Teaser for [Test Bash Brighton 2020] : How to Coach Subject Matter Experts to Do Testing
In the recent years I have been working on projects with no dedicated testers but plenty of testing. The testing has primarily been performed by subject matter experts. This is where it gets interesting, as my role on these projects has been to lead the testing being performed by people that have limited experience in testing. They also have no desire to be testing specialists, after all they are already specialists in their own subjects, however, everyone agrees and insist that the testing needs doing. So how do we ensure that the testing being done is done well?
After having worked on several very different projects, yet still with subject matter experts doing the testing, I have been able to get both the public process clerks and the technology specialists to perform excellent testing. This talk is about the approaches that I have found work well:
- One of the approaches is for me to prepare the test cases and prepare them only as headlines. Sometimes preparing the tests as open questions helps too.
- Another approach is to lead them as if they are doing the project participation voluntarily. They probably are, but still it helps to respect where they are coming from.
The lessons though (good and bad) is relevant to many testers in other situations, especially being the only “tester” on the team. The story applies equally to developers and business end users doing most of the testing and you will have them contributing with great testing in no time!
What you will know after the talk:
- An understanding of how testing looks when done by subject matter experts
- How to lead a testing activity with an appreciative and motivating style
- Examples of how teams can do great testing without dedicated testers

[…] Test Bash Brighton 2020 : How to Coach Subject Matter Experts to Do Testing [https://jlottosen.wordpress.com/2019/10/15/testbashbrighton2020] […]
LikeLike
[…] is happening, it is not necessary by the tester. Don’t hawk the testing activity, let the experts play their part , have testers for the remaining exploration and have tools for the rest. The trend of less testers […]
LikeLike
[…] you can teach the people the details, sometimes you can have a guide (tool smith) to enable them – sometimes it’s best to […]
LikeLike
[…] Previously scheduled for Test Bash Brighton – full text here. […]
LikeLike
[…] was presenting “When Subject Matter Experts test” at Test Bash Manchester 2020. As I mentioned the FDF activity of making fireballs in my […]
LikeLike
[…] to ask the audience questions (Angie) and have a theme or a story/stories. I tried my best on “When Subject Matter Experts test” [Available online with subscription: MoT […]
LikeLike
[…] it to the supporters using ITSM or similar ticket tracking solutions – give it to all the subject matter experts (SME) involved in the testing. But! Don’t let them sink on it, train them, support them. Let […]
LikeLike
[…] Locally we also have five banks that share the same IT company. The IT organization is an independent company that provides the same domain technology to all the banks. Just with a bit of flavouring and branding, which is actually very common with industry specific solutions. The banks themselves have no testers, neither have the IT organization. But with every new release representatives from the banks are brought in to test and review the solution. The people participating are not testers, but they are doing testing. They go back to do their full-time job as process admins, customer advisors at the end of the testin…. […]
LikeLike
[…] you build trust and collaboration – nor when handling systems that are not stable – nor when the subject matter experts test. You cannot structure yourself out of a complex […]
LikeLike
[…] at that point in time – given the information available. do not neglect the wisdom of subject matter experts […]
LikeLike
[…] not so much these days. Testing is an act that any role can do in context. It’s about the testing – not so much the testers. And I have […]
LikeLike
[…] Fortunately, most applications have a system owner (or product owner, or manager in charge) and usually a team around maintaining the application. To some degree, we could frame these teams as stream-aligned teams. The experts in testing the applications are the superuser – hence they do the testing. […]
LikeLike