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“Can you develop the product in which you are finding bugs? “, “It’s OK that you are finding mistakes, but can you fix it yourself?” – There is list of such questions, which I have heard throughout my career, often derogatory, from professionals (at times friends) who happen to be developers. The very idea of finding a bug in some one else’s developed code in itself, puts a tester in a very awkward situation. But as they say, for every job there is a person, and for this job, that person happens to be a tester.

I do not completely blame developers for this. Testers often contribute themselves to this feeling against them. Many a times, they fail to understand that they are finding a bug in the product they are testing and not fault in the person who is developing it. Quite often, under the pressure of deadlines, the managers will contribute to this hard feeling against testers. They think that developers are people who are in favour of shipment of the product in time and working hard for that and testers are the people whose intention is not to get the product shipped by finding more and more faults, and they hardly work!

I am sure, that some time or the other, we all have faced such a situation. We often ask – “Why the hell all people seem to be against testers?”. We can not change the world. But when we start taking corrective actions on our part, we can make the situation a little better, and soon others might follow as well.

I think we should all start by respecting our profession. Testing is not a non-technical job. It requires a lot to learn and with various domains of testing into picture, there’s lot to explore. When someone asks you, “Can you develop the product in which you are finding bugs?”, be polite, look straight into his eyes and say, “It’s not my task to develop products, but I have seen better products. My task is to test it, to make sure that when it is shipped, it’s much better product than it is now.” What kills a tester is his inferiority complex about his job. He should get out of this feeling, and start doing what he is being paid for – finding bugs. No organization, despite its not-so-helpful developers or mangers, will like to have a no-bug-detecting-tester in it.


Abraham Lincoln has correctly stated, “He has a right to criticize, who has a heart to help.” By design, testers are critics. By virtue they should be helpers. We should find bugs in the products, and then do our best to help the developers to get them fixed. For developers, I found another beautiful quote – “To avoid criticism, do nothing, say nothing, and be nothing.”. So, if a tester has a found a bug, treat it as if a friend has pointed out something wrong, which you can correct, before the world knows it. I always wish an IT world where developers and testers share a healthy relationship, which they surely are entitled for.

I hope, we all get the point. It’s not that I am perfect in terms of practicing what I say. This is that tester inside me who dreams and writes, and there’s another silly tester inside me, who does mistakes and tries to learn from the former. So, I am very much a part of the race of being a good tester.

Rahul Verma

 

5 Responses to “Can you develop the product in which you are finding bugs?”

  1. Mallikarjun Reddy

    Good article.
    -Mallik
    Code Inspections

  2. Rahul Verma

    Hi Mallik,

    Thanks for appreciating my article.

    This is the first time that we are communicating with each other. I would like to have you as a sincere critic of my articles, so that we can develop this as even better relationship.

    Looking forward to your advice and views for further improvements.

    Regards,
    Rahul Verma.

  3. Sam

    Hi Rahul,

    Really its nice to read this…What you dropped is the thought of each and every tester !! S..U exactly mentioned how tester get arrows((cursing too :-)) from every corner….I personally had very bad experiences with my fellow programmers…

    S..Some dev guy annoy persistently…

    Some waste their energy and argue that “Testing” is not a work at all…but i feel “Pity” for their perception towards “Testing”…

    But still, situations are now changing and started know about the importance of “Testing”…..

    Anyways…Its really cool to read tis kind of articles…
    Thanks for your article…
    Keep up the good work…

    Cheers,
    Sam…

  4. Rahul Verma

    Hi Sam,

    In the recent times, I have come across a lot of developers who treat testing and testers in a good way and provide all the support needed. And we shared the observation that it helped both ends.

    So, times are changing…in a better way!

    Reagrds,
    Rahul

  5. srinivas kadiyala (skc)

    Nice article– good to learn some things.

Leave a Reply to srinivas kadiyala (skc)Cancel reply

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1 10 11 12
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The Big Fight – Schools of Testing – Views Against and Additional Perspective – I

May 22nd, 2007

The Big Fight – Schools of Testing – Views in Favour

May 21st, 2007

The Big Fight – Schools of Testing – Is Context-Driven school a Meta-school?

May 15th, 2007

The Big Fight – Schools of Testing – The Schools

May 10th, 2007

The Big Fight – Schools of Testing – The Origin

May 9th, 2007

The Big Fight – Schools of Testing – Introduction

May 7th, 2007

Dealing with dynamic boundaries in LoadRunner using Text Flags

May 3rd, 2007

Presentation at Yahoo! Bangalore

May 3rd, 2007

Selective Logging for effective debugging in LoadRunner

April 26th, 2007

Using Bug Count for Performance Evaluation of Testers

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