10 Challenges in Mobile Application Testing with Solutions

Publish date: 2024-06-14

The world has witnessed a mobile phone user base boom in the last decade. With a steady increase in smartphone users, from 3.6 billion users in 2016 globally to 6.25 Billion users in 2021, it is further projected to reach 7.6 billion by 2027, as per a report by Statista.

Worldwide smartphone subscription 2016 to 2027

What started with a simple device through which one can send and receive SMS and calls has become an extension of ourselves. These smartphones help a person wake up in the morning, show current affairs and real-time weather, send and receive messages & emails, and help meet loved ones through video calls. Order groceries from an eCommerce website, get your food delivered, and so on.

Smartphones or mobile devices have become an intrinsic part of our lives and are here to stay. All the functions a smartphone can do can only be done through mobile applications or ‘Apps’. Because of the increasing number of mobile-OS-browser combinations, device fragmentation has become a real challenge for developers and testers to be on top of their game. Especially when the end-users are now hyper-aware of what they want, adopting solutions to resolve challenges in mobile testing is vital. 

10 Core Challenges in Mobile Application Testing

Table of Contents

1. Device Fragmentation

Device Fragmentation is the biggest challenge faced by the app development team. It refers to an application being run on various devices and OS combinations. 

This is where the QA teams have to Test Compatibility not only in different OS (Android, IOS, Symbian, Windows, etc.) but also in different versions of the same OS (like Android Nougat (7.0), Oreo (8.0), etc.). And it is often linked much more to Android devices as many third-party manufacturers provide their own “re-skinned” versions of the OS.

2. Different Screen Resolutions

With the number of mobile users increasing, the number of devices catering to different sections of user groups has multiplied. To provide a wider pool of options, newer versions of smartphones come with a varied number of screen sizes & resolutions. This creates one more challenge for the app development and testing team. Hence there is a need to test websites on different screen sizes.

3. Updated Device Models

Each year, smartphone users increase rapidly. Because of this, numerous mobile models are available today to cater to this growth. Developers are expected to create an app that can run smoothly without compatibility issues.

Too many models with different device configurations pile up the list of devices for which apps need to be tested. This ever-increasing task is not solved entirely by emulators and simulators only. Testing on real devices is a massive step up from emulators/simulators and is needed for mobile apps for any bug or issue rigorously.

4. Testing a Mobile App on Staging

In an app development cycle, staging is the last phase of the deployment process before releasing to Production. Though developers also test the app before passing it to the testing team, it still needs to be tested thoroughly before it is sent into production.

It is essential to create an environment where all the production environment configurations should be matched in staging.

5. Mobile Network Bandwidth Issues

While a tech team enjoys working with high-speed internet, it’s not the case for all end-user. Increasing numbers of smartphones indicate that it has penetrated suburban areas also, where the speed is moderate. Apps users would also want certain features while traveling to remote places when the networks are unstable. Testing mobile apps in offline mode where app users would want to access certain functionalities is of paramount importance. 

A simple solution to this problem is Network Throttling with BrowserStack, where internet speed is deliberately slowed to emulate low bandwidth conditions experienced by a large user segment. Monitoring and simulating network conditions on Android & iOS devices is necessary to rectify any abnormal app behavior.

Overcoming Network Challenges in Mobile Testing

BrowserStack allows testers to throttle network speed for mobile app testing on the latest and legacy models of real Android and iOS devices. The entire system is hosted on the cloud, so there is no need to connect many devices to testers’ workstations.

Simulate Network Speeds on iOS & Android

6. Mobile App Security

The app’s security is one of the most critical concerns for a developer or a QA. With the advancement of technology, it has become easier for security breaches to happen. But simultaneously, if the app is tested thoroughly, it can decrease the probability significantly.

Testing any app for Security needs a lot of information gathering and analysis. It is tricky compared to desktop or web apps since mobile applications have many permutations.

7. Real User Condition Testing

The main drawback of emulators and simulators for app testing is that they mimic the real device environment and do not provide testing under real user conditions. The advantages of emulators and simulators are limited in scope and should never be considered a substitute for a real device. Emulators and simulators can mimic the device but cannot create a real test environment

To test app performance rigorously and thoroughly, it should be done in real-world conditions, i.e., to know how the app behaves when the battery is low or when a notification pops.

With BrowserStack App Live, QA can:

Challenges in Mobile Testing (with Solutions)

8. Different Types of Applications

A mobile app has three types Native, Hybrid, and Progressive Web Apps (PWA). 

Types of Mobile Applications

You can install and test native or hybrid apps on our BrowserStack App Live and BrowserStack App Automate. App Live is for interactive testing, while App Automate runs your automated tests on native or hybrid apps using test automation frameworks like

9. Consistent User Experience

How the app’s functions and features work for an end-user is as essential as its user interface. For a consistent user experience, these things must go hand in hand. Sometimes, making the interface and functionality work seamlessly can be tricky. Applications are also at risk of working fine on one device, not another. This lack of consistency and bad user experience can be unsatisfactory for the user.

A few key parameters to evaluate and conduct a UX design test are page load speed, content quality, functionality, navigability, responsiveness, accessibility, and overall user-friendliness. 

10. Geolocation App Scenarios

With globalization in full swing, apps are also being developed for various regions and locations. Developing and testing the app according to the language, region, audience preferences, and area-based regulations is essential.

Localization testing intends to test globally operating software to provide linguistic and cultural relevance for different parts of the world. It is a technique to verify software behavior, accuracy, and suitability for specific locations and regions.

Benefits of Localization Testing:

Localization testing can be a strenuous process. Consolidating the data according to different regions and locations, tailoring the app according to various target audiences, getting accurate and appropriate translations, and, most importantly, testing the app on real browsers and devices. With 9000+ devices being used globally, every app has to be optimized accordingly. 

Your Singular Solution to Mobile App Testing Challenges

All the above challenges can be overcome if mobile testing is done in real devices, rather than emulators and simulators, as they can never mimic an actual device and how it will function in different test scenarios for thorough app testing. But choosing the right mobile app testing tools and working with real devices and OS combinations can be tiresome.

Start Testing on BrowserStack

ncG1vNJzZmivp6x7o77OsKqeqqOprqS3jZympmeXqralsY6mppuhnJp6tbHSraCnn12YtaK4y56loJ2j