Sam Jarman 👨🏼‍💻
Posted on April 26, 2018
This is a article from my "Dev Chats" series where I speak to an awesome developer or techie every week or so. You can read more here. Let me know in the comments if you find these useful to you!
Â
Introduce yourself! Who are you? Where do you work?
I’m Katrina Clokie. I work as a Test Practice Manager at the Bank of New Zealand.
Â
Who or what got you into software testing?
I entered the IT industry from a Bachelor of Computing and Mathematical Science majoring in Software Engineer. When I graduated, being a developer was the only technical role that I knew of. Once I was part of an organisation I saw that there were many career paths available. I quickly moved from developer to solution delivery engineer to tester.
Why testing? After my first two roles, I reflected on what I enjoyed and looked for a specialist area within IT that had the right mix of interaction with people, problem solving, and technical work. My move into testing was a considered decision.
Â
How should developers and testers best work together?
As closely as possible. The more you collaborate, the more successful your developers and testers become. I encourage practices like peer review of test coverage, including testers on pull requests, cross-discipline pair programming or pair testing, etc.
Â
How has your book helped your career? What’s the game plan there?
This question assumes that I have a much savvier approach than reality!
My book, A Practical Guide to Testing in DevOps, was primarily written for my own team of testers at BNZ. I wanted a single, consolidated reference to support our journey. I used LeanPub as the platform to write and decided to share my work in case it was useful to others. I wasn’t expecting it to be so successful. I published on the 1st of August 2017 and by the 1st of December there hadn’t been a zero download day.
From a career perspective, writing a book has created more opportunities for conference talks, webinars, podcasts, and interviews. All of these activities continue to broaden my audience and professional network.
Â
How has doing conference talks helped your career? What drives you to give talks?
I was initially driven to speak at conferences so that I would be able to attend them. It’s expensive for New Zealand employers to fund trips to international conferences. Becoming a conference speaker has given me the opportunity to learn from and network with the international testing community.
Â
What has been your toughest lesson to learn in your tech career so far?
There have been a lot of tough lessons. I think the worst was my first experience with sustained and unwelcome attention from a male colleague. It had a lasting impact on my professional personality and made me aware of how I might be perceived as a woman in technology.
Â
What would be your number one piece of advice for a successful tech career?
It is never too late to learn something new.
I think this advice applies whether you want to get into a career in technology, or you want to switch disciplines within technology, or you just want to learn a new coding language. The pace of change in our industry can make it seem like opportunities are fleeting. I think that those who are most successful are those who are always willing to learn.
Â
Have you got any hobbies outside of your job? Do you think they help your tech career in any way?
I have a lot of hobbies. I often get asked how many hours I have in a day.
Related to technology, I co-founded WeTest, the New Zealand software testing community, and continue to co-organise the WeTest Wellington MeetUp and our annual conferences. I founded Testing Trapeze, a bi-monthly software testing magazine, and have been the Editor for the past four years. I also blog regularly as Katrina the Tester.
Outside of technology, I am a leader of the Kelburn Brownies as part of GirlGuiding NZ. I’m a member of Altrusa International of Wellington, a volunteer service organisation. In Altrusa I’m the current secretary of our Wellington club, I’m the national leadership chair, I run the international social media accounts as part of the international communications committee, and I’m a member of a task force team to re-develop our international website.
I think that all my hobbies contribute to my career, though that isn’t their primary intent. These activities help me develop and practice a variety of skills.
Â
What books/resources would you recommend?
For testing? If you’re curious about what is happening in the international testing community, the Testing Curator does a weekly round-up of software testing blogs that I find a useful summary. If you’re interested in a career in testing, I would recommend Heather Reid’s 30 Things Every New Software Tester Should Learn.
Â
Finally, make your shoutout! What would you like the readers to go have a look at?
I think I’ve shouted enough within my previous answers :)
Posted on April 26, 2018
Join Our Newsletter. No Spam, Only the good stuff.
Sign up to receive the latest update from our blog.