Celebrating 1 Year of QAlogy: From Idea to Reality

Celebrating 1 Year of QAlogy: From Idea to Reality

Exactly one year ago, something that had lived in my head for years became reality. QAlogy.com was created.

It wasn’t just the launch of a website.
It was the beginning of something I’ve always dreamed about — having my own space on the internet.

Why I Started QAlogy?

For a long time, I wanted to have my own corner online.
A place where I could write.
Where I could share what I know.
Where I could help others, communicate with people in the QA world, and express myself creatively.

So, one year ago, QAlogy wasn’t a brand. It wasn’t a community.
It wasn’t even a real website. It was just… a blank screen.

And from that blank screen, I created everything — piece by piece:

  • I chose the colors
  • Designed the logo
  • Built the website
  • Picked the fonts
  • Wrote the content
  • Hit “Publish” for the first time

And just like that — QAlogy was live.

What Happened in This First Year?

A lot.

From that first post to today, I’ve:

  • Published a lot of blog posts (some planned, some spontaneous, all from the heart)
  • Redesigned the blog once to keep things fresh and better organized.
  • Got my posts shared by other QA professionals from Serbia, Germany, and beyond.
  • Was featured by LambdaTest and SoftwareTestingWeekly — who included my content in their newsletter (huge thank you to them!)
  • I was invited to be a guest on the Tech-Savvy podcast in Bulgaria by Scalefocus, where I shared my story and talked about QAlogy and other QA related topics (the episode will be published around the end of September). Huge thanks to Scalefocus and my Team Lead, Kiro Kosturanov, for the support.
  • Met some truly amazing people from the QA community — people I wouldn’t have connected with if this blog didn’t exist.
  • Grew my LinkedIn following by nearly 300% thanks to the blog and the support from the community.

What I’ve Learned

  • Starting something from scratch is hard — but incredibly rewarding.
  • It’s okay not to have everything figured out. Just start.
  • Writing consistently helps you grow — not just as a QA, but as a thinker and communicator.
  • There’s a whole world of amazing QA people out there — willing to support, engage, and share.

What’s Coming Next?

As QAlogy enters its second year, I’m excited to keep building and improving.

I have a few ideas I’d love to explore in the near future, such as:

  • Creating a QA course.
  • Writing more in-depth articles on some advanced testing topics.
  • Featuring stories and interviews from other QA professionals.
  • Possibly starting a newsletter for those who want to stay updated and inspired.

These are just ideas for now, but I’m really looking forward to seeing where QAlogy goes next — and I’m always open to feedback, suggestions, and collaborations along the way.

Thank You

To every single person who:

  • Visited QAlogy.com
  • Read even one post
  • Shared an article
  • Reached out with a message
  • Supported me online or offline

Thank you !!!
You helped turn a blank website into something real.

Let’s keep going. Let’s keep testing, learning, and sharing.
Here’s to Year 2 of QAlogy.com!

Vladimir Josifoski
Founder of QAlogy.com

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