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Thursday, October 6, 2016 - 11:15am to 12:15pm

Three Keys to Mobile Testing for Real User Conditions

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Congratulations on making the jump to testing on real mobile devices. But are you also testing under the actual conditions experienced by your users? Do your tests include scenarios of varying location, interrupts (call, SMS), backgrounds, and varying networks in motion? Join Carlo Cadet as he describes modeling user condition testing scenarios with the same personas used by marketing teams. Carlo focuses on three key areas of user-condition testing: 1) defining personas, 2) implementing tests, and 3) analyzing results. He demonstrates how user-condition testing easily fits into existing Selenium tests, orchestrated with Jenkins, and executed in parallel on several devices. Carlo discusses how to use personas to bridge a conversation with business and marketing groups to define test scenarios with user conditions. He explores how to integrate user condition testing into an existing functional testing plan. Discover how persona test reports that include app vitals quickly loop that information back to developers. People don’t use apps in the lab. Learn to configure your approach to test in their environment.

Carlo_Cadet
Perfecto Mobile

Carlo Cadet leads Product Marketing at Perfecto, the leading cloud-based mobile application testing and monitoring company. He is responsible for go to market strategy, product positioning, messaging and manages the Customer Advisory Board. He is a frequent speaker at industry events such as StarEast, STP CON, Jenkins User Conferences as well hosting webinars with high performing organizations such as Paychex & RaboBank.  Previously, he held similar responsibilities driving identity & access management and virtualization initiatives at RSA Security. During that time he acquired his CISA and CISSP certifications.  He earned an MBA from the MIT Sloan School of Management and a BSc in Computer Science from Tufts University. He served his country as a Captain in the United States Air Force in the acquisition corps delivering major software programs.