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A test strategy can be like a massive spiralled portal that can take you down the path through many different dimensions. There are many aspects and factors to consider plus cover which could be enough to strike fear at the heart of those who need to carry out the task.
Toyer Mamoojee
January 11, 2026
Having a strategy or plan can be the key to unlocking many successes, this is true to most contexts in life whether that be sport, business, education, and much more. The same is true for any company or organisation that delivers software/application solutions to their end users/customers. If you narrow that down even further from Engineering to Agile and then even to Testing or Quality Engineering, then strategy and planning is key at every level.
Let’s zoom into the software testing or quality engineering context. It can be extremely daunting when one is tasked to create a test strategy whether this is at a product, domain, project or company-wide level as there are many aspects and factors to consider plus cover which could be enough to strike fear at the heart of those who need to carry out the task. In this post, I will hopefully make this task much easier and set out a potential blueprint or areas to consider when drawing up a test strategy
Keeping in mind that there are many different contexts, settings, technologies, and structures that different people operate in, coming up with a generic test strategy might seem impossible. However, if one zoom’s out and tries extracting key factors to consider then some paths to a tailored test strategy can be clearly visible. Over the years my experience across many different industries, company sizes, methodologies, and technologies has allowed me to extract these factors to trace in order to gain maximum coverage on a test strategy.
As Quality engineers and testers, the expectation is to try and gain as much test coverage across every area to ultimately ensure maximum quality related to solutions delivered, so where do we begin?
When tackling Test strategy creation I usually try to visualize what I am trying to cover by using tools to brainstorm ideas. I try to start my visualization on a blank canvas and then expand to cover the following key areas:
Once I have these, I expand this further by incorporating the 5W1H concept to each area above. So typically I ask the question of What, Why, Who, When, Where, and How? related to each area above but this is totally optional. This helps me validate and support my approach. I do this to ensure that every possible gap is covered when addressing an ideal test strategy.
Sprint Level:
We can further expand to other aspects related to delivery such as releases and/or other enablers related to delivery test environments, test data etc
A test strategy can be like a massive spiralled portal that can take you down the path through many different dimensions, however if some of the aspects mentioned above are followed then the focus around making solid progress related to Test strategy coverage is much closer. The above approach can mostly be used to kick-off and create your content that will go into your final test strategy (in your chosen format), however you can be confident that by touching on each of the sections mentioned above plus validating each section with the 5W1H technique that you should be well on your way to create a solid test strategy.
Explore our Analytical Test Strategy Guide. Understand its importance, roles, tools, defects management, metrics, automation, and more. Master analytical testing confidently.
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