vote up 2 vote down star

We're in the process of hiring a new Q/A person for our team. The previous person wasn't as technical as we would have liked and lacked formal Q/A experience. This was probably due to the former posting going up and the requirements not matching what the job expectations were! As a result our teams development suffered for quite a while as we had to bring that person up to speed. After the fact, we lacked good test plans etc.

Going forward, I wanted to poll the group and see if anyone else who has hired a rockstar tester can give us some tips. Our goal is to hire a tester that knows Q/A processes, is flexible, and isn't afraid to ask questions. We need someone who wants to "rise to the top" and become a lead of the existing Q/A team. (yup, I know these are good points to convey on that posting!)

I do know requirements on a posting won't be the be-all-end-all here and the interviews are the next and more important step. I've had some fantastic answers from this group and I just can't not ask!

flag

I've never heard of a rockstar QA person before. That sounds kind of like "rockstar roadie", which doesn't make much sense. :) – MusiGenesis Nov 21 '08 at 14:05
I'm using rockstar to describe the ideal situation "an employee that is smart, gets things done, and that you hold onto for dear life because you know they're a star". I read a lot of Joels stuff. :) – Mat Nadrofsky Nov 21 '08 at 14:08

5 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check
  1. Knowledge of a dynamic scripting language (any) would be a plus.

  2. Requirements Engineering knowledge, specifically how to create and maintain a RVTM, and how to inspect and review requirements.

  3. Good problem solving skills.

  4. Detail oriented. All the best testers I know love to dig into the details of everything; code, cars, computers, A/V equipment.

  5. Any experience with the programming language you use would be a plus.

  6. Knowledge SDLC (any) and where QA fits into it.

  7. Politically savy. Must know when to "stand up" for quality at the expense of schedule, but in a way that doesn't alienate. Must know when to compromise for the overall good at the expense of quality.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Thick skinned. :)

link|flag
Very true! We coders aren't hard on our Q/A people are we? ;) – Mat Nadrofsky Nov 27 '08 at 14:25
vote up 1 vote down

Your job posting should include something along these lines:

The successful candidate can explain the difference between Quality Assurance and testing.

QA isn't just testing. It's reviewing requirements, providing input during the design phases, performing code reviews, and analyzing real-world performance after ship.

The point is, effective Quality Assurance requires more than just testing. An exceptional QA candidate should know this.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I'm going to use information gleaned off this question as well as this site in addition to the mention of metrics. Anyone else have any points to add?

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I am not sure about your "rockstar" attribute ;)

But make sure he/she knows what metrics are for when using them in a Q/A process.

link|flag
Did Jimmy Page use metrics? No! – MusiGenesis Nov 21 '08 at 14:06
Hey, I can try right? :) – Mat Nadrofsky Nov 21 '08 at 14:07
[Humor] May be you want someone with some metrics-knowledge around the release of Guitar Hero III ? (klosterstrading.com/Videogame.aspx) – VonC Nov 21 '08 at 14:14
Attitude and ability make you a rockstar. Not your title. Think about it this way, If you can have rockstar computer programmers then you can have rockstars in any profession. We're all of us nerds here, let's not forget. :) – Bill the Lizard Nov 21 '08 at 14:22
@Bill: Yes! :) And that's precisely what I meant by Rockstar. Though Rockband is a great game... it makes me feel like a rockstar at least! – Mat Nadrofsky Nov 21 '08 at 15:06

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.