"Failing to trust 'the Business' does NOT add Business Value"I'd like to generalize that statement further to say "A lack of trust that individuals or groups involved in the project are primarily focused on helping the business succeed undermines business value".
Now, I can only imagine the reaction many testers are having while reading this. For instance "If I trust the developer when they say 'This is fine, you don't need to test it', we'll have major bugs make it to production." And anyone thinking that would be absolutely right -- because that is not the *kind* of trust I'm talking about.
When I say trust, I don't mean "Trust others to tell you how to do your job" or "Trust others to do what you believe is correct/best" or even "Trust others to be successful in accomplishing what they have been assigned to accomplish on time, on mission, on quality, and on budget"
When I say trust, I mean "Trust others to approach their role with integrity" and "Trust that others are doing the best they can to make the decisions or take the actions appropriate to their role and responsibilities based on the information they have" and "Trust that if you haven't been assigned to do or to be the decision maker about something, that task or decision is better handled by someone else -- whether or not *you* have the information necessary to make sense out of why.
