Jonathon,
I feel your pain. In my case, I was initiated by my students and very quickly 
learned how to ask the questions a newbie would ask. I also paid small amounts 
to graduate students to get their feedback.

One of my very effective testers is my grandson, my wife, any of my colleagues 
who might be enticed to use the app. Looking over the shoulder while these 
folks use the app can be very illuminating. 

In summary:
1. Ask friends and relatives first.
2. Perhaps there would be volunteers from the live ode users group.
3. Hire high school students who might have a tech interest. Look over their 
shoulders as they use the app and dialog to themselves. Actually watching users 
is invaluable.

Good luck,
Bill P


William Prothero
http://es.earthednet.org

> On Jul 7, 2017, at 4:57 AM, Jonathan Lynch via use-livecode 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I think my experience of the last two days has taught me something - I have 
> been micro-coaching my friends when they try my app.
> 
> Just the littlest input, like saying "oh, just press the button again to 
> submit" comes so easily and, apparently mucks up testing entirely.
> 
> While the harm will be minimal in this case, I can see where it could be 
> disastrous for a large company.
> 
> What steps do you guys follow for accurate testing when you don't have a 
> budget for proper official testing procedures?
> 
> Sent from my iPhone
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