Book Image

Implementing Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Finance and Operations

By : Rahul Mohta, Yogesh Kasat, JJ Yadav
Book Image

Implementing Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Finance and Operations

By: Rahul Mohta, Yogesh Kasat, JJ Yadav

Overview of this book

Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Finance and Operations, Enterprise edition, is a modern, cloud-first, mobile-first, ERP solution suitable for medium and large enterprise customers. This book will guide you through the entire life cycle of a implementation, helping you avoid common pitfalls while increasing your efficiency and effectiveness at every stage of the project. Starting with the foundations, the book introduces the Microsoft Dynamics 365 offerings, plans, and products. You will be taken through the various methodologies, architectures, and deployments so you can select, implement, and maintain Microsoft Dynamics 365 for Finance and Operations, Enterprise edition. You will delve in-depth into the various phases of implementation: project management, analysis, configuration, data migration, design, development, using Power BI, machine learning, Cortana analytics for intelligence, testing, training, and finally deployment, support cycles, and upgrading. This book focuses on providing you with information about the product and the various concepts and tools, along with real-life examples from the field and guidance that will empower you to execute and implement Dynamics 365 for Finance and Operations, Enterprise edition.
Table of Contents (23 chapters)
Foreword
Title Page
Credits
Disclaimer
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface

Types of testing


ERP implementation projects require different types of during the testing phase of the project. Each type represents a different objective, scope, and depth of testing.

The following diagram highlights the different types of testing in a typical implementation project:

As shown in the diagram, we can categorize testing into four main categories: feature testing, system integration testing, user acceptance testing, and end-to-end or cut over testing. The following subheadings describe these testing types in detail.

Feature testing

Feature testing, also known as function testing, is standalone of individual performed by the QA resources or business analysts. Primarily, there are two sets of features to test here: custom features being developed by the project development team to fill the gaps, and standard or ISV solution features being configured by the business analyst.

Testing of custom developed features

Testing of custom features by the project team unit testing, which...