Prashant Hegde, QA leader at Razorthink Technologies in India, is a passionate Agile tester, blogger, and international conference speaker. In this session, he demonstrates how mind maps can act as “lean test artifacts” to reduce waste, accelerate test design, and amplify creativity. Drawing on re...
Prashant Hegde, QA leader at Razorthink Technologies in India, is a passionate Agile tester, blogger, and international conference speaker. In this session, he demonstrates how mind maps can act as “lean test artifacts” to reduce waste, accelerate test design, and amplify creativity. Drawing on real-world techniques, he shows how mapping supports planning, execution, reporting, and collaboration in Agile environments where adaptability is crucial.
Key Themes & Topics (Timestamped)
[3:20] Career background – Introduces his QA leadership role, Agile experience, blogging, and speaking at testing conferences, establishing credibility in testing practice.
[5:10] Purpose of session – Explains challenges of traditional test documentation and how mind maps act as leaner, more useful alternatives.
[7:18] Problems with traditional documentation – Notes test artifacts are bulky, time-intensive, and quickly outdated in Agile contexts.
[9:57] Waste of over-documentation – Argues that documentation is not testing, and too much time spent reduces real testing capacity.
[11:06] Mind maps as lean artifacts – Describes how maps are lightweight, easy to update, and provide rapid status visibility for stakeholders.
[13:33] Lean test plan approaches – Demonstrates “in scope/out of scope” maps and the “5Ws technique” as simple one-page plans.
[17:32] Lean test cases – Introduces four mapping approaches (user features, testing types, mnemonics, freestyle) to improve coverage without heavy scripts.
[20:21] Visibility of coverage – Shows how mapped test cases give a bird’s-eye view of features tested, pass/fail status, and coverage gaps.
[23:22] Mnemonics for regression – Applies heuristics like RCRCRC (Recent, Core, Risk, Configuration, Repaired, Chronic) to guide regression testing with maps.
[29:28] Freestyle mapping – Shares example using bug screenshots inside a map to speed feedback during Agile development.
[30:21] Collaborative mapping (test storming) – Encourages brainstorming test ideas with teams using maps, improving diversity of input and coverage.
[34:46] Traceability maps – Shows how maps replace traceability matrices by linking user stories to test cases visually.
[35:39] Recording meetings – Demonstrates how maps capture agenda, attendees, notes, and action items live, serving as dynamic documents.
Featuring: XMind