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How to Run EDI Testing Without Losing Your Mind?
How to Run EDI Testing Without Losing Your Mind?
Learn how to structure EDI testing the right way, avoid endless delays, and get through validation faster without breaking your workflows.
- Duration: ≈ 22:08
- Host: EDI Support LLC
- Published: 2025
In This Session, You’ll Learn:
- Why EDI testing feels chaotic and never-ending
- How to align testing with real business workflows
- The biggest mistakes that delay EDI testing
- How to prepare your team before testing begins
- How to speed up testing without cutting corners
Best For: EDI managers, EDI analysts/specialists, IT managers, IT directors
Key Takeaways
- Generic testing causes real-world failures
Testing that doesn’t reflect your actual business process leads to issues after go-live. - You must define your business process before testing starts
Without this, testing becomes guesswork and rework. - EDI testing is not just technical, it’s operational
You need the right people validating documents, not just systems processing them. - Trading partners and third-party testers slow things down
Delays often come from external dependencies and unclear feedback loops. - Missing requirements lead to repeated testing cycles
If expectations are not defined upfront, testing keeps expanding. - Manual work during testing creates production issues later
If you fake data or bypass workflows to pass testing, it will break in production. - Clear ownership is critical
You need to know who owns testing steps across your team, your provider, and your trading partner.
Session Overview
EDI testing is one of the most frustrating parts of implementation for SMBs.
What should be a structured validation process often turns into a long cycle of:
- Failed test cases
- Unclear feedback
- Repeated iterations
- Endless back-and-forth
The core problem is that most EDI testing is not aligned with how your business actually operates.
Instead, companies are forced through:
- Generic testing scenarios
- Third-party testing platforms
- Incomplete or unclear requirements
This leads to a mismatch between what gets approved during testing and what actually works in production.
On top of that, many teams enter testing without:
- Defined roles
- Clear ownership
- Complete data readiness
- Understanding of trading partner expectations
This session breaks down how to approach EDI testing strategically, so you can reduce delays, avoid rework, and move to production with confidence.
Go Deeper: Practical Guide to Running EDI Testing the Right Way for Small Businesses
Struggling with EDI testing and not sure why it keeps dragging on? This guide breaks down what actually happens during EDI testing, why delays occur, and how to validate your workflows correctly before go-live without endless rework.
Full Transcript
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00:00:00 — Introduction
Hey everybody, Jim Gonzalez here from EDI Support LLC.
Today we’re talking about how to run EDI testing without losing your mind.
00:00:56 — Why EDI Testing Feels Frustrating
EDI testing depends on:
- The industry
- The trading partner
- Third-party testing platforms
If testing is generic, it will create problems.
00:01:32 — The Problem with Generic Testing
Many retail companies use SPS testing portals.
These are convenient, but they often rely on generic rules that don’t match real workflows.
00:02:10 — Start with Your Team
Before testing begins:
- Identify who will validate data
- Understand your business process
- Assign ownership
Testing is not just technical, it requires business validation.
00:02:48 — Know Who You’re Testing With
Ask:
- Are testers using generic requirements?
- Do they understand your business model?
Generic testing creates unnecessary complexity.
00:03:22 — Align Testing with Real Scenarios
Define:
- Drop ship vs wholesale
- Order flows
- Shipping structures
- Claims or billing workflows
Testing should reflect real business interactions.
00:05:22 — Real-World Example: Costco Testing
Even if your provider has experience:
- You still go through testing
- Requirements are often generic
- You may need exceptions
Testing is not automatically passed.
00:07:36 — Passing Testing Doesn’t Mean You’re Ready
You may pass initial testing but still fail in production due to:
- Missing data
- Incorrect assumptions
- Misaligned workflows
00:08:07 — Define Testing Scope Early
Clarify:
- Required documents
- What you can and cannot support
- Exceptions and exclusions
00:09:17 — Testing Requires Planning
You need to:
- Define processes
- Assign responsibilities
- Build timelines
Testing is not a last-minute activity.
00:10:35 — Manual vs Integrated Testing
Understand:
- Are you testing manually?
- Or testing full ERP integration?
True testing should reflect real operations.
00:11:15 — Delays from Poor Feedback
Testing slows down when:
- Feedback is unclear
- Errors are not explained
- Documents disappear into queues
00:12:24 — Common Bottlenecks
- Manual file handling
- No automation
- Slow iteration cycles
- Missing requirements
00:12:58 — Example of Changing Requirements
Testing may evolve:
- New document scenarios
- Additional requirements
- Unexpected edge cases
You must gather requirements upfront.
00:14:01 — Missing Data Issues
Check if your system supports:
- Required fields
- Data structures
- Business rules
Otherwise, customization may be needed.
00:15:18 — Risks of Manual Workarounds
Manually altering EDI data during testing leads to:
- Production failures
- System mismatches
Always test using real system capabilities.
00:15:54 — Ownership and Coordination
You must define:
- Internal responsibilities
- Provider responsibilities
- Trading partner roles
00:16:38 — Version Control and System Changes
Watch for:
- Map changes
- ERP upgrades
- Data resets
These can reset your progress.
00:17:13 — Visibility Matters
You need:
- Clear error logs
- Human-readable messages
- Real-time alerts
Without visibility, testing stalls.
00:18:25 — AI Limitations in Testing
AI cannot fully replace testing because:
- Too many variables
- Multiple parties involved
- Business-specific logic
00:18:56 — Unrealistic Timelines
You cannot onboard multiple partners quickly without:
-
- Preparation
- Coordination
- Defined processes
00:19:27 — Final Advice
Plan everything before testing begins:
- Internal setup
- External dependencies
- Roles and ownership
You are the key to making testing successful.
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