Course Outline
Introduction
- The need for usability testing
Defining Your Test Strategy
- Resources, timing and focus
Organizing the Test Team
- Recruitment and management
Writing Your First Test Task
- Scenarios and presentation
Choosing the Environment
- Remote testing vs on-site testing
Moderating Your Usability Tests
- Moderated vs unmoderated
- "Thinking aloud" usability test
Analyzing the Results of Your Tests
- Statistics and surveys
- Measuring satisfaction
Revisiting Your Test Tasks
- Questioning initial assumptions
- Regrouping and revising
Reporting the Results of Your Tests
Standardizing Your Usability Tests
- International standards
- Using and adapting standardized forms and templates
Communicating and Collaborating on Usability Testing across Teams
Closing Remarks
Requirements
- An understanding of user requirements concepts
- A discerning eye for software goodness and software inadequacies, from an end-user perspective
- Programming and testing experience are NOT required
Testimonials (5)
The exercises we saw in the course were quite useful and applicable to my activities at work. Doubts were resolved, and the examples shared are quite helpful.
jocelin salas - BANXICO
Course - Test Automation with Selenium and Python
Machine Translated
The Dynamics.
Cesar Ortiz Lara - Bienes Programados SA de CV
Course - Selenium WebDriver in C#
Machine Translated
Amount of hands-on excersises.
Jakub Wasikowski - riskmethods sp. z o.o
Course - API Testing with Postman
The trainer explained every functionality thoroughly.
Argean Quilaquil - DXC
Course - TestComplete
Trainer is nice. His explanation is clear and interesting. He try to make the lessons interesting as possible. I enjoyed the lesson and gained a lot of knowledge. Thank you so much. The most useful technique I learned is the locating elements for different web component like textbox, radio buttons and buttons. Sometimes, the element ID is not capture correctly. We learned a different way of locating elements by using CSS selectors, XPath, Name and ID. I like the explanation. Thanks