Monday, September 18, 2017

I've fallen and I can't get up


A common theme around testing is answering the question "How did you fall into testing". Honestly? I cringe a bit every time I hear this question. It might be that English is not my native language, but when I hear "fallen" I get the impression of someone lying hopeless on their back, waiting for someone to come to the rescue.
Well, at a certain point, every tester chooses to become one - It might be after working as a tester for some time, or after a really crappy day at a different type of work, or, as is my case - after being exposed to testing as part of my CS degree. Sure, most people don't grow up dreaming of being a software tester,  but neither they want to become a project manager, or a financial analyst - those jobs are not visible to children as is driving a truck, being an astronaut or creating a piece of software. At some point, an opportunity presents itself, and a tester chooses it. People rarely wake up and say "whad'ya know? I've been testing for a decade, I must be a tester".

The Application Security PodCast is dealing with the same problem - most security expert have quite a versatile background and have chosen security as a career in a later phase. Whenever they interview someone, they don't ask "how did you fall into security?", they ask "What is your superhero origin story?"

Isn't that a bit more fun to hear?