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A woman with a rucksack stands outside a grand-looking door. There is a yellow container with the word GRIT on it.
Brighton 2024. TestBash. Diana, me and a few more of the MoT crew arrive super early at one of the stage doors at the Brighton Dome. Ti...
The image is a promotional graphic for "MINISTRY OF TESTING TWITTER SPACES" with the tagline "JOIN THE CONVERSATION." It features three circular profile picture icons, one of which is a ninja, another a person with a beard and a hat, and the third a person with blue hair and sunglasses, followed by "+55", indicating more participants. Below these icons are two Twitter bird logos. The background is a purple gradient.
1. It started as an internal thought experiment: "I wonder how easy it would be to spin up a voice-only room where we could chat with eac...
Here are some key takeaways that stood out to me: 📌 Agentic AI strategies like R2GAS are reshaping software testing. These intelligent ag...
I went down memory lane. This is me and Danny Dainton at TestBash 2015. (I think) It's been 10 years, my friend!
API mocking made easy image
  • Sarah Deery's profile
A brand-new professional member course with José Carréra
A small group of people queue up for a coffees and teas at a bar area in a conference space. They are wearing matching pink Ministry of Testing I'm Here to Help T-shirts. Some have purple Ministry of Testing drawstring bags. The woman in the middle is facing away from the camera and has a large ladybug bag on her back. A duck, seagull and bug character have been added to the photo.
Can you find Bug, Cosmo the Space Duck and Space Seagull?
Lessons learned in test-driven development: Software tester edition image
Identify when TDD, traditional, or hybrid testing best fits your environment to deliver high-quality software
Does quality leadership matter anymore? MoT Weekly – Issue 518 image
  • Simon Tomes's profile
How do leaders set up a healthy environment and what does it mean for quality? Engage with quality engineering leaders and more to seek help, offer advice, and join events. Available in MoT Weekly.
Prompt injections: A new opportunity for testers image
Generative AI apps and integrations are growing fast and so are the injection attacks. This time it's through harmless-looking plain text, aka prompts.
A purple desk mat with 404 written in white. The zero is represents by a cartoon style astronaut.
Spot the tiny duck for a bonus point!!
Photo of a seagull, maybe it's Space Seagull.
Rosie Sherry
Rosie Sherry
I took my girl to the park on Friday evening after a long and busy week at MoT HQ. She was showing off her climbing skills, as she does, ...
How do you document feedback on your documentation? Ep 91 image
Oleksandr, Demi, Judy, Lukas, Gary, Milan & Susanne explore the art of documentation, feedback loops, test automation, and the value of community conversation.
Image: A koala in a tree looking shocked. The caption reads, "The moment when you realize raising your hand at TWIT makes you a podcast guest".

Want to be a guest on a podcast? Join This Week in Testing with the Ministry of Testing Community. Raise your hand. And, boom, you are a guest.

Judy Mosley
Judy Mosley
A screenshot from a virtual conference session featuring Rahul Parwal as the main speaker, actively gesturing while presenting. Behind him is a display shelf filled with certificates and awards. The right side of the screen shows participant video tiles, including Selmen Ben Said, Mariem Safi, Jinene Hedfi, and a tile indicating "21 others" attending. The setting appears to be a professional meetup, possibly part of the MoT Sousse community event.
Was watching Rahul introduce his presentation and I was like: Oh my God! I'm so happy and proud to have Rahul as the first Speaker ever i...
An AI generated image of a pencil that's half mechanical, half old-fashioned, with text underneath that lays out the steps in facilitating a test planning workshop:

Invite the team, and share feature documentation beforehand. 
Ask the product owner to give a brief overview of the feature. 
Collect and then prioritise high risk areas based on business impact and complexity, maybe by using a simple matrix. 
Discuss how the team can mitigate the highest and most impactful risks.
Determine how you can test for those. 
Document the outcomes, and agree on ownership of action items.
At the Leeds Testing Atelier I spoke about how we, as testers, can go from being gatekeepers to being quality coaches. One of the practic...
Over the last couple of days we've achieved another major milestone for Quality and the culture we are building at Capital One in the UK....
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