Myth #1 – Testing is the easiest path to enter the IT world
This slogan often appears in articles and courses, and it is very misleading. Testing is often the tedious checking of an application or its functionality many times. It also means knowing a lot of usa whatsapp number technical issues, and testing techniques, alongside handling many devices and tools. Quality assurance is also a very big responsibility. The final version of the application always passes through your hands and your task is to catch as many anomalies as possible. Nevertheless, you must be aware of the fact that your tests will not provide the application with a hundred percent protection against bugs.
When I was recruiting, I often came across people who had completed courses to become software testers for a lot of money. They have two certificates, all possible tools listed on their CV, basic knowledge of two programming languages and test automation knowledge. On paper everything looks beautiful; a certified tester with ISTQB, armed with a lot of knowledge about tools and testing itself. I take such a person blindly for an interview for a junior position – this was exactly my attitude at the beginning of my adventure with recruitment.\
Now it looks completely different, as we often take people with this profile for an interview just to give them feedback on what they still need to work on, and if they feel up to it in some time, they can send us their CV again and we will be happy to talk to them. Of course, there are candidates who can surprise us with their knowledge and who are really strong, but it is a small percentage of them and, if we agree on other issues, we just hire them.
What do I think about courses?
Firstly, they are expensive, providing knowledge which can be found for free on the Internet, and the money spent could be used in a better way.
You will become a tester after the course
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