If you’re the kind of tester who catches what others miss and can explain the “why” behind the bug, this role is built for you. You’ll own manual and automated testing across the full cycle to keep mission-critical applications stable, fast, and clean.
About Conduent
Conduent delivers mission-critical services and solutions for Fortune 100 companies and over 500 governments. Their teams build and support systems that impact millions of users, with quality and reliability at the center of the work.
Schedule
- Remote (100% telecommuting)
- Full-time (regular)
- Location: United States
What You’ll Do
- Develop, execute, and maintain manual and automated test cases and scripts
- Perform functional, integration, regression, and performance testing
- Identify defects, document issues, and analyze root causes
- Review test results and produce detailed test reports
- Participate in User Acceptance Testing (UAT) and API testing
- Use tools like Postman and SoapUI for API validation and troubleshooting
- Partner with business analysts, developers, and engineers to translate requirements into test plans and scenarios
- Help improve testing processes and overall quality standards
What You Need
- Bachelor’s degree in electronic engineering, Electronics & Communications, or a related field (or foreign equivalent)
- 5+ years of experience in a software testing analyst–related role
- Experience across the full software testing lifecycle (requirements, planning, case development, execution, closure)
- Hands-on experience with both manual and automated testing methodologies
- Strong defect documentation skills and comfort collaborating across teams
Benefits
- Estimated salary range: $85,470–$111,000 (varies by location, experience, performance)
- Health insurance coverage and voluntary dental/vision programs
- Life and disability insurance
- Retirement savings plan
- Paid holidays and PTO/vacation/sick time (per policy)
- Potential eligibility for bonus/incentive (based on business need)
If you want a remote QA role where your work actually protects the product and the people using it, jump on it.
Bring the rigor. Break it before the users do.
Happy Hunting,
~Two Chicks…