Showing posts with label public speaking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public speaking. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 1, 2025

2024 - A Year In Review

At the end of each year, I reflect on the entire year and write down everything I did, whether it's wins, achievements, learnings, or challenges(both work and personal). I have been doing this since 2019, which means it's been almost five years now. 

My 2024 started with a lot of excitement, curiosity and joy as I stepped into a new role as a quality practice lead. I am really grateful for all the challenges that helped me grow and for all the opportunities that led to my achievements. This year has been particularly special because I've realized how fortunate I am to have an incredible network to learn and receive support from. I want to express my gratitude to my network who have been so supportive and helpful whenever I needed guidance throughout this year.

It was a fantastic start but also an incredibly busy year. I intentionally decided to do less outside of my work, focusing fully on my new role and its demands. This meant attending and speaking at fewer conferences and avoiding taking on any new commitments. 

Here are my accomplishments that I'm grateful for in 2024 :

  • In my yearly review for 2023, I mentioned that I wanted to focus on more writing and to set the goal to publish at least five blogs in 2024 hoping to reignite my passion for writing. I successfully managed to write five blogs and although it looks like a small number I'm happy that I set this realistic goal and achieved it. I wanted to get into consistent writing habit so I started ship30for30 challenge again. I had previously completed this challenge successfully for 30 days in 2023, but I struggled to maintain the pace and ended up stopping on day 5. I'm writing this as a reminder for my future self that it's okay to stop midway when things are not working that might have worked once.
  • I'm a subscriber and regular reader of the Quality Coach Book newsletter by Anne-Marie Charrett. I had the privilege of contributing an article on the topic of "Building Cross-Functional Expertise in a Team." where I talk about cross functional requirements that are commonly referred to as non-functional requirements, which are often overlooked or treated as an afterthought. I shared my experience of a workshop that promotes discussions among teams to achieve a shared understanding of cross-functional requirements and their importance. 
  • I had the pleasure of being invited by Liliya Frye to share my journey and experiences in quality engineering and public speaking. You can check out the full interview here: Parveen's Path to Quality Engineering and Public Speaking

  • I organised and hosted multiple events at my work as part of an internal quality community focused on various topics of quality engineering. It's not just about having a session on a topic but also to bring people together from different roles including testers, developers, product owners, agilists and platform. I believe this approach is a powerful way to advocate for and influence the importance of quality across the organisation.
  • This year I took up an exciting opportunity to support The Test Tribe community who were looking to host meetups in London. Together, we successfully hosted two events featuring sessions by Simon Prior, Lewis Prescott and Afsal Backer. It has been rewarding to help facilitate connections, networking, and learning within the testing community.
  • This year, I intentionally scaled back on speaking at many conferences but still had the opportunity to speak at a few.. I facilitated a workshop on Cross-Functional Requirements at TestBash Brighton—a special moment for me as it marked my return to TestBash after five years, and this year it was back in Brighton! I also had the privilege of speaking for the first time at the National Software Testing Conference in London, which I attended alongside my entire team from CFC. I delivered a talk at Women in Silicon Roundabout in London. My talk, titled "Elevate Your Career Through the Power of Networking and Personal Branding," where I shared my personal journey of public speaking and my mentors Angie Jones and Maaret Pyhäjärvi. I emphasized the compound effect of taking one small step at a time and how it can lead to remarkable progress. Delivering this session was a pleasure, and the positive feedback from attendees made it even more memorable.
  • Beyond conferences, I participated in several panels, including ones hosted by LambdaTest, Ministry of Testing, and QE Babble. I also delivered a talk on 'A Peek into observability from testers lens' for EasyJet and spoke at CFC’s Quality Engineering Meetup, hosted in collaboration with SauceLabs as part of the CTM London meetup series. I was also invited by Shruti Pandey to join the Testing Roundtable alongside Tooba Fatima. This  one is special to me as I got to talk about testing in my native language for the first time(Yayy!)
  • This year, I invested my time in reading a lot. Some of the newsletters I looked forward to regularly were by Pat Kua, Alan Page, Simon Sinek, Anne-Marie Charrett, and MoT. I also discovered MasterClass through Ajay Balamurugadas, which offers a variety of excellent courses. I have completed courses by Melody Hobson on "Strategic Decision Making" and Navy SEAL officer Jocko Willink on "Critical Leadership Training". Currently, I am taking Indra Nooyi's course on "Leading with Purpose". I definitely recommend signing up for Masterclass as there's so many various courses with great content with some real experiences shared by industry leaders. (Maybe I should start writing about what I learned from each of these courses)
  • I had the incredible opportunity to join a cohort in a leadership workshop facilitated by Lisi Hocke and Shiva Krishnan. I’ve always been deeply inspired by Lisi in so many ways, and so participating in this workshop felt like an excellent opportunity to learn from both of them. It gave me the chance to explore a topic I’m most curious and passionate about right now -leadership, from two amazing leaders. Their insights, experiences, and unique perspectives have already sparked so many thoughts and ideas for me. Maybe it’s time to start writing about what I’ve learned and how it’s shaping my leadership journey!
  • I won the "Fletch Cup" within the first six months of joining my current company. This monthly employee recognition award is presented to employees chosen by the CTO, Jon Fletch. Achieving this recognition was a significant accomplishment for me, especially since I had only been working as a Quality Practice Lead for six months at the company. Many of these wins have gone into my brag document, which I keep to myself to remind myself and my future self whenever imposter syndrome visits and sits on my shoulder trying to pull me down. Whenever I'm feeling doubt or low in confidence, I find it helpful to remind myself of my achievements. It's easy to forget our successes while we get caught up in our busy lives. Taking the time to pause, reflect, and acknowledge our wins no matter how big or small can be incredibly valuable. For me, my brag document is my go-to place to revisit those accomplishments and to motivate myself to do more.
  • I have been a mentor on ADPList and Mentoring Club for the past couple of years, and I have had the opportunity to mentor and help many people. And I'll continue to do this even more so if anyone is looking for any help or support please feel free to reach out to me on Linkedin and I'll be happy to help if I can, longterm mentorship would be even better. This year, I pursued help by finding a mentor, and I feel incredibly fortunate to have Ajay Balamurugadas as my mentor and coach. He has helped me learn and see things from a new perspective. As a thought leader in testing with many years of leadership experience, Ajay has shared valuable insights with me. (Maybe I can write and share some of the golden nuggets I've gained from him.). I received support and brainstorming help from community friends who were always there when needed and infact we might be planning something for 2025(sharing it already for accountability :D). I have been very fortunate to have had great supportive managers who helped me grow. This year, I am grateful for having mentors and a network who supported me throughout.

This is a brief overview of my year in 2024 a year filled with growth, challenges, expanding my comfort zone(another way of saying getting out of my comfort zone) and learning valuable lessons. Looking ahead to 2025, I want to make some changes, such as speaking at least at two international conferences on a new topic, writing and sharing more consistently, and to invest time in various other activities. This year, I realized that we usually believe we need to cut down on other commitments to focus more on work or new responsibilities. However, this approach can consume and drain all our energy and space, leaving little room for innovation, creativity, and even necessary healthy distractions. 

This year taught me a really important lesson, we often feel the need to scale back to commitments to focus on work or new responsibilities. 

I've learned or say discovered that when I engage in multiple activities it not only fuels my productivity but also broadens my horizons and keeps me motivated. Personally, I've experienced this when I was doing multiple things like going on testing tours, writing blogs, speaking at conferences, and attending online events to learn from others, exploring new courses on new topics, and engaging in multiple things has consistently helped me achieve more, grow more and stay motivated. I plan to get back to this in 2025. 

There are two things that have been on my list for the past two years, so let's see if I can make progress on them this year. I plan to launch a podcast focusing on quality engineering leadership. The podcast will explore leadership in quality engineering, discussing how thought leaders have built quality culture within their organizations and their journeys transitioning from individual contributors to leadership roles. Every time I had planned to progress on this idea, my first thought was(the most common one) that there are so many podcasts out there already so how would this be different and why people should invest their time as guests or listeners(I know I shouldn't listen to these negative inner voices). And the other one was to collaborate with community friends to deliver a joint talk or workshop. 

I'm excited to see what 2025 will be like. 

Sunday, December 1, 2024

Reflecting on November of Hosting, Speaking, and Connecting

I don’t generally write monthly reviews, but this time I wanted to share about four events from November so I  thought of capturing everything in one place. This post is more of a personal journal to look back on later.  Normally, I share updates about the events I attend or speak through LinkedIn, but I thought it would be a good to compile everything into a blog. 

1. Final Internal Quality Community Event

On November 13th, I hosted the final internal quality community event of the year at my company. Our guest speaker was Jakub Cagiel, who delivered an insightful talk on Quality at Atlassian. Jakub shared Atlassian's approach to quality and their journey to achieve it, focusing on processes that empower developers to own and build quality effectively. Highly recommend this talk, Jakub was an absolutely fantastic speaker. 

This was the sixth event I organized this year as part of our internal quality community at CFC. Here’s a recap of the other incredible sessions. I'm so grateful to all the speakers who agreed to speak.

I enjoyed hosting these events and am very grateful to my colleagues who attended that kept me motivated to continue organizing these sessions. I look forward to continuing these events next year as part of our internal quality community

2. Women in Silicon Roundabout

On November 28th, I attended and spoke at the Women in Silicon Roundabout London conference for the first time. My session, on “Elevate Your Career Through the Power of Networking and Personal Branding,” shared my journey into public speaking and how mentors like Angie Jones and Maaret Pyhäjärvi helped me in my speaking journey. I talked about how I initially had no awareness of testing communities and had never attended a conference. Now, I am involved in several communities and have the opportunity to speak at conferences. I shared about TestBash Brighton 2019 being my first conference and the first community I was introduced to.

In today’s world where layoffs, redundancies and uncertainty, personal branding and networking have more relevant than ever. Watch these short video clips by Kelsey Hightower on how everyone has a personal brand  and Angies Jones on networking

I shared actionable tips and stories about how these skills can open new doors, help you stand out, and elevate your career. 

The audience engagement was excellent, with a full house of 340 participants attending the session. I’m always happy to present this talk at meetups, conferences, or internal events. If you’d like me to present this session to your organization or event, feel free to reach out on LinkedIn.


3. Ministry of Testing Panel

It was an honour to join Jitesh Gosai and  Barry Ehigiator as a panellist on The Testing Planet’s discussion on why shifting left isn’t enough hosted by Gwen Diagram. We kicked started by answering the first question 

What are the limitations of shift-left testing?

For me, when we talk about shifting testing to the left, it often leads to the misinterpretation that it's solely about automating early or starting testing sooner. This perspective can miss the importance of a shift-right approach or a more holistic view. 

 It was an engaging conversation where we explored the challenges of shift-left testing, balancing speed with quality, and identifying gaps in current testing practices. Have a read at this post by Jitesh who has written a detailed summary on the testing planet event here

If you missed it, don’t worry, Testing Planet sessions are available on-demand. Thanks to Ministry of Testing for organising this.

4. The Test Tribe London Meetup

On November 29th, I hosted the second Test Tribe London Meetup. Even though we were a smaller group of 16 people, it was a wonderful evening of meaningful interactions and learning. The first one was hosted on 25th September where Simon Prior gave a talk on "Testing SaaS - Quality in a "Buy not Build" World". 

The Test Tribe community is organizing events in various cities, and when they reached me to help host a meetup in London, I agreed to it. I had never hosted any external events like this before, so I wanted to contribute to the community in a new way. It was an exciting opportunity to be involved being on the other side. We had two amazing speakers for the second meetup:

Lewis even gave away a signed copy of his book to a participant who asked a great question during the Q&A! Lots of discussions over pizza and networking. There will be more meetups by The Test Tribe London Meetup in 2025, so keep an eye out for that.

November was a month of events, from organizing internal events to speaking at conferences and hosting meetups, it was a month filled with opportunities to learn, share, grow, contribute and give back to the community. Apart from these events, I got an opportunity to contribute to Anne-Marie Charret's November Newsletter on Quality Coach Book on the topic of  "Building Cross-Functional expertise in a team"

If you attended any of these events or found the topics interesting, I’d love to hear your thoughts!