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"Just learn this and that, practice this, and you will become a middle/senior/lead test/automation engineer."
Unfortunately, it did not happen in university, so I needed to learn a lot by myself. So it did not occur at work.What I learned is that the only person responsible for your personal development - is you. It is not your lead, manager, CTO, or career advisor. It is YOU.
You need to think about what you want from your current and future career: whether it will be testing, development, automation, leading people, or starting your own company.
You need to think about which companies do you want to work with in the future.
You need to create a personal development plan for yourself. Analyze which skills do you need to have. Which frameworks or programming languages do you need to master.
Think about it as an RPG game. Create a mind map with skills that you have, and want to have. It can be a path for the upcoming 3-6 months or a couple of years. Set goals and start to learn new things. Learn from books, courses, videos, blogs. Learn for colleagues. You can discuss your plan with your manager. Ask him/her whether you can apply new skills in your current project. Ask about future opportunities within a company. If you see that a company can't (or don't want) to support you in your development - consider changing your job.Take responsibility for your own career "story," and you won't regret it.
But magic can happen.
If you invest in developing your technical skills, you, as a tester, can see that the overall picture is changing.It changes when you go to the developer with an initial investigation of the root cause. Or with possible solutions along with the trade-offs.
It changes when you describe a possible "what if" scenario during a discussion of future deployment strategies.
It changes when you highlight possible issues with scalability or reliability when you talk with architects.
And after all, it changes when you clearly show the risks to managers and stakeholders, supplying it with business metrics and data - not just words.
Developing technical skills is challenging. It requires time and dedication. But it pays off.Testers are engineers. They can perform academic researches. They can apply programming to create the tools which benefit the team. They can do a complex analysis of the system to find "weak points."That's what engineers can and should do.
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Previously published on .