Fish baking story …

This was a story that came to my mail box.

A little girl was watching her mother prepare a fish for dinner. Her mother cut the head and tail off the fish and then placed it into a baking pan. The little girl asked her mother why she cut the Shead and tail off the fish. Her mother thought for a while and then said, “I’ve always done it that way – that’s how grandma did it.” The girl was not satisfied with the answer, and went to visit her grandma to find out why she cut the head and tail off the fish before baking it. Grandma thought for a while and replied, “I don’t know. My mother always did it that way.” So the little girl and the grandma went to visit great grandma to find ask if she knew the answer. Great grandma thought for a while and said, “Because my Grandma told once that the baking pan was too small to fit in the whole fish”.

In most cases we fail to challenge belief systems and assumptions.

This is true about many ritual centric processes that we are asked to do in testing today. If you dig deeper, you would be surprised like this little girl. There are no real reasons to do certain things. Typical answers might be “my boss wants it that way”, “this is how our clients want” or “this is how I have done it always” or “this is in that book” or “this is how the consultant who we hired told us” or “this is how it always appear to work”.

One trademark quality of a skilled tester is skepticism and ability to think beyond rituals – ask “why I am doing what I am doing”.

Are you asking this question frequently in your job as tester?

Shrini


Comments

7 responses to “Fish baking story …”

  1. What you said is totally agreeable Srini. I started asking questions like why we are doing things in certain way? And when I could not be convinced, I asked for "permission to disagree" so that I can work freely.

    Thanks for sharing this story.

  2. Yes, you are quite right, as job of the tester is always questioning the product in different dimensions.

    Nice Post

  3. Great story and the conclusion is very well said. I'm still a few years into testing and QA but have experienced every bit of what you said. Good product comes with testers thinking outside the box.

  4. Excellent point Shrini.
    Thanks for this story.

  5. Well said Shrini. I think most of us are used to the "traditional ways" so much that we often fail to analyze and question what we are doing? Or I should say what do we actually want to do..
    Nice post.. This will definitely help us to be more questionable in our approaches!

  6. Anonymous Avatar
    Anonymous

    Nice post kulkarni. Whether we are in right way or not can be revealed by this question "why I am doing what I am doing".

    Excellent way to raise the question.

  7. penname@manusree Avatar
    penname@manusree

    Hi Shrini,
    Very nice post and liked it.I have got the intention of this article But I am also curious to know what would you do/How would you think? when you just need food, just need food to survive in the market and your one and only one client is hesitating to provide the answers (both directly and indirectly) for our Q-patterns.
    Don't get me wrong. I am just asking to know your thoughts on this.

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