The Enterprise Browser Buyers Guide

Learn what an enterprise browser is, why it exists, and how to evaluate one for your organization.

Key findings

The browser has quietly become the most used enterprise application as work shifted to SaaS and the cloud.

Enterprise browsers are emerging as a consolidation layer that can combine capabilities historically spread across multiple tools into one platform.

CIOs are prioritizing simpler, more cost-effective app delivery as legacy access models create friction and support burden.

Summary

Most organizations try to secure SaaS and web apps by surrounding a consumer browser with agents, proxies, and gateways. That stack gets complex, fragile, and costly, and it degrades the user experience. An enterprise browser flips the model by building the core enterprise requirements directly into the browser.

This is The Enterprise Browser. The modern workspace that unifies security, IT, and productivity requirements in one place.

What you'll learn

See why the enterprise browser exists, the benefits it delivers for CIOs, CISOs, and end users, how it compares to alternative options, and where to go next in your journey.

Common use cases

Secure SaaS and web access
VDI reduction
Zero Trust workflows
BPO and third-party access
Mergers, acquisitions, and divestitures
Data loss prevention
BYOD (Bring Your Own Device) programs
Incident response and resiliency

Industry leaders are adopting the enterprise workspace