Products

Problems
we solve

We can help your business

Request a Free Demo / trial

Insights

Insights | From a different perspective
25 June, 2025

Exposed: Are You Being Conned By Test Tool Marketing?

Unethical Test Tool Marketing

We have all witnessed an alarming rise in deceptive marketing practices that undermine customer decision-making and market integrity, with tool vendors increasingly comparing their tools to industry leaders using deliberately misleading information.

I’ve published several insights highlighting specific instances of this. Why Top Software Lists Can’t Be Trusted, in particular, is worthy of a read, as it explains how and why ‘top tools’ lists are manipulated.

However, despite the proliferation of fake news, there are ways to find the truth. At the end of this insight, you can find three ways to perform accurate comparisons and protect yourself against unscrupulous marketing.

Lies, Damned Lies, and Marketing

As the saying goes, “A lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes.”

In our information-saturated world, we’re increasingly subjected to misinformation, and the software industry is not immune. Often, the volume of misinformation will significantly outweigh the volume of accurate information.

Common Unethical Marketing Tactics

As I’ve highlighted in insights covering BlazeMeter and Tricentis, test tool providers employ several deceptive tactics:

  • Inappropriate competitor selection: Comparing their tools against unsuitable products or market leaders in different categories
  • Cherry-picking functionality: Highlighting only features where their product excels while ignoring areas where competitors demonstrate superiority
  • Selective data points: Presenting carefully curated statistics while suppressing contradictory evidence
  • Ignoring obvious weaknesses: Minimising implementation complexity and mischaracterising limitations as strengths
  • False AI Claims: Nearly every vendor now claims that their product is AI-enabled, without providing substantial technological justification.

The Impact on Customers and Competition

As a result of shady marketing tactics, time-poor tool selectors often find themselves bombarded with false or misleading information, and consequently, they frequently end up making poor test tool choices.

Misleading comparisons fundamentally breach trust between vendors and customers. If their marketing is based on inaccurate information, can you trust what they say about their tools?

These practices also create unfair competitive advantages, where vendors using honest marketing find themselves at a disadvantage against competitors willing to manipulate information, despite often having superior and more cost-effective solutions.

How You Can Protect Yourself

1.     Live, Bespoke, and Unscripted Demos

Insist on live demos that cover the specific functionality you want to see. You will need to ensure you have established your requirements before the session, but it will be worth it and will allow you to ask relevant and informed clarifying questions during and after the demo.

This approach lets you assess the product capabilities you’re interested in, without the theatrical elements often found in traditional vendor demonstrations.

If possible, implement proof-of-concept evaluations that provide hands-on experience with actual software functionality, performance, and integration capabilities.

2.     Existing User References

Ask vendors to put you in touch with existing customers to gain insights that vendor-generated testimonials cannot match. Reference checks reveal the realities of implementation, the quality of ongoing support, and the actual performance of the product.

If vendors are unable to do this, try to reach out to your contacts, user groups, or ask within your extended network.

3.     Consistent Evaluation Metrics

Rather than relying on vendor-provided comparisons, establish your own measurement approaches aligned with specific business requirements.

Key evaluation areas can include:

  • Functionality coverage
  • Performance characteristics
  • Implementation complexity
  • Maintenance requirements
  • Total cost of ownership over 3-5 years

This final metric is critical, as many tools appear to be low-cost bargains, but rapidly become more expensive.

By applying the same metrics to all vendors, you can make truly objective comparisons rather than being swayed by manipulated presentations.

Conclusion

The marketing lies used by software test tool vendors represent a significant threat to market integrity and your welfare—it’s easy to believe the hype when it sounds so compelling.

However, you can protect yourself through rigorous evaluation processes.

The key is treating vendor-generated comparisons with healthy scepticism and supplementing them with independent verification.

Why not start your tool comparisons by looking at the latest OpenText solutions? After all, they are the company that most vendors choose for their comparisons. Arrange a demo today.

Stephen Davis
by Stephen Davis

Stephen Davis is the founder of Calleo Software, a OpenText (formerly Micro Focus) Gold Partner. His passion is to help test professionals improve the efficiency and effectiveness of software testing.

To view Stephen's LinkedIn profile and connect 

Stephen Davis LinkedIn profile

25th June 2025
Test Automation Hype

Are Test Automation Claims Just Marketing Hype?

Read the marketing collateral from test automation vendors and you’ll encounter bold promises around costs, coverage, and defect reduction. However, for many who have been through multiple automation initiatives, the reality frequently fails to live up to the pitch.

Adding More Testers Makes Quality Worse

When Adding More Testers Makes Quality Worse!

You’re deep into a project, go-live is rapidly approaching, but there is a mountain of testing to get through. Then, a key stakeholder chimes in, “Let’s just pull more people into testing.” It sounds logical: bigger effort, higher quality. But doubling down on resources can easily lead to chaos, confusion, and worse software quality.

Is Open Source Trustworthy

Do You Trust Open-Source Tools for Enterprise Testing?

Open-source testing tools like JMeter and Selenium have obvious appeal—no licensing fees, endless customisation, and a community to lean on. But, if you’re using open-source for mission-critical testing, you need to ask—is it really worth the risk?

Should testers be allowed to block releases?

Should Testers Be Allowed to Block Releases?

Your testers find a critical bug the night before a major release. Should they have the power to stop the launch?

Testers provide essential insights into software quality and risk. Their analysis is critical for decision-makers, so would it make sense to give them the power to veto releases?

Bug seeding

Bebugging: Would You Plant Defects to Test Testers?

Would you intentionally plant defects to test your test team? Bebugging, as it’s known, is a technique where software flaws are purposely introduced to gauge testing effectiveness. Are there times and places where bebugging is a valid way to help improve processes, tighten up testing, or root out a potential weak link?

Flaky Automated Tests

Are Flaky Automated Tests Better Than None at All?

Is flaky automation better than no automation at all? Does it help accelerate projects and reduce timelines, or does it end up causing more problems than it solves? And are the questions moot when, with modern AI-powered tools, there’s no excuse for flaky tests?

Software Testing Concepts

Software QA Mythbusting: 5 Misunderstood Testing Concepts

We’ve all been there—sitting in a meeting, nodding along, confident that everyone shares the same understanding, only to discover later that our ideas were built on shaky ground, based on false assumptions and an incomplete grasp of a complex situation. In the world of software development, nowhere is this more common, or more consequential, than with software testing.

LoadRunner v JMeter

LoadRunner: Cheaper & Easier Than JMeter?

Four years ago, I wrote about how LoadRunner Cloud was debunking the myth that open-source is cheaper. At the time, LoadRunner Cloud’s pay-as-you-go pricing, bundled infrastructure, and rapid setup were already making it a compelling alternative to JMeter and similar tools.

Model Based Testing

How to Bridge the Gap Between Business and Testing

MBT can transform software QA processes through enhanced collaboration between testers and subject matter experts (SMEs). It offers enhanced capabilities for businesses seeking efficient, comprehensive testing solutions in an increasingly complex software landscape.

Insights

Search

Related Articles

InsightsTrending

To get other software testing insights, like this, direct to you inbox join the Calleo mailing list.

You can, of course, unsubscribe 

at any time!

By signing up you consent to receiving regular emails from Calleo with updates, tips and ideas on software testing along with the occasional promotion for software testing products. You can, of course, unsubscribe at any time. Click here for the privacy policy.

Sign up to receive the latest, Software Testing Insights, news and to join the Calleo mailing list.

You can, of course, unsubscribe at any time!

By signing up you consent to receiving regular emails from Calleo with updates, tips and ideas on software testing along with the occasional promotion for software testing products. You can, of course, unsubscribe at any time. Click here for the privacy policy.