𝗧𝗵𝗲 𝗧𝗲𝘀𝘁𝗲𝗿 𝗪𝗶𝘁𝗵 𝟭𝟬 𝗖𝗲𝗿𝘁𝘀 𝗪𝗵𝗼 𝗖𝗼𝘂𝗹𝗱𝗻'𝘁 𝗙𝗶𝗻𝗱 𝗮 𝗕𝘂𝗴
You have every certification. ISTQB, ScrumMaster, Cloud, and Security. Your resume is a wall of acronyms.
But you cannot write a single test that finds a real bug.
I interviewed a candidate last quarter. They spoke only in theory. They mentioned the V-model and shift-left. When I asked them to show me one test they wrote that caught a bug, they stayed silent.
They had never written a test that broke something. They only wrote tests that passed.
Certifications test your memory. Bugs test your thinking.
Certifications provide vocabulary and structure. They help you pass recruiter screens. They do not teach you how to find defects.
Exam questions follow a syllabus. Real applications do not. A login form does not have a syllabus. It has weird edge cases, like server clocks being off by four minutes or specific timing issues.
The certified tester follows a checklist. They write tests from requirements and mark them as pass or fail.
The bug hunter treats testing like an investigation. They start with a hypothesis. They try to prove the application wrong.
Look at the difference in mindset.
A standard test checks the happy path:
- Go to products.
- Add to cart.
- Enter valid card details.
- Expect order confirmation.
This test proves the feature works when everything is perfect. It will never find a bug.
A bug hunter test is suspicious:
- Enter a card number with a typo.
- Expect an error message.
- Check that the order confirmation did not appear anyway.
The second test assumes the application will fail. It asks: "Where does this break?"
Many testers have a gap in experience, not a gap in their resume. You have seen tests fail because of bad data or down environments. You have not seen tests fail because you found a flaw in the logic.
Stop studying for new exams. Close the gap by writing tests designed to fail.
Try this exercise: Pick one feature. Spend one hour trying to break it.
For a search feature:
- Test gibberish queries.
- Test SQL injection characters.
- Test empty strings.
For a file upload:
- Test files with no extensions.
- Test massive file sizes.
- Test malicious file names.
Una vez trabajé en un sistema de pagos con un 95% de cobertura. Todas las pruebas pasaban. Entonces, el sistema perdió dinero en producción debido a un error de redondeo. Nuestras pruebas cubrían el escenario ideal, pero nadie pensó en probar la lógica matemática.
Ahora, comienzo cada prueba con una pregunta: "¿Qué tendría que ocurrir para que esta funcionalidad falle silenciosamente?".
No construyas un sitio de portafolio. No actualices tu LinkedIn.
Escribe una prueba diseñada para fallar. Si pasa, tienes una garantía de seguridad. Si falla, has encontrado un bug.
Escribe qué probaste, cómo lo probaste y qué encontraste. Esa es la verdadera prueba de que sabes pensar.
¿Cuál es la prueba que escribirás esta semana para demostrar que puedes encontrar bugs?
Comunidad de aprendizaje opcional: https://t.me/GyaanSetuAi