I’m being a little cagey at the moment, but I won’t have to
be for much longer .
I’ve been talking to a number of people over this past
weekend while I was in New Orleans, and some of the conversation turned to the
show “Pawn Stars”. I am not at all surprised that “Pawn Stars” is a popular
program among software testers. For
those of us who do a regular amount of testing, Pawn Stars is a great metaphor
for a lot of what we do.
For those not familiar with the show, there’s a pawnshop in
Las Vegas called the “Gold & Silver Pawn Shop”. It’s a family owned
business and three generations of the family work there. Richard Harrison (The
Old Man) is the owner of the shop. Rick Harrison, who is the elder Richard’s
son and runs the shop’s day to day operations, and Rick’s son Corey, who works
there and has hopes of running the store one day. The premise of the show is that people bring
items into the pawnshop, and the Harrison’s (and others in the store) try to
determine what they are looking at and what the potential value of the item is.
They then ask if the customer wants to pawn the item or wants to sell it. In
the event of a pawn, then a loan is made based on the value of the item. If
it’s a sale, then they negotiate for purchase. One thing is made abundantly
clear by all of the Harrisons. Their goal is to make money on every
transaction.
One of the things that makes the show interesting is the
fact that you may not have any idea what you are looking at. IS the item
legitimate? Maybe it’s a counterfeit. Or perhaps it’s a really valuable item in
some areas, but you just don’t know anything about it. Since Rick is the one
that does a lot of these interactions on the air, he admits when something is
in his scope of expertise and when something isn’t. When Rick doesn’t know how
to move on something, he almost always say “I’ve got a buddy that is an expert
in …[fillInTheBlank]”. This is the indication that Rick is calling in an expert
to check out the item, discuss what they see, what their understanding is, and
what the value of the item based on their education, experience and past
dealings with items like this informs.
We as testers go through this every day. Each of the Harrisons have different
experience levels. None of them knows everything. Sometimes Richard (the Old
Man) has gut level instincts based on years of experience, but having little to no knowledge of the
current market. Sometimes he’s right, but sometimes he’s wrong. Often Corey
sees opportunities that neither the Old Man or his dad understand, and he can
make a great deal, even when the item they are looking at may be beat up or
even missing pieces. In my world view, I know quite a bit about functional
testing and doing negative tests, but performance isn’t quite my bag (or at
least not to the level someone like Scott Barber would be). The point is, we all have our gut
feelings, our skills and our learning, but we don’t all have the 100% complete
package all the time. The good news is that I don’t have to if I have enough
buddies I can call on to get some expert opinions from time to time.
Coming up soon, there will be something where I can
guarantee I will need to call in on some of those “I’ve got a buddy who…”
situations. I’m hoping y’all are receptive and willing to help “close some
deals” :).
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