#QADiscussion #ManualQA #Automation #TechCareers
Hey fellow QA professionals! 🧐
Does QA get better? 🤔 Let’s chat about our experiences and see if there’s light at the end of the tunnel! Here are some thoughts to get the conversation going:
– Have you started with manual QA tasks and eventually transitioned to automation?
– Did you have to write test cases for every story like our fellow QA member?
– How did you handle micromanagement and endless meetings in your QA role?
I totally get how frustrating it can be to feel stuck in a job that’s not fulfilling your potential. Here are some possible solutions that might help:
– 🚀 Seek opportunities to learn automation tools and technologies in your spare time.
– 💡 Talk to your manager about your desire to grow and explore other areas within the QA field.
– 📚 Connect with other QA professionals for networking and mentorship opportunities.
Let’s support each other and share our experiences to help our fellow QA friend navigate their career path! 💪🌟
Sounds like the test monkey life to me.
QA can be better, but it probably won’t be in your position.
No, I used to do QA. Was one of the options you were given a dev role? Can you try to transfer to the dev team? Idk how I’d approach that politically though.
start automating your work. build your framework test framework
The reality is that it’s bleak even at experienced roles. A lot of QA people have been transitioning to dev/cloud ops.
Why can’t you build automation foe the QA tasks you have been given? Did they say no automation allowed
>does it get better
Only if you automate that shit bruh
Managers generally won’t care as long as testing is done and doesn’t hold up features or have too many defects.
It’s a huge opportunity for you to step up and improve your skills, job satisfaction, and WLB, while displaying your value to the company.
No one is going to hold your hand in QA.
it gets worse
QA is retardedly boring, I can hardly stand it writing automation cases, I’d str8 up rage quit if I had to do that shit manually