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Liz is HR Technology and Services Research Director at NelsonHall, with global responsibility for key HR research projects including Cloud-Based HR Transformation, Cloud-Based Benefits Services, HCM Technology, EoR, Global Payroll and The Future of HR, as part of NelsonHall's wider HR Technology & Services practice.
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Please visit NelsonHall's HRO Insight blog for further updates from our analysts daily
published on Oct 13, 2017
NelsonHall's market analysis of software testing services, digital testing services, and the crowdtesting market consists of 69 pages. It provides an in-depth understanding of the dynamics at play in the software testing services and digital testing services market.
NelsonHall’s “Software Testing Services: The Impact of Digital and DevOps” report is a comprehensive market assessment report designed for:
The report analyzes the worldwide market for software testing services. It addresses the following questions:
The software testing services market is a maturing market, expected to grow by 6.5% over the 2016-2021 period, from $20.4bn to $27.9bn. Within software testing services, spending is shifting: the share of functional testing in 2016 was 62% of software testing spending, and will decrease to 52% by 2021.
Spending in specialized testing services (i.e. non-functional, digital, and test support services) will grow to 48% of total spending. Within specialized testing services, digital testing is the fastest growing (+15% annually during the 2016-2021 period). Non-functional (performance and security) will be up 11%, and test support services up 9% annually.
Demand for digital testing services is structured around three sub-segments: mobility testing, UX testing, and other digital testing. Growth is fastest in UX testing currently, thanks to accessibility and usability testing. In the next few years, NelsonHall is expecting sustained growth in usability testing.
From a contract structure perspective, the software testing services market has evolved significantly. Multi-year managed testing services now represent 47% of testing services spending. The market for these managed testing services contracts has slowed down, and price pressure has increased. The organization of the TCoEs (which are the delivery engine for managed testing services contracts) needs to be adapted to the digital world. TCoEs are now aiming to maintain their characteristics (offshore delivery, low costs, and delivery centralization) to adapt to agile development and testing projects. This adaptation to agile requires a shift in the skills of manual testers, the development of scriptless or testing object based frameworks, and the deployment of automation software tools around DevOps.
The ecosystems of the software tools used has evolved in the context of specialized testing services. Testing software products of HPE/Micro Focus and of IBM remain relevant in the non-digital world, with clients retaining their existing tool license and script investments. In the digital and agile/DevOps world, the ecosystem of software tools is oriented towards open source software (with Selenium as main software and Jenkins in CI/CD) and ten small ISVs (e.g. Tricentis). In addition, testing service vendors are increasingly building their own platforms, aligned around DevOps/continuous testing, the testing lifecycle, and increasing digital testing.
published 2017-11-01 | Project by Dominique Raviart