Report finds 60% of Singapore organisations now ship untested code – FutureCIO


As a result of elevated strain for pace from management groups, the bulk (60%) of organisations in Singapore have launched software program with untested code, up from 47% in 2025, in response to Tricentis’ second annual Quality Transformation Report.

Damien Wong, senior vp, APAC (Asia-Pacific &Japan) at Tricentis, stated: “Singapore is shifting shortly to speculate and scale sensible AI adoption, from AI-assisted software program improvement to extra autonomous, agentic methods. However as organisations construct new AI capabilities, the analysis highlights a rising disconnect between organisations’ confidence in AI and their capability to constantly ship high-quality software program.”

Software program high quality

The research discovered a fast enterprise-wide adoption of AI in Singapore, with 89% of organisations utilizing three or extra AI or automation instruments throughout the software program improvement lifecycle. Furthermore, 84% of Singapore organisations belief AI brokers to make software program launch readiness and selections with out human oversight.

The bulk (82%) expressed preparedness to operationalise, govern, and scale AI brokers and autonomous testing throughout the software program improvement lifecycle. Some 32% stated implementing AI brokers in software program improvement and testing is a prime IT precedence over the subsequent 12 months, whereas 31% stated lowering supply threat and bettering launch confidence are vital.

“As Singapore companies deepen AI adoption, high quality, governance and oversight should scale on the identical tempo,” Wong stated.

The 2026 High quality Transformation Report relies on a survey of over 2,500 world CEOs, CIOs, CTOs, VPs of engineering, DevOps and high quality assurance (QA) leaders, and software program builders throughout varied industries, together with manufacturing, power and utilities, retail, monetary providers, and the general public sector. Of these surveyed, 500 respondents have been based mostly in Singapore.