Bug reporting is a vital a part of any mobile app development process and yet it is still a confusing process that many developers spend a lot of time, money and energy trying to perfect and yet can easily be managed by following some mobile app bug reporting best practices.

We’ve gathered below some mobile app bug reporting best practices based on our experiences as well as different studies that will help you spend less time debugging your mobile app and more time developing it.

Bug Reporting Best Practices

Ideal Bug Report

Testers should always aim to submit the most ideal bug report with all the information that will allow the developer to be able to reproduce the bug and then eventually fix it, which is the ultimate objective of the bug reporting process. Developers need to always communicate with their testers and inform them about what they expect exactly from the testers end and if they have a specific format in mind for the bug report that the testers should abide by.

Developers also need to inform their testers about any bug reporting tool or bug reporting SDK integrated within the mobile app and have them properly on-boarded on how to use it so as to make everyone’s lives so much easier. Head to How to Write a Bug Report for more details.

To The Point

Your bug report needs to be as concise and precise as possible. The developer needs to be able to understand what the bug is just by reading the bug title then by opening the bug report, they will need three main things to investigate the bug; the bug reproduction steps, the expected result and the actual result. Any additional information including attachments, screenshots, video recordings, log files or anything that would help the developer get to the root of the bug faster is great but these three things are the core parts of any bug report and that should be focused on.

Make sure to check out our post on [The Ideal Mobile App Bug Report Template] for more information.

In-Depth Investigation

As a tester, it could be exciting to find a bug and you might feel the need to report it immediately and you should but before you do it’s better if you take a moment to further investigate that bug to be able to provide better context to the developer in your bug report. You should try and reproduce the bug yourself a few times before listing down the repro steps to see if the bug happens every single time or if there’s another factor that causes the bug to happen as well as if the bug can be reproduced with fewer steps or with a different user flow.

Another thing you can do but only if you’re part of the mobile app development team and you have access to the issue tracking system being used is to check if the bug has already been reported before. This will save the developer a ton of headache of having to sift through many duplicate reports of the same issue.

Communication is Key

This might seem like the most obvious thing but it takes two to test a mobile app. If you’re unsure about a problem you’re facing or a bug, you can approach the developer and discuss it with them. The other way around is also true as the developer might need more clarification regarding a bug report which might seem unclear to them or have questions about a bug that they can’t reproduce so the tester also needs to be present and responsive to help fix the issue in the most efficient way.

Accuracy

When it comes to mobile app development, time is of the essence, which is why it is crucial for testers to provide developers with the most accurate bug reports. Submitting inaccurate or incomplete bug reports can do more bad than good as it can throw the developer in a loop, waste their time and eventually break the trust between the tester and the developer.

The first thing is to avoid speculation in your bug report and to only provide facts that you can back up and if you’re unsure about anything in your report to test it and provide proof. Never provide feedback based on intuition because if you can’t validate it then it’s probably not true.

Another thing is to always try and assign the most accurate level of severity and priority to your bugs. Testers can get carried away and think that the bugs they’re submitting are the most crucial ones and assign them high priorities but in most cases, they’re not. If you keep assigning high priorities to minor bugs then again you will lose the developer’s trust and they won’t be taking your feedback as a credible one anymore. If you’re unsure about the bugs severity levels from the developer’s side, make sure to communicate with them and to get an understanding beforehand about what they deem severe or not.

In-App User Feedback

Your app is definitely the best place to collect feedback during the bug reporting process as you don’t want to interrupt your user’s experience by having them leave the app to go to a website or to send an email. In-app user feedback tools allow you to strategically obtain user feedback through different methods by requesting it right there on the spot. This sort of feedback is specifically great because it’s coming from users who are already using your mobile app, providing you with user feedback based on actual usage.

Using our in-app user feedback tool has been proven to result in up to 80% less negative reviews for mobile apps as you provide a private channel for users to provide their feedback, including negative comments, instead of on public app stores.

Shake-to-Send User Feedback

A few in-app feedback SDKs provide developers with the option to allow users to submit feedback simply by shaking their phones. This is the best way to have as little friction for the user as possible to prompt or trigger a feedback form. This allows users to submit feedback in the easiest way possible, allowing them to provide you with more feedback.

We found that implementing our in-app user feedback tool can result in a 750% increase in user response. That’s more data you can use to improve your app, better chances of identifying problems, and since you’re using a third-party bug reporting tool, you have more time to fix errors.

How can Instabug help?

Instabug is the top beta testing tool for bug reporting and user feedback in mobile apps. It provides the most useful metadata on the market, exceptional customer support, and an in-app communication channel to chat with your beta testers.

Bug and Crash Reporting

With each report, you automatically receive comprehensive data to help fix issues faster, including steps to reproduce errors, network request and console logs, and environment details. For bug reporting, your beta testers can also send screen recordings and annotatable screenshots to provide further context.

In-App Surveys and Feature Request Management

Collect user feedback from your beta testers right inside your app to minimize interruptions and boost participation rates. Get powerful insights to enhance your product roadmap with surveys that you can target to specific tester segments and feature request voting to understand user pain points and desires.