Quality Experience: A Grounded Theory of Successful Agile Projects Without Dedicated Testers
Title | Quality Experience: A Grounded Theory of Successful Agile Projects Without Dedicated Testers |
Publication Type | Conference Paper |
Year of Publication | 2016 |
Authors | Prechelt, Lutz, Schmeisky, Holger, Zieris, Franz |
Conference Name | Proceedings of the 38th International Conference on Software Engineering |
Date Published | May 2016 |
Publisher | ACM |
Conference Location | New York, NY, USA |
ISBN Number | 978-1-4503-3900-1 |
Keywords | Agile development, composability, grounded theory methodology, industrial case study, pubcrawl, Scalability, software assurance, software quality assurance, Testing |
Abstract | Context: While successful conventional software development regularly employs separate testing staff, there are successful agile teams with as well as without separate testers. Question: How does successful agile development work without separate testers? What are advantages and disadvantages? Method: A case study, based on Grounded Theory evaluation of interviews and direct observation of three agile teams; one having separate testers, two without. All teams perform long-term development of parts of e-business web portals. Results: Teams without testers use a quality experience work mode centered around a tight field-use feedback loop, driven by a feeling of responsibility, supported by test automation, resulting in frequent deployments. Conclusion: In the given domain, hand-overs to separate testers appear to hamper the feedback loop more than they contribute to quality, so working without testers is preferred. However, Quality Experience is achievable only with modular architectures and in suitable domains. |
URL | https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/2884781.2884789 |
DOI | 10.1145/2884781.2884789 |
Citation Key | prechelt_quality_2016 |