Tech tutorials The Case for Automated Testing in Agile Teams
By Insight Editor / 21 Jul 2016 , Updated on 16 May 2019 / Topics: Agile
By Insight Editor / 21 Jul 2016 , Updated on 16 May 2019 / Topics: Agile
One of the most common challenges Agile software teams experience is maintaining both quality and velocity throughout a project’s development lifecycle. Imagine this scenario:
The Code Monkeys team just began its sixth sprint. At the last retrospective, the team realized there wasn’t enough time to fully test their application and decided to set a “dev freeze” date three days before the end of their two-week iteration.
On the surface, this sounds like a solid plan (and a win for Agile). The Code Monkeys identified an issue with their development process, brainstormed a solution and self-organized to remediate the problem. What more could we want?
Let’s fast-forward a few weeks:
The Code Monkeys just began their 12th sprint. At the last retrospective, the team noticed production bugs seemed to be increasing. Some team members complained three days wasn’t enough time to completely test the application. The team decided to switch to three-week iterations and to dedicate the additional week to testing.
Once again, our team has self-organized a solution to a process issue, but there’s an concern. Imagine what the team might do on its 18th sprint, when even a full week isn’t enough time to test the growing product. Will they add another week? Maybe they’ll hire another developer. These approaches only delay the problem rather than fixing it.
The Code Monkeys have slipped into the classic Agile trap of “mini-Waterfall.” Development and testing activities are separated by a codified process — and, as a software project grows over time, so does the effort required to test it. The result is an unsustainable cycle that will eventually collapse under its own weight.
Do the Code Monkeys sound like an Agile team you’ve seen before? Or perhaps even been on yourself? The trap of mini-Waterfall is real. To understand how teams get there, let’s dissect the root problem using a little math.
A team’s sprint capacity is a measure of work the team is able to contribute to a given iteration. For the sake of illustration, let’s assume a given development team spends this capacity on two primary types of activities:
A team’s total capacity for a sprint can then be represented as the sum of capacity spent on these two activities:
Equation 1
Sprint CapacityTotal = Sprint CapacityDevelopment + Sprint CapacityTesting
Although Sprint capacity is a constant, a cross-functional team should be able to focus that capacity on either development or testing activities as needed.
A team’s velocity is a measure of actual value the team delivers for a given iteration. This can be represented as:
Equation 2
Velocity= Sprint CapacityDevelopment × Vc
In this equation, Vc is a coefficient that converts a team’s development capacity into a measure of delivered value (its numerical value isn’t really important, so don’t get hung up on it). The important thing this equation communicates is that a team’s velocity is directly proportional to development capacity.
If we do a little algebra, we can combine the two previous equations to get:
Equation 3
Velocity=(Sprint CapacityTotal - Sprint CapacityTesting )×Vc
This tells us what should be intuitively clear: As a team spends more of its capacity testing, less capacity is spent developing, and velocity decreases.
As the Code Monkeys discovered, the effort required to fully test a software project continuously increases over time as new features and functionality are added. This looks something like:
Equation 4
Full Regression Testing Effort
= (∑Previous Sprints' Testing Efforts) + Current Sprint Testing Effort
If we assume a team’s capacity is constant, the team is then left with two approaches to development. They can operate under a rule of either maintained quality or maintained velocity.
If a team wants to maintain its quality standards by completing a full set of regression tests before completing each sprint, Equation 3 tells us this will result in an ever-decreasing velocity. Eventually, this will completely paralyze the team as the effort required to complete a full regression will exceed the team’s total capacity.
A completely paralyzed team is not useful to anyone. Instead of maintaining quality and permitting paralysis to happen, teams will inevitably choose to maintain their velocity. With a constant velocity and sprint capacity, Equation 3 tells us testing capacity will remain constant as well — but it won’t be enough to test everything.
Over time, a constant testing capacity means most features will go untested from sprint to sprint, eventually leading to degraded quality in the form of increased bugs and defects.
Frankly, I don’t find either of those approaches acceptable. Agile teams shouldn’t have to sacrifice quality to maintain velocity and, fortunately, they don’t have to.
The key is test automation, which lets us change the rules by setting the effort needed to fully test previous sprints’ delivered value to virtually zero. This effectively changes Equation 4 to:
Equation 5
Full Regression Testing Effort= Current Sprint Testing Effort
With the cumulative element of the equation removed, the root cause of our original problem is also removed.
Of course, nothing is free, and test automation comes with a price. Namely, the effort needed to write automated tests can easily match (or even exceed) the effort of actual development. The result is a much lower (though sustainable) velocity that doesn’t sacrifice quality. I’ll take that any day.
Due to the high upfront cost of writing automated tests, it may take some time for a team to realize a return on their investment. Consider the following chart representing a team’s possible velocity over time:
At first glance, you may think Sprint 5 is where the team would break even, but that isn’t quite right. When considering total value delivered over time, it isn’t until Sprint 10 that this team would start realizing a long-term velocity benefit from having automated tests.
While this example is completely imaginary and theoretical, I think it communicates my point. In an industry already famous for being behind schedule and over budget, it can be difficult to justify the cost of automated tests to a stakeholder who really wants that one extra feature by next week.
“When you’re up to your neck in alligators, it’s easy to forget that the initial objective was to drain the swamp.” — Anonymous
For sustained, long-term Agile projects, the need for test automation is clear. Automated testing is the only way Agile teams can maintain quality standards over time while continuing to deliver new value. For an Agile team to succeed, this needs to be understood by both its members and stakeholders.
How companies can foster a culture of quality is a topic for another time, but for now, I can offer a few ideas to help you grow test automation practices on your team: