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Codeless Automation Adoption for Manual Testers: A Pathway to Agile QA Transformation
Abstract
Software teams embracing codeless automation systems find new pathways for manual testers facing the Agile revolution. Quality assurance veterans, despite holding extensive product expertise, frequently hit roadblocks when confronting script-based tools like Selenium or Cypress. The complexity demands programming skills that many testers never developed during careers focused on user experiences and business logic validation. Meanwhile, sprint cycles keep shrinking, release frequencies accelerate, and manual-only approaches buckle under mounting pressure. Codeless platforms break this stalemate through visual interfaces anyone can navigate—drag-and-drop elements replace coding syntax, record-playback features capture interactions directly, and business-language commands substitute for programming constructs. When organizations implement these solutions thoughtfully, following structured transition phases, test teams maintain their invaluable domain wisdom while gaining automation's efficiency. The framework presented maps this journey, revealing how visual automation design naturally matches testers' mental models, reducing cognitive barriers and preserving institutional knowledge that took years to develop.
Article information
Journal
Journal of Computer Science and Technology Studies
Volume (Issue)
7 (9)
Pages
263-270
Published
Copyright
Open access

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.