News
Survey: Formal QA Process Key to Improve Testing Results
- By Kathleen Ohlson
- April 18, 2005
In order to achieve better applications quality, companies will have to implement
a standard, centralized testing methodology and skilled staffers, according
to a recent survey commissioned by Compuware and conducted by Forrester Research.
The survey questioned 305 U.S. and European senior IT executives from large
companies about their approach to software quality assurance, as well as examined
how companies approach application quality and which practices are the most
effective at improving the delivery of high-quality applications.
According to the survey, “Today’s Quality Assurance Practices:
How Can We Continue to Improve,” 85 percent of IT executives indicated
application quality is either critical or very critical to their overall effectiveness
in demonstrating business value. The findings also showed that 63 percent started
improving application quality more than three years ago, and more than half
invested in quality testing tools for application development.
Although companies grasp the importance of application quality and are making
moves to achieve it, quality improvements still aren’t meeting expectations.
For example, only 29 percent of the 54 percent IT executives who have invested
in testing tools have seen significant improvement. When executives were asked
what the biggest barriers to improving application quality today were, they
said lacking standardized quality procedures was the top reason.
Despite the common pitfall of operating without a formal quality assurance
discipline, less than half of the IT executives said they rely on a formal plan
for improving application quality. The remaining IT executives said they were
taking steps to improve applications quality without a formal plan, monitoring
application quality or didn’t consider application quality a big concern.
Other findings of the Compuware survey included:
- Out of the 32 percent that saw a huge improvement in application quality,
64 percent consistently apply a formal quality assurance methodology.
- Forty-five percent of the 117 executives who consistently apply a formal
methodology saw huge improvements in application quality.
- Fifty-two percent of the 129 executives who consistently apply a formal
methodology said that they are very effective at eliminating defects before
deployment.
- Even though there are benefits to operating with a formal quality assurance
discipline, fewer than half of the IT executives said they rely on a formal
plan for improving quality.
The Compuware-Forrester survey also noted that development, quality assurance
and operations staffs play an important role in testing efforts by working together.
As part of the survey, 305 IT executives—180 from North America and 125
from Europe (France, Germany and the U.K.) responded. Fifteen percent represented
companies with annual revenues in excess of $10 billion; 55 percent represented
companies with annual revenues from $1 billion to $10 billion; and 30 percent
represented companies with annual revenues ranging from $500 million to $1 billion.
About the Author
Kathleen Ohlson is senior editor at Application Development Trends magazine.