Solutions

Create your users and give them access to the SaaS tools they need. Nothing more, nothing less than what they really need.
Change their access however you want. Add or remove accesses to tools as needed. Organise them by type to be more effective.
Manage user anomalies without delay. MIA detects and lists addresses that should be checked. Validate new email connections to your tools.
Delete outdated users. Avoid dormant accounts scattered across your SaaS and secure access to your internal data.
MIA makes it easy to control every access to your resources.
Sort out your users with the necessary rights, for however long you want and maintain the integrity of your data.
Protect your data every day.
30% of cyberattacks start from breaches of dormant accounts forgotten in SI.
Don't wait for information to leak before setting up a backup plan.
A centralized identity management platform allows organizations to oversee user accounts, permissions, and connected applications from a single interface. This approach improves visibility, simplifies audits, and helps ensure that access rights remain aligned with business needs.
The right solution depends on your organization's size, IT maturity, and security requirements. Traditional IAM platforms can be complex and costly to deploy, while newer solutions are designed to simplify access management, user lifecycle processes, and visibility across business applications without requiring extensive technical expertise.
Yes. Several European vendors offer IAM solutions designed to reduce reliance on non-European technology providers. When evaluating sovereignty, it's important to look beyond data hosting and assess factors such as infrastructure location, regulatory compliance, software dependencies, and data governance practices.
No. Single Sign-On simplifies authentication, but it does not provide complete visibility into all accounts and permissions. Many organizations still rely on local accounts, service accounts, and third-party managed access. Comprehensive identity governance typically requires capabilities that go beyond SSO alone.
Most modern IAM platforms provide native integrations with identity providers such as Microsoft Entra ID and Google Workspace. These integrations enable the synchronization of users, groups, and organizational data, helping organizations maintain a consistent identity source across their software ecosystem.
Automation is typically achieved by defining access policies based on roles, teams, or employment status. When a user joins, changes position, or leaves the organization, accounts and permissions can be automatically provisioned, updated, or revoked, reducing manual effort and lowering security risks.