Identity & Access Management (IAM / MFA)

Identity is one of the most important control points in modern cybersecurity. CyberDuo’s Identity & Access Management service helps businesses control who has access, what they can reach, and how that access is protected. For regulated companies, this is not just a security issue. It is also an operations, audit, and risk-management issue because weak access practices often show up in breaches, failed offboarding, and compliance findings.

We help organizations build a cleaner access model across Microsoft 365, Azure, and core business applications. That includes MFA, conditional access, role-based permissions, admin separation, and joiner-mover-leaver workflows. The result is a stronger login experience for users and better control for IT and leadership.

Identity & Access Management (IAM / MFA)

What This Service Covers

Multi-factor authentication rollout, enforcement, and exception cleanup
Role-based access and least-privilege design across users and admins
Conditional access policies based on user, device, location, or risk
Onboarding and offboarding support tied to real access governance
Better alignment between Microsoft 365, Azure, SaaS apps, and security policy

Why It Matters

Strong IAM reduces the chances of account takeover, limits unnecessary permissions, and makes it easier to respond quickly when employees leave or roles change. It also gives regulated businesses a more defensible access model when auditors or clients ask questions.

Best Fit For

You need MFA and access controls across Microsoft 365 and other business apps
You want cleaner onboarding, offboarding, and admin-account practices
You need an access model that is easier to explain during audits or reviews

Frequently Asked Questions

Can MFA be rolled out without slowing down the business?

Yes. A phased plan, clear communication, and policy-based deployment help strengthen security while keeping disruption low for users.

Do you support third-party applications too?

Yes. Identity management should cover the business applications your users rely on, not just email and Microsoft 365.

How is IAM different from a password manager?

A password manager improves credential hygiene. IAM is broader and governs who gets access, how they authenticate, and what permissions they keep.