Step 1 of 1010%Please answer the following survey to get a quick understanding of your QA process maturity.Please hit Next to view the first question.How well are your acceptance criteria documented?*Through a central accessible toolThrough email/chatVerbal conversationsNot at allWho is involved in reviewing the requirements before the team builds the feature? QA Analysts/Engineers Developers Project Manager OtherSelect all that apply.How difficult is it to apply new changes to your product?*Easy - Product is very extensibleModerate - There are some challenges, but we manageDifficult - It is a challengeImpossible - It’s not happeningCheck all of the processes that the engineer team implements: Unit testing Peer Review Follows a development methodology (ex. TDD) Utilizes CI/CD Utilizes a change management processSelect all that apply.What role in your organization has the primary responsibility of test case execution?*QA Analysts/EngineersDevelopersSDETProduct OwnersBusiness AnalystsOtherHow many feature stories go through a formal QA testing process?*All of themMost of themA fewNoneIn the last quarter, how many defects have made it to production?*None1-23 or moreHow often do outages in non-production environments occur?*Daily OccurrenceWeekly OccurrenceMonthly OccurrenceRarelyNeverCheck all of the team roles that are involved in regular domain knowledge documenting: Developers QA Analysts/Engineers Product Owners Business Analysts OtherSelect all that apply.Generally speaking, how regularly do teams meet to review and improve process?*Every iterationEvery monthNot on a regular basisRarelyNeverWhen improving process, does the team create and follow through on action items?*All the timeMostlyOccasionallyNot oftenNeverHow often do teams have to work overtime to meet a deadline?*Daily OccurrenceWeekly OccurrenceMonthly OccurrenceRarelyNeverYou've completed the E² Quick QA Assessment. Please provide the following information so we can send you the results.First Name*Last Name*Company Name*Email* Share this quiz: Share Tweet