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From Bug Hunter to Strategist: My Journey from Manual Tester to Test Manager

Written by Fathallah Embarek | Mar 31, 2026 1:06:22 PM

The Foundation: Why Manual Testers Make the Best Managers

Manual testing is sometimes dismissed as an "entry-level job." That is a fatal misconception. Those who have spent years putting applications through their paces develop skills you won’t learn in any management seminar:

• User Empathy: Manual testers know exactly where software "hurts."
• Risk Instinct: They can literally smell which components are hiding the bugs.
• Perseverance: Anyone who has executed 100 manual test cases knows the true meaning of discipline.

The Turning Point: A Shift in Perspective

The transition to management happens in the mind. You stop asking, "How do I find this bug?" and start asking, "How do I optimize the process to catch bugs as early as possible?"

Here are the three pillars that shaped my growth:

1. From Bug Hunting to Risk Assessment: As a manager, you realize you never have time for 100% coverage. I had to learn to make risk-based decisions. We invest our resources where the impact is highest.

2. Mastering the Tools: I didn’t need to become a full-stack dev, but I had to learn the language of automation. Deciding whether a regression belongs in a Groovy script (QF-Test) or requires manual exploration is key to a high ROI.

3. Stakeholder Management: You become the bridge between Devs, Product Owners, and Leadership. You provide the data for the ultimate question: "Is our release at risk?"

The Greatest Challenge: Letting Go

The hardest part? Transitioning from "doing" to "enabling."

• Trusting the team to shine while you provide the framework.
• Removing obstacles instead of checking every single test case.
• Measuring success not by bugs found, but by the team's efficiency and motivation.

Mentoring: Paying it Forward

Today, I support our testers in their development toward becoming ISTQB Test Managers. We focus on:

• Exam Prep: Mastering the ISTQB hurdles with confidence.
• Strategic Thinking: Moving from operational execution to decision-making.
• Practical Risk Management: Identifying and preventing process failures early.

Conclusion: A Journey with Purpose

Moving from manual testing to management isn’t a farewell to Quality Assurance, it’s an expansion of your horizon. You aren't just sitting in the boat anymore; you are the one navigating it.

To all the manual testers out there: Your ground-level knowledge is pure gold.

Use it! Your Fathallah Embarek