Experiment vs Test: Key Differences That Shape Product Success

Experiment is a deliberate, structured inquiry designed to discover new knowledge or validate a hypothesis; a test is a focused check to confirm that a product or feature behaves as expected.

Teams swap the words because both involve running something and watching outcomes. Experiments feel bold and open-ended, while tests sound like a quick “yes/no” gate—so people pick whichever sounds less scary in a meeting.

Key Differences

Experiments explore unknowns and may change direction; tests verify known requirements. Experiments often compare versions; tests usually pass or fail a single version.

Which One Should You Choose?

If you’re still unsure what users want, run an experiment. If the spec is locked and you just need confirmation, run a test.

Examples and Daily Life

A/B testing a new checkout button is an experiment. Checking that the payment flow completes without errors is a test.

Can a test become an experiment?

Yes. When unexpected results send you back to the drawing board, the test has quietly turned into an experiment.

Do I need special tools for either?

Not necessarily. A spreadsheet and clear question can start an experiment; a checklist can run a test.

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