Automation Testing

Accomplish more with less investment
Make it work, make it right, make it fast
Discovering the defects
Test less, but test smarter

Perhaps the biggest change you can make in your business is how you manage the time by doing more with less. Quality Assurance is one such factor responsible for productivity. Automation testing sets up a continuous testing environment and is more utilized in test areas that are not often changed.

Quicker smoke tests of the software or application can suffice in a time crunch. Test automation done at regular intervals helps you catch bugs at each release. We build a comprehensive and practical test automation strategy that meets objectives of the project and enterprise goals.

UTH is an automated software testing company in the UK, providing top-notch QA testing services in a CI/CD pipeline. We help you automate all your manual testing methods to improve turnaround time, efficiency, quality and work ability of your applications.

UTH does Automation using some automation tools such as Jira, splunk etc. and using frameworks such as Selenium, Agile, Scrum etc. Our Test automation solution increases the depth and scope of tests, cuts down the time to market and aids you gain better insights.

Automation testing types:
  • Smoke test
  • Integration test
  • Regression test
  • Security test
  • Performance test
  • Acceptance test
Automation testing services programme delivers:
  • Reusable testing activities on high volume data
  • No room for human errors
  • Greater test coverage, accuracy and scope
  • Repeated test done simultaneously on different machines
  • Incredible capability
Benefits:
  • Enhanced delivery and customer experience
  • Fast, precise and allows quicker release
  • Reduced TCO of the software
  • Reduced Optimized testing loads
  • Higher test coverage
Solutions:
  • Increased frequency in release cycles
  • Traceable with real time analytics
  • Reduction in testing efforts
  • Digital transformation initiatives
  • Increased efficiency
Service