certification did you have?

    • @ragaraggaa7223
      @ragaraggaa7223 Před rokem

      You were before 27 now things are quite different

  • @mermaidalone7826
    @mermaidalone7826 Před 5 lety +70

    I have an interview and technical testing next week for getting into this job. Desperately watching different vidoes. Your videos was such an inspiration for me. Thanks alot🌸

  • @elleamo92
    @elleamo92 Před rokem +6

    I just started my first job as a UI tester, so happy to find your channel!

  • @chef5588
    @chef5588 Před 5 lety +50

    Excellent video, doesn’t try to discourage people but is realistic about what’s needed to get into the field.

  • @eli-tutos
    @eli-tutos Před rokem +3

    I have been trying to find a career that fits my personality, and I after watching this video I am extremely interested in QA testing. Thank you for all the advice.

  • @thomasschlitzer7541
    @thomasschlitzer7541 Před 4 lety +7

    I am a free consultant in sw testing. I focus on test management and have 20+ years of experience. First let me thank you Alan because I feel that you live and breath quality and I can learn from you even after all these years. For the people here who consider becoming a tester and looking for a job. I am often in the situation to hire testers for my customers and yes I filter with certifications. But more important I test the people in the interview if they see themselves as a tester. I don’t want people who think testing is just a step. Testing software is a profession and I need people who have a true passion for it. I am happy to hire people who tell me about their passion for quality with sparkles in their eyes. I want to feel that you love testing. If you really do nothing will stop you getting a job in our career path. Remember it’s a passion and not a just job.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +1

      Hi Thomas thanks watching, and for sharing your approach and experience.

  • @dennisbenedictos9915
    @dennisbenedictos9915 Před 5 lety +11

    Thanks for the video. I relate a lot with your comments. I'm a Software Tester for over 9 years now. Nearly quit the industry as I got burned out due to staying in the same company for too long. During that 9 years I progressed from a manual tester to learning automation testing using QTP and recently, Tosca. I hated QTP but loved Tosca! On my 10th year as a Software Tester, I realised that it is not the role of Testing that I got sick and tired of. I realised it's the fact I stayed in a company where it had no more substantial way to challenge my inquisitive mind. I got bored with our projects even though I was learning new technology testing tools like Tosca. Now on my 10 year as a Software Tester, I moved on to another company as a Test Automation Specialist. I wake up eager and excited to be a tester once again. There is so much new things to learn and there is a real challenge for me to be excited about as it is now my responsibility to introduce automation testing in this company! Also in this 10th year, I have decided to go contracting to challenge myself and see if I could demand a higher salary for my 9 years experience as a Tester compare to what I would be earning if I continue to be a permanent employee of a government department. I still 'work' for a government department but I am contracted via an IT recruitment agency. Just a thought, maybe you can make a video and let us know your thoughts about the difference (pros and conts) between a career in Testing as a contractor vs as a permanent employee?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety

      Thanks Dennis, glad to read you took action to improve your situation. I might well do a permie vs contractor vs consultant video - good idea.

  • @mza1409
    @mza1409 Před 4 lety +52

    I never regreted my decission, at least not in the last 3 years and the fact that I make more than most developers deoesn't hurt either. Now I want to focus on API automation. I also wanted to be a developer before, but I feel in love with testing, knowing C# and SQL is enough for me.

    • @ciprianghenghea7779
      @ciprianghenghea7779 Před 4 lety

      Nice stuff dude :DDD

    • @kenimaralu
      @kenimaralu Před 3 lety

      What testing school did you go to?

    • @chukwuuchethankgod1591
      @chukwuuchethankgod1591 Před 3 lety

      Please suggest video tutorial on CZcams for beginners

    • @rashmiranasinghe9949
      @rashmiranasinghe9949 Před 2 lety

      Same story.

    • @Dattebayo3089
      @Dattebayo3089 Před rokem

      In which country ur?? Cuz in india qa, testers are considered as lower layer employees. Many companies completely ostracise qa team here. After 4 yrs of struggle and switch I earned 6 figure mark. Even learning many skills, technologies, tools also companies not willing to give us good amount. Meanwhile dev in india reach to 6 fig salary with just 2-3 yrs of experience.

  • @Stargrazerone
    @Stargrazerone Před 2 lety +1

    im extremely unexperienced in the field, worked as a cook and waiter for the past ten years,ever since i finished school, and now i applied for software testing job, had and interview, called for another one tomorrow, had only a week to prepare with 11hr shifts a day at my current job, doing crash course on c# when i have time to sit down, when im cooking or cleaning, im watching videos like yours on software testing, how to approach it, and what to learn, as well on scrum and agile.
    you gave a plethora of good advices and references, and im grateful for this video, because it gave me a perspective regarding the job.
    im introverted but good at reading people and sometimes i imagine putting myself into their own skin to get a sense of their behaviour and thinking, cause im aweirdo...which i think could be actual skill in software testing, as in viewing software from different perspective, thats the waiter job.
    as for a cook, well i realised that cooking is a lot like programming, same thing, different work, at least in c#...
    anyway, got my sub, im gonna go through more of your material.
    p.s. its been bugging me the whole time...your dialect is very mild, but are you scottish?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 2 lety +1

      It's great that you're finding parallels between your current experience and what you want to do next. Testers have to think about systems differently and from many perspectives, some people view the thought process as weird, sounds like you'll be fine. Best of luck with the interviews and job hunting. I do indeed still have a Scottish accent. :)

  • @pedronajera4745
    @pedronajera4745 Před 3 lety +22

    Sir, I watched a couple of your videos. Went to my interview. I had done my homework and had a bit of knowledge of what the company works on or type of clients. Anyways, I am landing my first programming job in two weeks as an RPA QA. Thank you so much for posting this type of content!
    I don't have much of programming experience and the interview was focused on questions on what do I consider good software or what I would look for. Goals and processes pretty much. So, I think many of the things you mention in your video are true.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 3 lety +3

      Congratulations. I'm happy to learn all your hard work paid off :) Best of luck.

    • @RWarrior777
      @RWarrior777 Před 2 lety

      @@EvilTester hi there, good video. Where and how can I learn software and web testing?. Please help. Thanks

    • @JeatBunkie
      @JeatBunkie Před rokem

      @@RWarrior777 you mustn’t have actually watched the video…

  • @MICHAELKAGAN8
    @MICHAELKAGAN8 Před 5 lety +9

    Thank you for giving a full conversation about being a software tester and educating me about what is and what takes to be successful at it.

  • @user-pt3bw9vh3i
    @user-pt3bw9vh3i Před 4 lety +7

    Great video! Most companies overlook this role. Manual testers are the most common ones. They learn more on the software products and testing approaches. But lacking in making sure quality of the product. I’d say we need more performance tester, penetration tester who can ensure better software quality.

  • @bravenick
    @bravenick Před 5 lety +8

    Really good video! Personally me pick a route of being a tester first and then become a developer. I failed to land a dev job... But because we all need to pay our bills I land a Software tester job and now I'm working 50% of the time testing and 50% developing.

    • @sneocatenaccio746
      @sneocatenaccio746 Před 5 lety

      Brave Nick hi friend i'm a brazilian guy And I see your CZcams channel, I have a question To you : if i want To became a qa test i need to learn coding in some lenguage first ? I have some know only in c++ and never make any software in my life, so i could i get into it ? Learn programing and after that how to teste ?

  • @amirmolavi1415
    @amirmolavi1415 Před 5 lety +8

    This is amazing! I am having a career shift from HCI/UX to SW testing and I'm so glad to have found this video now !

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety +1

      Great. Hope it helps. Thanks.

    • @GoogleAccount00
      @GoogleAccount00 Před rokem

      Im interested in UI. What is the best way to transition with no experience. Will being a Systems Administrative Support Specialist help at all?

  • @shaneparsons9684
    @shaneparsons9684 Před 5 lety +7

    Thank you so very much for this video, a friend of mine is a software engineer and he recommended this as a career change due to an injury. Everything he mentioned to me, you reiterated a bit more in depth as well and even going farther into detail. I look forward to learning more from your videos and the reading you suggested!

  • @hardwellmjaho4185
    @hardwellmjaho4185 Před 4 lety +9

    This is really a life couching video this works in any aspect of career, Thanks for guidance

  • @olaola5333
    @olaola5333 Před 5 lety +2

    You just make impact , have been studying Software Testing for like 7months now been a beginner , thanks i came across your Video

  • @AnthonyWoods-jr6iu
    @AnthonyWoods-jr6iu Před rokem +1

    Im doing a testing course with automation, SQL, OOP & manual testing......so much to learn

  • @Rafikiler
    @Rafikiler Před 6 lety +4

    This is the best video about software testing as a career I've seen so far. I've been a tester for a year now and I must say, I got into testing mostly because I wasn't that enthusiastic about programming and didn't have the motivation to learn it myself. However, I found the topic of testing itself extremely interesting. In my current job I have the opportunity to explore a wide range of topics, from exploratory testing, through performance and automation to security and I'm overwhelmed with how much there is to learn. I hope this branch of software development will grow and will stop being regarded as an easy, unskilled job - that's the image bad testers create.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 6 lety

      Thanks Rafal. The overwhelming amount of stuff to learn never goes away :)

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 6 lety

      Also... Great guitar playing in your videos. :)

    • @Rafikiler
      @Rafikiler Před 6 lety

      EvilTester - Software Testing thanks :) I'm honored

    • @mayabahapenga
      @mayabahapenga Před 5 lety +1

      how did you learn software testing?

  • @nahummaciel6385
    @nahummaciel6385 Před 5 lety +5

    I put in an application for Software Test Engineer last week. I don't know what to expect or what I should know. This video lots of references to learning how to go about it. Thanks a lot.

  • @diRumahKedua
    @diRumahKedua Před 5 lety +2

    More than 8 years in software testing industry, but keep inspiring by watching this videos, thanks for sharing.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety

      :) Thank you

    • @axa5005
      @axa5005 Před 5 lety

      Hi, I am just getting into the field and want to know long term where can I go for continuing education courses or how do you personally stay up to date? Books/courses, etc?

  • @lydiadolbel780
    @lydiadolbel780 Před rokem +1

    Thanks for this video I found this super informative compared with other videos I'd be browsing to help me learn about getting into software testing. Lots of great real world advice and not too much technical jargon. I'm subscribing to watch more :D

  • @lukapavlesic7610
    @lukapavlesic7610 Před 6 lety +9

    Been a Software Tester for 10 months so far after graduating Software Engineering and having two years of Software Developing and can say that I totally agree with everything you have said! Great talk!
    Also agree that Testing is way more complicated than Developing and it is not as easy job as other might think.
    And when boss asked me why I got into testing (because we are hiring a new testers) I have told him exactly the same reasons you have mentioned and on a plus side I am able to work with multiple projects and multiple teams.
    Loving every minute of my testing job and we are seeing now how hard it is to find a good tester, to find a good junior testing that is willing to be trained so really hope people will start appreciating Tester as much as Developers (especially in salaries)

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 6 lety

      Thanks Luka, really glad to see the enthusiasm coming through in your comment. :)

    • @lukapavlesic7610
      @lukapavlesic7610 Před 6 lety

      Thank you very much, I appreciate it! :)
      Have an question for you if I may...
      Am from Croatia and here Testing is not as popular as it maybe should be simply because universities do not even mention it (not even a Software Engineering Universities - all of them are mostly focusing on developers) but need for them is bigger and bigger, which is reason why I liked your video so much since it says exactly how exciting testing can be - even more than developing...
      So my company suggested me to be a guest lecture on Software Engineering Universities in Zagreb just to show students what testers do and introduce them to this field of software developing.
      So my question is, do you have any advice for me (that has not been said in this video) for that lecture and even more how to encourage students in this field as well, how to present them testing the best.
      Would gladly watch any of your videos as well, if you are able to link them to me.
      (if it is easier, my LinkedIn profile is www.linkedin.com/in/luka-pavlesic/)
      I very much appreciate your answer! :)

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 6 lety +3

      Always talk from your experience, describe things you learned. Also, if possible, try and demonstrate some of the things you do and the tools you use. University courses often make testing all about the techniques. If you can demonstrate the amount of thinking involved and technical exploration then it might make it seem more interesting.

    • @Bm23CC
      @Bm23CC Před 5 lety

      In your opinion Is it a bad idea for a CS / SE student to move into testing as your first role. I can code.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety

      Neither a good nor a bad idea. If you can find a role with a company that you like, and if you are interested in testing then you'll be fine. There is a lot to learn, whichever route you go down, and you don't have to stick at one thing, you can move between testing, programming, automating, ops, etc. The important thing is to find a company that will provide a good environment for you to learn and grow.

  • @Director414
    @Director414 Před 11 měsíci

    Great video! Thanks for sharing how the job of a tester can be so much more and be so broad. Really mind opening, thanks a lot!

  • @konwe6579
    @konwe6579 Před 5 lety +5

    Thank you very much. Great insights. I'm currently working at those lower end companies that you've described. Good to hear that advanced testing can be an interesting problem solving activity.

  • @forexdragon
    @forexdragon Před 5 lety +5

    AWESOME VIDEO!!! One of THE BEST IT career videos I've ever seen and definitely the best one on a career in software testing. Bravo!

  • @cateclism316
    @cateclism316 Před 3 lety +1

    What you said came true for me. I wanted to be a database programmer. I took my first testing job as a "foot in the door". I could not move up after a few years because it really wasn't my thing, and I couldn't move into development because all my experience had been in testing. I was in demand due to my SQL skills, but I did not develop my QA skills and knowledge to the same degree. After being fired from my third QA job, I ditched my career and started learning another field altogether. I just wish the IT recruiters would leave me alone!

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 3 lety +1

      IT Recruiters never leave you alone, not when you have in demand buzzwords on your CV. :)

    • @andresviveros3994
      @andresviveros3994 Před 3 lety

      @@EvilTester I have been offered a job within my same company to do testing but i want to be a developer. Should I take it? Will testing help give me a good insight into web development also?

  • @schmoab
    @schmoab Před 4 lety +2

    I think a good career path would be to start as a developer then move into testing. Or switching back and forth. I’m now a combination QA engineer and SDET. Finding a programming language you are comfortable with and becoming an expert in the test framework is a great career path. Somebody will always need a QA with that skill set.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety

      The more skills we have the more options in how we approach activities. So when people are interested in both paths, then absolutely develop both paths. :) Thanks.

  • @janehamilton3039
    @janehamilton3039 Před 6 lety +6

    Great advice, particularly about learning testing before jumping in to automate, especially as the industry is all about automation/coding these days. I sometimes feel that being able to code is placed as more important than actually knowing what to test in the first place, which is a shame. I love to code, but I was a tester first, so hopefully I have learnt how to identify what we need to test, and then when, what and how to automate.

  • @lijulal
    @lijulal Před 6 lety +3

    Thank you for the advice. Great video for all software testers!

  • @Nistorakee1
    @Nistorakee1 Před 2 lety

    thank you very much for the real vision of software testing and all the great content! much appreciated

  • @xiaotianho1309
    @xiaotianho1309 Před 2 lety

    I am not from programming background and currently job hunting and exposed to software tester job and when I am wondering about it I found your video. Thanks for your video. You give me an insight on software tester could be an interesting continuous exploring path instead of constraint in following the ruled test script or the test cases which also provide me a good criteria I can consider if I would like to apply as the software tester. Thank you! Interesting!🌟

  • @hamidaparvin6062
    @hamidaparvin6062 Před 5 lety +5

    Thank you so much for sharing this video. I am interested to do software testing job but don’t know how to get into the system.

    • @mza1409
      @mza1409 Před 4 lety +2

      Istqb foundation cert can help, knowing basic coding, how to use chrome dev tools, basicslly you can start applying for junior qa positions after 6 months of learning. Just keep being curious.

  • @athziriherrejon6692
    @athziriherrejon6692 Před 4 lety +1

    This channel is so helpful! Thanks for the information :) I got a job as a Jr Tester.

  • @lukeharper7850
    @lukeharper7850 Před 2 lety

    Wonderful review, and very refreshing. You articulated things fantastically, and for any beginner... Start here

  • @strend2833
    @strend2833 Před 3 lety

    I am completely new coming into software testing, your insight will help me a long way. Thank you :)

  • @Tchp-ld1uz
    @Tchp-ld1uz Před 2 lety

    Seeing this in 2022. Currently in IT support & networking, but want to make the move to QA/Software testing.
    This is the best video on CZcams hands down!
    Bought the book by Boris Beizer, running through Udemy courses, will look at ITSQB foundations.
    Knowledgeable of SDLC and agile methodology

  • @reezdog
    @reezdog Před 3 lety

    I am doing career change and I am thinking of software testing as a way to get into the industry. I want to move into Product Management or Scrum. This video has great guideance.

  • @mobeenahmed2916
    @mobeenahmed2916 Před rokem +1

    Great video. Reality check for newbies who think it is easy... Continuous improvement is must.
    Communication with QAs, Devs and specially being in-touch with Testing Community is very crucial for testers. Conversations lead to questions and vise versa. Thus more learning.

  • @john-juanmoreno2236
    @john-juanmoreno2236 Před 3 lety

    Great point of view, using yours skills and develop your self to be a software tester in your field its has a better perspective.

  • @ramonrios4716
    @ramonrios4716 Před 6 lety

    I totally agree with you Alan ...I got into the testing world thanks to your books and courses , and there is so many people there saying " with this single course you will get a job as a tester in a week.. " ...kind of thing ...absolute rubbish!!!!. I was studying and practicing at home for at home for at least a year , before anybody will offer me an interview. But I am in Spain , and there is not a " Testing Culture " in the majority of companies ...it's an overhead that must be keep to a minimum , or so they think , or worst still ..the developer should also do the testing..!!!
    So thanks for been so sincere and throwing a bit of honest and professional light and very truth full advice.
    Keep up the good work ...!!!...althought I must admit I miss a bit of advice from you about the present and future of Selenium...I started long time ago with the FireFox IDE...but then ????...is the IDE still used ...does anybody know what is happening to Selenium ????
    Any way , Alan , thanks for the great video...
    Cheeerrrrsss...!!!

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 6 lety

      Thanks Ramon.
      I'm sure someone will try to bring the IDE back. I wouldn't use the IDE since I find it better to work in code. The people that I've spoken to that use the IDE have been experimenting with the Katalon IDE
      www.katalon.com/resources-center/blog/katalon-automation-recorder/
      Which I haven't tried.
      The code based Selenium WebDriver is going from strength to strength. I'd use that.

    • @ramonrios4716
      @ramonrios4716 Před 6 lety

      Great ..!!! thanks for the reply Alan....I have been disconnected from the Testing world for a while now , after some very miserable experiences with rubbish companies , and I won´t mind to refresh the whole thing from scratch ...using IntellyJ, maven, Jenkins , Git , ect...are you planning to do a " beginners " course from scratch ..sort of thing ...like you did similar to your UDEMY days ??? or do you know of any " complete " course I / we could refresh with the latest technologies ...with Selenium , with or without FF IDE or similar sort of course ???
      Thanks for your time and kind regards .-

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 6 lety

      My testing courses are no longer for sale on Udemy, but they are all available here compendiumdev.co.uk/page/online_training
      If you sign up to my newsletter then I typically announce anything new I create there. :)
      www.compendiumdev.co.uk/page/join

    • @ramonrios4716
      @ramonrios4716 Před 6 lety

      Joined...!!! subscribed and thanks again ..!!!

  • @ukaszglegoa7519
    @ukaszglegoa7519 Před 9 měsíci

    16:10 remind me of Miyamoto Musashi, in his renowned work "The Book of Five Rings," famously stated, "If you know the Way broadly, you will see it in everything."

  • @chinmayjahagirdar3333
    @chinmayjahagirdar3333 Před 5 lety +4

    Thanks that video is really informative ! 😊

  • @Igzanda135
    @Igzanda135 Před 3 měsíci

    Great videos, glad I found your channel!

  • @Swanny
    @Swanny Před 6 lety +1

    Great video!!! Loads of points taken down. Will share this as anyone looking to get into testing, like me should watch!

  • @SirJonMan
    @SirJonMan Před rokem

    Thank you for this video !
    P.s. i can see you are into finger style guitar playing with that right hand of yours.

  • @arthurivex2298
    @arthurivex2298 Před 4 lety +2

    Here's the issue, automation engineers get pushed to SDETs, then evolve into engineering. The problem is that senior level automation engineers are few. Sois good to stick with automation and then you'll see $$$ if you reach senior level.

  • @DPaquette
    @DPaquette Před 5 lety +1

    Very good video and I agree on the certification information as well.

  • @Godsserver22
    @Godsserver22 Před 2 lety

    I need a mentor like you, this is so great, awesome awesome job!

  • @melbbb5673
    @melbbb5673 Před rokem

    great video and very available/realistic things that anyone can do!

  • @marekk7151
    @marekk7151 Před 4 lety +10

    Going for Interview 16.01 :)

  • @igorkovalenko6775
    @igorkovalenko6775 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome video
    Thank you much

  • @josephralston772
    @josephralston772 Před 4 lety +12

    *singles in on EvilTester videos to learn about software testing*
    EvilTester: "Dont just focus on a single person"
    Me: "S**T"

  • @KennTollens
    @KennTollens Před 5 lety +1

    I did software testing and development. Software testing paid less, but was so much more fun to me.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety

      Great to hear :)

    • @SHenna-ug9zd
      @SHenna-ug9zd Před 5 lety

      What are the important information you need to learn for software testing? I'm more interested in learning the manual part. Please tell me from A-Z what I have to know in order to get a job in that field. Thanks!

    • @ciprianghenghea7779
      @ciprianghenghea7779 Před 5 lety

      @@KennTollens Do you think testing has a good future mate ??

    • @KennTollens
      @KennTollens Před 2 lety

      @@ciprianghenghea7779 Yeah, especially if you can do automate tools like selenium.

  • @Lupasiupa
    @Lupasiupa Před 4 lety

    Thanks for that vid, and thanks for SPEAKING CLEARLY. I am not native english speaker, so that's so helpful. Greetings.

  • @smileonmybirthday
    @smileonmybirthday Před 3 lety

    Amazing!! Thank you!!! YOU ARE THE BEST!!!

  • @IntricateMoon
    @IntricateMoon Před 2 lety

    Thank you for this insightful video. Cheers

  • @dooorrr
    @dooorrr Před 2 lety

    Hi,
    Please excuse the wall of text I hope it's not too much.
    Watched your video a couple of days ago and it actually answered a couple of concerns about test automation that I had but It created new ones. I had a few things in my head and one of them actually was a thought that test automation is a road to dev. I've got into IT industry very recently with an absolute bottom of the barrel service desk job but the company has a lot of other departments out there. You've actually mentioned that it makes a bit of sense if that's a Progression within company, but after your vid I understood that test automation is a lot of commitment. Not that I don't want to make the commitment but I'm afraid that I will try hard to get the test Automation job and I will have to work my ass off to prove that I am able to do the job without a degree and job experience and then I will keep thinking about what to do get into Dev instead of getting better at test automation. How you describe it makes me feel like it's a lot more to master and a lot more of skills to have than an actual Dev. I was skeptical first when I started thinking about Test Automation whether I could make it or not, but I had the thought that's "just a milestone on the way to dev" but after your vid Im concerned that it isn't and I can't wrap my head around that. Second thing I was wondering about is whether I should pursue a paid certification, and again you mention that it holds no real value.
    I would like everything to happen fast because I'm afraid of losing time (feeling like I got into service desk really late at 26, my prior experience is pretty much useless in IT) but at the same time I know that it will take time and I have deal with staying in SD for a while. I was hoping that within a year I could get enough knowledge to be able to contest a Junior position and I'm absolutely not sure where to start and whether it is reasonable to get into test automation and would the skills and knowledge not go to waste if I'd like to pursue a Dev job anyway. (perhaps I would feel good with tests if I got into it, but at this point I just know absolute basics from CZcams vids but yours hit the most so far)
    To sum up the wall of text:
    Is a year enough to get enough skill for a Junior if today I only have a bit of coding skills
    Are the skills useful if I wanted to pursue Dev anyway
    Where to really start, you give a lot of great tips and worthy reads but Im wondering if I should study the books or look for something like an udemy course that could give a basic overview.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 2 lety

      - A year can be enough to get enough experience to land a junior job.
      - Programmers automate their applications, automating is a useful skill to know, if you learn to test and automate and switch to coding it won't be wasted.
      - Learning styles and requirements differ. I learn by reading and doing, watching videos if I get stuck... but I also have a lot of experience now. There are a lot of free courses on FreeCodeCamp, there are many CZcams videos on specific skills and topics, there are many free books on most languages.
      - Whatever you do, build a portfolio using Github and blogging about what you learn, and the resources you use.
      - Also do lots of searches for "how i learned to code and got a job" there are many experience reports of learning paths that people took to get in to coding... there are fewer for testing and automating but they do exist.
      Learning to code well will help with automating to build reliable tests that only fail when an assertion fails, not when the system is slightly slow. Learning to build applications requires an extended set of development knowledge including architcture and design. There is a lot of overlap so nothing is ever wasted. If you are working in an automation role then extending your programming knowledge into creating applications may not directly help with your automating but will be necessary for a development role. Learning concepts like Domain Driven Design and how to architect code into effective classes and functions, learning about immutability etc. are part of the overlap between automating and application development.
      Read as much as you can, follow as many tutorials as you can... but the most important thing for moving into a programming role is to write programs. Automating is part of that so you can use any automating skills to help with that. The timescales depend on how much free time you have and what type of programming you are interested in, also which language you are learning.
      Since you are working, see what paths the people who came before you took, did they move into the programming side or the testing side? Speak to the people in your company to find out how they did it. If you can move within your existing company then that is often easier than starting from scratch somewhere else.
      Develop the skills that help you do your current role better. Depending on who you are supporting and how you are supporting different technical knowledge will help.
      In general, I think if you have aptitude for programming and like programming then learning to code applications to a level suitable for a junior dev is often easier than learning the skills for automating. You can learn testing skills on your own application as you build them.
      You'll have to try the different paths and see, remember there are tutorials on like that claim to teach the basics of coding in an hour or a weekend - try those and see how you get on.
      Whatever path you take, create an online portfolio. With programming that is slightly easier because you can release your applications and host the code on github. There are many ways to deploy code live for free.
      Pure HTML and JavaScript - gitpages
      Server side code - Heroku
      Python - streamlit and anvil works
      Glitch supports multiple languages with free app hosting.
      Experiment with different paths. A Software Developer has skills from: programming, testing, automating, managing, marketing, operations, support, writing, documenting, training.
      Each of those aspects also has specific Roles: Programmer, Tester, Test Automator, Manager, Marketer, Dev Ops, Help Desk, Dev Rel, Technical Author, Trainer.
      It is rare for someone to learn all the skills and gain experience in them all. It takes time.

  • @yottaXT
    @yottaXT Před 3 lety

    Thanks you very much, i love testing but it has not a good payment in my country, i'll take the books you mentioned from this video.

  • @George-et8sx
    @George-et8sx Před 2 lety

    Awesome content, good job, sir!

  • @leemengyt
    @leemengyt Před 4 lety

    Thank you for the invaluable information.

  • @md.imranmia7857
    @md.imranmia7857 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you very much

  • @doriantomas
    @doriantomas Před 3 lety

    no my friend, that is not me. me, i look for some easy job, boring job, not to be tired,vto be able to work from home as well. thanks for the informations man. you're cool.

  • @harrycarpinter
    @harrycarpinter Před 5 lety +5

    Hello there EvilTester and thank you for your video. Really interesting insights.
    Can I pick your brain about the QA mentor program? You know, the one founded by a Russian-American guy. Is is too good to be true?
    I sincerely appreciate your answer.
    Best,
    H.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety

      Hi, I really don't know anything about this program or any links to it. But feel free to contact me via eviltester.com/contact and you can tell me more about it... P.S. I do mentoring through Patreon.com/eviltester and might be convinced to bring back the higher tier category for direct mentoring.

  • @graceli3186
    @graceli3186 Před 5 lety

    Very inspiring video! Thanks for sharing!

  • @suryamanipandey8002
    @suryamanipandey8002 Před 3 lety

    beautifully summarized

  • @KenjiMiller
    @KenjiMiller Před 4 lety

    amazing overview, thanks

  • @stroeds
    @stroeds Před 4 lety +1

    Thank you!

  • @podunk87
    @podunk87 Před 4 lety +5

    Thanks for the video.
    I'm an American, and I live in Ukraine. I've been offered a position as a Junior/Trainee QA Engineer at a good company once I get some knowledge / go through some courses. I'm planning to move back to the US in a couple years, and I was wondering if you think that 1.5 - 2 years of real experience would be enough to get a job in the US without having a degree in Computer Science. I'd really appreciate your opinion and insight on that.
    Thanks, again.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +2

      I don't live/work in the US so I don't know what the job market is like there. And as ever, it depends on the company, the role, the hiring manager and the hiring process. Some companies are looking specifically for junior staff that they can help grow. I personally think that if you have real work experience then that will be very helpful. When job hunting, we may have to apply to many many companies at the same time. I'd recommend sending applications to companies prior to moving back. Best of luck.

    • @podunk87
      @podunk87 Před 4 lety

      @@EvilTester, thanks for taking your time and advice. Take care.))

  • @phichau90
    @phichau90 Před 5 lety +2

    Thank u dude . Im currently doing programming front an back end intense course. As im changing my career choice. I have littlr knowledge of it. But imma keep my head down an focus. My main focus is doing a full stack developer. Any tips and tricks u could advise me. Also just stumble to ur channel an thanks for the advice.

  • @melinoesedah9762
    @melinoesedah9762 Před 3 lety

    Thank for posting this video. Recruiters have contacted me for software tester and training positions, since I have tech and teaching skills. This does seem like a very interesting career to go towards.

  • @JoolieEm
    @JoolieEm Před 6 lety +11

    ... "and I hope that's you..." :D :D :D

  • @DevlogBill
    @DevlogBill Před rokem

    Excellent advice, I really enjoyed your video. I am not certain about becoming a tester because I have my heart set to become a front end developer. Been learning JavaScript for 10 months, did 3 months of Python and SQL using MySQL. Now I am learning React. I will try what you recommended.
    Question? Does learning testing make you a better programmer? I will look into becoming a tester to see if I like this. If I have further questions I hope I can post you a question,
    Thank you once again for your very well made video on this topic.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před rokem +2

      Yes, learning testing makes people better programmers. At least it did for me.

    • @StevenBoutcher
      @StevenBoutcher Před rokem

      I've been in QA for 3 years, 2 of them automating tests, and 3 years before that learning frontend. I can say that programming helped me be a better tester and testing helped me be a better programmer.

  • @janpala5922
    @janpala5922 Před 5 lety +1

    I have joined a new job in a software development company 2 weeks ago. Everything there is great and I am stoked to learn and study SW testing in-depth! Any book recommendations? I worry that the books mentioned in this video will not be translated to my language, however I am eager to learn and understand the books in english!
    Cheers!

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety +1

      Hi, I recommended books that I found useful. But when I started, I read everything I could get my hands on. Also I read every magazine available. The main point is just to consume as much information as you can - books have a single voice and a path. But there are also so many blogs available that you could probably spend years just working through blog posts. I'd recommend subscribing to this feed of blogs www.ministryoftesting.com/feeds/blogs and reading the blogs that resonate.

  • @sunnypandey1777
    @sunnypandey1777 Před 5 lety +1

    U r the best video ...so informative so positive.. github for tester never thought of that will try thanks thanks for all the info..will have to come back to make notes

  • @gavishn8557
    @gavishn8557 Před 4 lety

    Thank you very much for the info. I am 40 years old & holding a EEE degree & decided to start with software testing. I welcome suggestions on my decision. And once again I thank you for the valuable video.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +1

      Keep working towards your career. Keep applying for jobs. Ask for feedback. Never lose hope. Best of luck.

    • @gavishn8557
      @gavishn8557 Před 4 lety

      EvilTester - Software Testing thank you very much...

  • @desertstar7664
    @desertstar7664 Před 4 lety

    As a Qa, you are the scapegoat of the team. Please be aware that you will be bullied, isolated and condemned. You have to develop a thick skin to survive in this game. You cannot be snowflake; you cannot be a pushover; you have develop a set of teeth. You have to be a monster to hunt monsters.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +1

      "Soft skills" are essential and each individual tester will have to develop their own approach to dealing with negative behaviour. Some environments are toxic and it can be hard to be a Tester in those environments. For people coming in new... not all environments are as bad as this comment describes. But I agree, they do exist.

  • @dalstonisdead
    @dalstonisdead Před 4 lety

    Hi Alan, what a great video, realistic but supportive! Wondered what your thoughts on uTest are? (if you have any?)

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety

      Thanks. I think crowdsourced sites like uTest are a great way to practice - if you don't do it for the money. And for some countries the exchange rates make it possible to earn good money - hints: get in fast, look for low hanging fruit, run link checkers, run validation tools, run spelling check tools.

  • @bubblesnz1059
    @bubblesnz1059 Před rokem

    I think (and you can see it in the comments) that people think testing is easy and a path to money and it feels really demeaning

  • @user-lm3uc9eu8i
    @user-lm3uc9eu8i Před 2 lety +1

    I dont have degree on IT . I talked to a "personal teacher" and he told me that it is better to be QA/Tester because it is a bit easier for someone who has not degree on IT .
    He said that he suggest it to everyone who has not degree.
    He said that i will learn python, sql ect ect ect ....
    I said him that i am police officer at Europe Union country and i want to change my job , i want to go to U.K..
    I asked him if there is a way to connect my previous job and the new one in IT , in my CV.
    He said that everything in IT can not connect in POLICE.
    Do you agree with this ? That nothing can connect and that the only easy way for someone who has not degree in IT is QA/tester .
    Could someone be at first QA/Tester and if he want it , he will change it to be software developer later ?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 2 lety +2

      I think I would not give the same advice as your personal teacher. The path to pursue - tester or programmer - depends on what you enjoy doing rather than what is "easier to get a job doing".
      The hard part about getting a job is not usually the lack of degree, it is the lack of experience. It is actually easier to get programming experience than testing experience because you can code stuff on your own and there are so many tutorials, learning paths and bootcamps available. You can also create evidence of programming experience by releasing code to github and releasing applications online. Testing experience can be built by doing crowd sourced testing, and getting involved in open source projects. It might be possible to move into security testing and take part in bug bounties. It really depends on the companies you apply to and their hiring process.
      Hiring junior staff is very dependent on the company. You might get lucky quickly. You might not. But if you want to move into IT then keep learning and building your skills and experience and keep applying.
      Whichever path you choose. Create a blog and document your learning experience and how you are building and developing your skils. Add any projects you contribute to on your linkedin profile. Make it easy for people to see that you are working towards a set of skills.
      Do a web search to find all the people who 'landed a job in programming/testing/it without experience/degree" you'll find plenty of stories to take as inspiration and see that it is possible. You can also learn from the experience of the people who did it and emulate the steps they took
      What you will learn on the job in testing depends on the company, you might not learn Python, SQL, etc. etc. I have been doing testing for over 30 years and have only just (in the last month) started learning Python for my own personal coding projects. Many testers do not learn to code. Many do not need to use SQL because the applications they work with do not use SQL. Skills learned on the job vary.
      Many things in IT connect with the Police and you should harness those in interviews. Police have to take diligent and effective notes when interviewing people - testers ahve to take diligent and effeective notes when testing. Observation skills are very important for Police, as they are for testing. Interviewing skills and personal interaction skills are important for many roles in IT - analyst, manager, tester, programmer. Police are often very good leaders because leadership training is included in the role, this can easily lend itself to an IT leadership position like scrum master, manager and tester. There are probably many more skills that overlap with IT, but I haven't been in the Police so I don't know what they are.
      I've worked with Programmers and Testers who did not have an IT degree.
      It is possible to be a tester and move to software developer - this depends on the companies you work with or how much extra time you can spend building your programming skills.
      I started as a programmer and moved into testing. People move around into many different roles.
      Best of luck.

  • @SamiSabirIdrissi
    @SamiSabirIdrissi Před 6 lety

    Thank you so much!

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 6 lety

      You're welcome. Thanks for watching :)

  • @PeyoteCowboy
    @PeyoteCowboy Před 4 lety +2

    Thank you for the video. Can anyone please direct me where can I find open source software to practice my testing skills and build portfolio for my github?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +4

      I have some here www.eviltester.com/page/tools/ but I look on bitnami.com/ and other such sites for larger applications

    • @PeyoteCowboy
      @PeyoteCowboy Před 4 lety

      @@EvilTester thank you!

  • @LearnWithNeeraj777
    @LearnWithNeeraj777 Před 4 lety

    U are my hero now

  • @aqsamussarat8605
    @aqsamussarat8605 Před 4 lety

    What is the easiest IT field/job would you recommend for Beginners

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +1

      I don't think there is a generic 'easiest'. The easiest one for you will be the one that matches the things you are most interested in. Because then you will be more motivated to learn the topics and will spend more time practicing and improving your sills. The hardest roles to do, are the ones you are not interested in.

  • @burakcelebi3378
    @burakcelebi3378 Před 3 lety

    That is the most helpful CZcams video ever ı seen. Thanks for your words. I have one question. Just I m trying myself upgrade about QA testing. I'm learning thinks as much as possible. Sometimes its getting hard but ı liked to do this works. I was gonna ask this. Is there any possibility without experience, work and learn same time? I wanna get experience. I am really hungry for this. You are inside this topics. How many "%" I have you think?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 3 lety

      To work and learn at the same time you can:
      - get lucky,
      - donate time to an open source project - test & raise defects (blog about your testing, or post about it on linkedin to demonstrate experience)
      - take part in crowd sourced testing programmes - the don't pay much, but you will get experience
      Sadly "work" does not always equal "paid".
      To get paid and learn you usually have to be an 'apprentice' or 'trainee' and that often means working as a junior in a consultancy or outsource testing provider.

    • @burakcelebi3378
      @burakcelebi3378 Před 3 lety

      @@EvilTester Thanks, it will definitely will help on my way. If I will have questions I hope I can ask you :)

  • @alobaidi1111
    @alobaidi1111 Před rokem

    How does the career outlook look like? I have been hearing that Quality Assurance is on the decline, is that true?
    Also how does it compare to Data Analytics?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před rokem

      It is really hard to tell and depends on luck - who is currently recruiting, and the country that you are in. Probably best to look at the job ads for the country you are in. I don't look at the Data Analytics job market so I don't know how it compares.

  • @michaelbarley
    @michaelbarley Před 4 lety

    Does it matter what programming languages you know already? If so what languages are the most commonly needed

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety

      You can automate in pretty much any language, so a specific programming language is not important. Once you know one, you can learn another.
      www.eviltester.com/blog/javafortesters/2020-01-31-which-language-to-learn/

  • @B.sou94
    @B.sou94 Před rokem

    thank you Sir

  • @TheSkirmantas
    @TheSkirmantas Před 3 lety

    Very good video. He seem to know stuff. But has anyone notice his fingernails? I assume his playing guitar (fingerpicking) :?

  • @kpa-vo4pb
    @kpa-vo4pb Před 4 lety +1

    I have trying for years to get hired by different video game companies but I lack the quality and the ability to understand things.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety

      Keep working to improve what you are doing. Keep learning, so that next time you try to get hired you can demonstrate more experience and skill.

    • @kpa-vo4pb
      @kpa-vo4pb Před 4 lety

      @@EvilTester I have a learning disability ADHD it takes a long time for me understand the terminology of what the person is telling me. Trying to anything on video game lingo. Explain layman termsterms ok that what it means. How do I get my foot in the door. Books on how to get into the video game industry business. For beginners to want to start out .

    • @kpa-vo4pb
      @kpa-vo4pb Před 4 lety

      @@EvilTester I don't know anyone anyone in the video game industry business so that works well against me. I'm back at square one. I feel like no matter what I put on the resume and cover letter doesn't help me get my foot in the door so to speak. Make videos of what I'm playing.?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety

      Bulding some sort of portfolio is a good idea. For games testing, videos of 'testing' the game, rather than 'playing' the game might help. At the very least it would give you practice. And you can demonstrate that you know how to test games - and if you can demonstrate issues as you test then even better. It might also be worth reading this pamphlet (link below) by Drayton Bird on how to write a cover letter for a job application and see if there are any improvements you can make to your cover letters.
      www.draytonbird.net/files/getabetterjob.pdf
      Drayton Bird also has an accompanying video in this linkedin post www.linkedin.com/pulse/why-free-booklet-save-lot-misery-drayton-bird/
      And if you do create videos, or blog posts about your approach then re-apply for jobs, with that additional information in the cover letter.
      I don't actually know of any books on working in the games industry. But I subscribe to the blog posts at Gamasutra
      www.gamasutra.com/
      And some of those are written from a games testing perspective.
      www.gamasutra.com/blogs/

    • @kpa-vo4pb
      @kpa-vo4pb Před 4 lety

      @@EvilTester I get it but don't know anyone in the video game industry which I know would help don't know anyone.

  • @jeanniehuang9117
    @jeanniehuang9117 Před 4 lety

    Thank you! Where would you suggest looking for online software testing blogs and communities?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +2

      for blogs I would initially subscribe to the rss feed for this collection... www.ministryoftesting.com/feeds/blogs
      There is a list of slack channels here applitools.com/blog/2019-top-slack-channels-for-software-testers/

  • @harshalyeole7008
    @harshalyeole7008 Před 3 lety +1

    I have worked in Mechanical Industry as Design engineer with 7 years of experience. Now, I have lost my job due to Covid pandemic. I have seen their is very less salary growth in Mechanical Industry. Right now, I am looking to switch to IT career in Software testing. Is it worth decision? if yes, please suggest me how do i start to prepare.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 3 lety +1

      I can't say if it is worth it for you. I don't know what availability of work is in your area or if there are other roles that are more closely aligned with your experience. It sounds like you might be viewing Software Testing as something 'new' which you have to start learning from scratch. In which case... read as many websites, books and watch as much content as you can, at the same time start testing as much as you can. If when you 'start testing' you get stuck and don't know what to do, then that is the next thing you research to help you move forward. Sign up to as many of the crowdsourced testing sites as possible and take part in as many of the programmes as you can. This will give you experience of what other companies expect from outsourced testing, and again will help you focus your research because anything you don't understand or don't know how to do becomes the next thing to research. As you learn more about Software Testing, map as much of it as possible on to your experience as a Design Engineer to find the overlap between the disciplines. This will allow you to build on your existing experience and 'sell' these as experience points for any Software Testing role. Best of Luck.

  • @nataliiakuzovych2498
    @nataliiakuzovych2498 Před 4 lety +1

    Hi! I have no software background and I am looking at switching careers to Software Testing. I would prefer to go with a certificate but while looking at options hasn't run across smth good. There are so many boot camps for software developers. Could you recommend an educational platform? Thank you.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety +4

      I haven't used a lot of online platforms. It really depends on budget and who is paying. There are many independent online courses, I have some on my web site. There are many courses on Udemy, the quality can vary massively but most courses discount down to 9.99 eventually. LinkedIn Learning has a lot of courses (I have several courses on LinkedIn) - again quality varies but they are all professionally produced and condense the information to get it across quickly.

  • @successstory813
    @successstory813 Před 5 lety

    Hello sir yur video is very nice can u tell SEO or testing is best good

  • @igeitunuoluwa8573
    @igeitunuoluwa8573 Před 9 měsíci

    How can I get all these books in Software testing

  • @tylerrogan4306
    @tylerrogan4306 Před 2 lety

    I wonder what you would think about a qa company hiring a junior programmer in their job description. I've found one to apply at and it's very unclear if they want me to be a manual tester or jump straight into automating. They don't require knowledge of automating testing or any specific languages but supposedly want a programmer strong in pretty much any language.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 2 lety

      I started as a programmer for a Software Testing company. Because they wanted to build some test tools. It never hurts to apply, or ask, when you find out more information about the role you can decide if it is something you want to do.

  • @ongumila1750
    @ongumila1750 Před 5 lety +1

    I am currently working as manual tester automotive domain . How do I start with automation thing which language should I start to go into automation career . Please reply asap...

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety +1

      You might want to check out this podcast episode and the links at the bottom of the show notes www.eviltester.com/show/010-automate-or-die-special/

  • @antomg9926
    @antomg9926 Před 5 lety +2

    A few hours ago I was contacted in LinkedIn by a Recruiter offering me a job as a Jr. Software Tester. Currently , I 'm a jr fullstack developer. Do you think that I should take the job?

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 5 lety +4

      That would depend on you, your aims for the future, how you value your current company above LinkedIn, and all the other considerations around changing roles: location, salary, commute, prospects, training, bonuses, etc. Compare the job with your current objectively by writing out pros and cons, but ultimately it is going to be a subjective decision about how you feel about it. And if you are unsure, ask LinkedIn additional questions to help you get clear in your mind.

  • @ragu5542
    @ragu5542 Před 4 lety

    Are there any (aptitude) tests which indicate whether testing is even a suitable career for a person ? It is possible that one can learn a bit of testing, maybe even get "not so great" testing jobs for many years, and still not realize that they have little or no aptitude for testing.

    • @EvilTester
      @EvilTester  Před 4 lety

      I don't know of any. But I'm not sure I would trust an aptitude test. Personal motivation seems more important. That and taking action to practice and learn.

  • @prachianillotake6573
    @prachianillotake6573 Před rokem

    There is a misconception and misunderstanding created about Testing field that software testing is not a good field....but this is totally wrong....I am working in a product based company and i can say that freshers who joined the company as automation test engineer they are getting paid 8-10 lpa. And also u need to keep u[pdate in your field...If u are in testing then try learning different tools to automate ....