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Testing Practitioner Handbook

You're reading from   Testing Practitioner Handbook Gain insights into the latest technology and business trends within testing domains.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788299541
Length 350 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Renu Rajani Renu Rajani
Author Profile Icon Renu Rajani
Renu Rajani
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Toc

Table of Contents (49) Chapters Close

Preface 1. State of Digital Transformation – What Has Changed in the Last Four Years (2013-16)? FREE CHAPTER 2. Future of Testing Engagement Models – Are Predictions of Increased QA Spends Justified? 3. The Benefits of Replacing Testing Subcontractors with Managed Testing Services 4. Digital Quality Assurance in a Factory Model 5. Crowdsourcing – Enabling Flexible, On-Demand Testing COEs 6. Testing Goes an Extra Mile over Weekends 7. Testing in Agile Development and the State of Agile Adoption 8. Agile and DevOps Adoption are Gaining Momentum 9. Does the Rise of DevOps Undermine Agile? 10. Role of Automation in DevOps Life Cycle 11. Assessing the State of Your DevOps Adoption with DevOps Benchmarking Approach 12. Accelerating DevOps – ChatOps is the New Cool 13. Behavior-Driven Development (BDD) Using Gherkin in Agile/DevOps Environment 14. Automating Configuration Management for DevOps Test Environments 15. Automated Test Data Management in the DevOps Environment 16. Testing in DevOps Life Cycle Using Microservices Architecture 17. Automated Test Environments for DevOps 18. Service Virtualization as an Enabler of DevOps 19. Best Practices in Identifying Regression Test Cases 20. Accessibility Test Automation in DevOps Environment 21. Performance Tuning of Java Applications 22. Testing Mobile Applications – Key Challenges and Considerations 23. Testing Analytics Applications – What Has Changed in SMAC World 24. Migrating Applications to Cloud Environments – Key Testing Considerations 25. How Should a Tester Adapt to Cloud – Call for Change of Mindset among Testers 26. On-Demand Performance Testing on Self-Service Environments 27. Quality Assurance for Digital Marketing Initiatives 28. Security Dashboard for the Board 29. Applying Robotic Automation to Mobile Applications Testing 30. Key Considerations in Testing Internet of Things (IoT) Applications 31. Algorithmic Business – In Need of Model-Based Testing 32. Making Testing Adaptive, Interactive, Iterative, and Contextual with Cognitive Intelligence 33. FinTech – A New Disruptor in Industry and Implications for Testing and QA 34. Blockchain Technology – Assuring Secure Business 35. Technologies for Digital Supply Chains and QA Considerations 36. Potential Innovations in eHealth-Care – Implications for Testing and QA 37. Trends in the Global Automotive Sector – Implications for Testing and QA 38. Digital Transformation in Consumer Products and Retail Sector – QA Considerations 39. Digital Transformation Trends in Energy and Utilities – QA Considerations 40. Smart Energy and Smart Grids – in Need of Effective Testing 41. Testing Airline Digital Applications – Case for Responsive Design 42. Orthogonal Array Testing (OAT) – an Application in Healthcare Industry 43. Future of Consulting in the Era of Digital Disruption 44. Future of Testing in the Digital World 45. Future of Testing – Career Opportunities 46. Robotics and Machine Learning Combined with Internet of Things – What Could This Mean for Indian Services Industries A. References Index

Use of direct subcontractors remains prevalent

Organizations have been locally hiring subcontractors. This is often done in emergency situations where there is no time to undertake an outsourcing exercise. Deploying subcontractors has its perils as it does not lend itself easily to:

  • Knowledge retention, including knowledge hand-over when closing
  • The ability to respond quickly to market dynamics
  • The costs involved
  • The poor economies of scale involved

Often subcontractors are independent individuals who come in for one specific project and move on to another. As such, they are not necessarily being provisioned or hired through outsourcing service providers who might be better suited to change the engagement from a staff provisioning to a managed service.

Regardless of subcontractor origins, there are shortcomings in the approach of using subcontractors. In this chapter, we will discuss the key challenges associated with facilitating subcontractors and demonstrate, through real examples, the benefits...

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