Let’s try to take a slightly different viewpoint on the whole situation. The things you’re seem to be unhappy about generally fall under the category of production technology, i.e. best-practises, procedures, tools and methods used to make and deliver product or service.
The production technology is as important as the product technology itself. Companies that do not use up to date or improve their production technology eventually go out of business. This is that the “dynamic company” part of most job adverts tries to refer to.
A good example is the way Ford has improved car production technology by introducing a conveyor. It was very controversial move at the time and many people, including many who worked for him, were strongly opposed to it. But eventually mass car producers that did not adopt the conveyor went out of business since they were unable to match quality, speed and cheapness of Ford production.
In good old days before the industrial revolution the production technology didn’t evolve that rapidly. It changed bit by bit over centuries, nowadays in engineering and especially in software engineering the production technology evolves noticeably faster. Probably not as fast as the product technology, but its fair to say that tools and methods constantly change and these changes summed up over five years present a significant evolutionary step. Companies that fail to keep up go out of business.
Hence, it’s part of the managerial responsibility to catalyse and facilitate this change, encourage people to constantly and actively advance the production technology, make it one of the priorities. I assume that you do not hold a senior enough position within the organisation to force the change (i.e. other developers do not report to you). But even if you were, making an already static team to start moving would be uneasy task.
Thus I suggest the following:
DO’s:
Move on to a company where management is doing its job. It can prove difficult to find such software company that will simultaneously be on the forefront of technology, be interested in you and match your personal circumstances; as a result some people would have to start their own.
If a technology can be applied on an individual level just do it. If you then told to do things in an inferior way — move on. Unfortunally, most contemporary production technologies either can only be utilised collectively or they are company and its product specific and need to be developed collectively by the whole of the production team.
In the case of collective technology try to built a strategic alliance with someone within or outside the team. See who can be helped greatly by the technology (fulfil an opportunity) or harmed (currently under threat) unless they use it. Obviously they need to be fully aware of the opportunity or the threat; it doesn’t matter if the opportunity of threat is the same for both of you.
Be realistic about the amount of change you can introduce at any given stage.
Find someone knowledgeable perhaps outside the organisation to discuss and plan the specific changes you hope to introduce (general advice like you get in the responses to this question might be fairly useless when it comes to planning concrete steps of, let’s say, introducing a formalised testing). An online forum could be helpful if you do not happen to have same minded friends living locally.
When planning a change try to brainstorm why it could fail: Ishikawa diagrams is one way to organise the brainstorming session, the other is to try design the thing to fail. Whilst you can Google the former, the latter needs an illustration. Let’s say you want to introduce issue tracking, then how would you prevent everyone from using it even if they wanted badly?
Don’t have the issue tracking software installed.
Don’t give anyone URL, make it impossible to find.
Don’t give anyone access to the system, don’t create the accounts.
Make it as user-unfriendly as possible, use obscure language and hard to understand process.
If someone still tries to use it make them populate hundreds of irrelevant fields, hide information that they want to find.
Make it time consuming to use.
Make management to condemn it.
Declare it a time waste that brings no real benefits.
Etc.
All you’ve left to do afterwards is just to address these points in your plan.
DON’T’s
Don’t fight the system. Remember if they see you as a threat to the current convenient status quo then they will easily form a strategic alliance against you.
Don’t talk to management to simply communicate how bad you think the things currently are. Listen to the management to understand what opportunities and threats they believe are out there and then suggest how improving the production technology could help address these.