This is Part 1 of a series of blogs focussing on increasing adoption of Identity and Access Management (‘IAM’). The blogs will focus on the why, what and how of the IAM adoption journey.
Identity and Access Management (‘IAM’) is becoming an increasingly important part of digital transformation. COVID-19 has pushed many traditional organizations into the unknown territory of remote working – wherein, people work from outside their usual office network, accessing organizational resources as remote workers. At the end of day, all IT system users are just an identity – and the segregation between trusted and untrusted users is becoming blurred…
IAM is all about managing identity and access lifecycles across diverse IT systems. It broadly consists of three domains – Identity and Access Governance (‘IAG’), Access Management (‘AM’ – the term generally used for Single Sign On (‘SSO’) and Multi Factor Authentication (‘MFA’) functionalities) and Privileged Access Management (‘PAM’).
These three together ensure that the digital identities are managed in a secure and controlled manner.
While compliance is a big driver for adopting IAM, IAM systems also drive productivity in IT teams and enhance the end user experience for businesses. Some of the key challenges that an IAM system addresses are summarized in the figure below.
One of the other big drivers for IAM solutions is the complex and hybrid IT landscape. Most organizations have a large number of discreet IT systems – both on-premise as well as on cloud. Managing access across these IT systems is a huge challenge for any IT team – most organizations don’t have a clear visibility of all these access, let alone an ability to control them.
IAM solutions help address these challenges. Some of the stand out benefits include:
Compliance – this is often the starting reason for most of the IAM projects. IAM solutions help improve the compliance posture of an organization.
User experience – IAM makes access easy for end users. Whether it is the experience of requesting access, approving access requests or reviewing user accesses, user experience is another key driver for the acceleration towards IAM.
Productivity – IAM solutions don’t just address the compliance and user experience challenges, but they also help drive the productivity of IT teams through automation. Features that enhance user experience almost always end up increasing user productivity too.
These are the key factors behind why businesses are increasingly putting IAM at the centre of their digital journey. With increasing cyberattacks occurring around the world, security is paramount - and a good IAM solution ensures digital identities are secure while organization focuses on accelerating their digital transformation.
The next blog in this series will focus on the primary features of IAM solutions, so be sure to keep your eyes peeled…