π Software Inspection β The Forgotten QA Technique That Still Works Wonders
π Introduction
Before automation, Agile, and CI/CD took over, there was Software Inspection β a rigorous, manual process of reviewing software artifacts to catch defects before code even runs.
In Software Inspection, Tom Gilb and Dorothy Graham outline a structured method to detect bugs in requirements, design, and code with surprisingly high efficiency.
Itβs not flashy. But itβs effective β and still highly relevant for teams seeking predictable quality and early feedback.
π What Youβll Learn
- What a formal inspection is and how it differs from a casual code review
- Roles in an inspection team: moderator, author, reviewer, reader, scribe
- How to apply inspections to code, test plans, requirements, and user stories
- Common metrics to measure inspection efficiency
- Real-world examples of how inspections reduce post-release defects
β Who Should Read This
- QA engineers and test leads focused on preventive quality
- Developers looking to implement structured peer reviews
- Business analysts and product owners reviewing requirements quality
- Teams working in regulated industries (finance, medical, aerospace)
- Students prepping for ISTQB Advanced Test Manager or Process Improvement
π‘ My Top 3 Takeaways
- You can catch 60β90% of defects before running a single test β with just structured reading.
- Inspections arenβt about blame β theyβre about team learning and defect prevention.
- In Agile, lightweight adaptations of inspection can still provide huge value during refinement or design reviews.
π¦ Where to Buy
π Software Inspection on Amazon
Affiliate link β support this blog and help revive some lost QA arts πβ¨

