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Featured Sessions--Management

 
Every year software grows more complex and business-critical. Add to this an ever-shrinking schedule and limited resources, and you understand the challenges faced by today’s software project managers and developers. In an attempt to test software more thoroughly, quickly, and efficiently, organizations are turning to automated testing.These featured sessions explore the business aspect of test automation from a managerial perspective. Gain valuable insight into achieving buy-in from senior management, and discover how test automation fits in both the testing and development lifecycle. Determine what you need to do in preparation for test automation, and learn how to select the right tools and processes to ensure project success.
 
 Indicates a presentation focused on Web/eBusiness.
 
M1 Wednesday, August 29, 10:45 a.m -- 11:30 a.m.
Making the Right Choice--A “How To” Guide to Choosing Tools
Elizabeth Hendrickson, Quality Tree Software, Inc.

You’ve been tasked with finding a new software tool to help automate your organization’s testing. With so many tools on the market, though, where do you start? In this presentation, Elisabeth Hendrickson walks you through the selection process—from determining your organization’s needs to acquiring the tool and then rolling it out to the entire organization.You will learn when to build a tool from scratch rather than buy it, and what to ask the vendor before committing to purchase it. Discover how to assess test automation tools and how to roll out new tools throughout your organization.

 
M2 Wednesday, August 29, 11:45 a.m -- 12:30 p.m.
Preparing for Test Automation--Are You Ready?
Kerry Zallar, Bank of America

Test automation requires an investment in software testing tools, equipment, personnel, and time. There is also continuous maintenance required in keeping existing test scripts current as well as developing new ones.This presentation reviews some fundamental factors to consider before making these investments. Learn how to answer the question, “Are you ready to begin automating your testing processes?” And, for those of you who answer “yes,” learn an approach on implementing automated software testing in your organization based on real-world expectations.

 
M3  Wednesday, August 29, 2:00 p.m -- 2:45 p.m.
Achieving eBusiness Quality by Design
Sam Guckenheimer, Rational Software Corporation

Testing can identify software defects, but it cannot prevent them.This presentation examines the opportunity for testers to engage in achieving eBusiness quality from the beginning of the development lifecycle. Architectural process and application of patterns can have a significant impact on eBusiness quality. Yet testing technology and testers’ efforts have largely focused in the opposite direction—on deriving tests from the “as-built” system. Learn how to architect testable Web applications and develop test designs and test in parallel with the design and development of your Web-based application.

 
M4 Thursday, August 30, 10:45 a.m -- 11:30 a.m.
Managing Test Automation
Mark Fewster, Grove Consultants

  • Know where you are going.
  • Organisational structures
  • What to measure
  • What to automate
There are many new issues facing the test manager when automation is introduced into testing. This presentation explorers some of these issues looking at where there could be problems and ways in which they can be avoided.

 
M5  Thursday, August 30, 11:45 a.m -- 12:30 a.m.
eBusiness Survival: The Essentials for Automated Web Application Testing
Dave Kapelanski, Compuware Corporation

Trial and error is no way to survive the aggressive world of eBusiness. A complete Web testing solution is essential. It must cover all phases of the application life cycle, automate your test practices for the different phases and platforms, and accelerate your process with team communication, measurement, and analysis. In this presentation, Dave Kapelanski teaches you how to survive and thrive in the eBusiness world with tools, services, and practices. Learn how to identify and track your systems and testing requirements, determine which parts of your process are ripe for automation, identify when remote testing is a viable and necessary solution, and achieve repeatable, predictable results to ensure continued success.

 
M6 Thursday, August 30, 2:00 p.m -- 2:45 p.m.
Bang for the Buck
Elisabeth Hendrickson, Quality Tree Software Inc.

Test automation can be expensive and time consuming. It often takes longer than anyone expects for a test automation effort to pay off in terms of defects found, hours saved, and increased test coverage. In this presentation, Elisabeth Hendrickson looks at techniques for maximizing the return on your test automation investment using real-world examples from her experience as a test automator and test manager. Learn techniques for considering return-on-investment during test automation design. Find the fastest route to big automation wins for your test environment, and discover when “quick and dirty” really is the right way to go.

 
M7  Thursday, August 30, 3:30 p.m -- 4:15 p.m.
Achieving eBusiness Reliability in Internet Time
Rohit Gupta, Segue Software

Time-to-market is one of the realities of today’s development world, as is the exposure and importance of your eBusiness. Given the pressures of time and resources, how can you achieve the level of reliability you want with today’s pressures? In this presentation, Rohit Gupta discusses the complexities of multi-tiered applications and system components—and the resulting challenges for eBusiness, including the reliability risks of scalability, uptime, verification, and monitoring. Learn how to assess your reliability goals and priorities, and discover ways to prepare for a high state of reliability in your organization.

 
M8 Thursday, August 30, 4:30 p.m -- 5:15 p.m.
Requirements-Driven Automated Testing
Jeff Tatelman, Spherion Technology Architects

Studies have shown that over 50 percent of software defects are attributed to poorly defined requirements. From a process improvement perspective, it is imperative that project managers establish a more effective and efficient way of defining and tracking business requirements. Jeff Tatelman describes a “how to” approach for developing a practical automated regression testing process using a traceability matrix and business event scenarios. Learn how requirements-based testing—coupled with a data-driven approach to test automation—can solve problems that plague most software development projects.

 
 
 


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