Webinar Replays
With ERPs now forcing all clients to move to the cloud (EBS to Fusion, ECC to Hana, etc.), there is a fundamental shift in the way testing is perceived. For example, previously ERPs only updated once a year, now you have to update 3, 4, 5 or 6 times a year minimum, and current tools aren’t equipped to handle the specifics of ERPs in the Cloud.
Advances in technology, such as automation, have streamlined organizations’ execution and development in order to further business results.
We’ll speak with automation experts on how adopting test automation has led to increased product quality, increased revenue, improved customer experience, and overall a better brand for organizations across the world.
Recent research shows that as organizations mature their DevOps practices, they become more likely to consider quality a shared responsibility across many teams. But distributing this responsibility means there are more people to align with, more potential communication breakdowns, and more opportunities for testing to become disconnected. Without a test management strategy in place that accounts for the way DevOps teams collaborate, your team will run into challenges with communication, visibility, and traceability – ultimately hampering your ability to deliver continuous value to your customers.
Test automation projects often fail to meet business objectives. They take too long to build coverage, can’t keep up with fast releases, or are too expensive to maintain. How can we design test automation to succeed in the long run? By starting with the end in mind. We need to plan for success and the impact of a growing team, more tests, and faster releases. This webinar will focus on some of the faulty planning assumptions that don’t account for inevitable growth. We will then talk about key features to help improve testing speed while keeping costs down. Finally, we will demonstrate some features to help agile teams manage their test automation projects efficiently at scale.
Mobile test automation is challenging. Besides the constant pressure to do more with less, you’re faced with complex and slow scripting (here’s looking at you, Appium), flakey test scripts, and always under pressure to meet tight deadlines.
Codeless test automation has rapidly become an integral enabler of Continuous Integration and Continuous Delivery (CI/CD), providing testing at speed without jeopardizing the quality of the release. While the market has no shortage of automation tooling, the pool of vendors capable of offering a holistic solution for functional and non-functional testing is markedly smaller. This lack of unified testing furthers technical and knowledge barriers between adjacent testing teams, leaving them in their respective silos and preventing collaboration and reusability. That inefficiency is counter to the cornerstone concepts of Agile and DevOps.
They say continuous testing is more than just writing automated tests. Tommy McClung knows a thing or two about that. When he joined Truecar as CTO, he had to fix their release cycle and unleash bottlenecks in dev, testing and production.
Test Automation is hard and the market is complex and fragmented! Many customers don’t have simple web and digital technologies and have heterogenous software systems that need to work together; and need to continuously test for patches, upgrades and new releases.







