Increased employee productivity.
Re-using your existing authentication provider reduces the time and resources spent by your IT team on resetting passwords or configuring new users and credentials.
You simply create the user in your existing 365 or Workspace account, and they can instantly access your QContact platform.
Increased employee productivity.
Re-using your existing authentication provider reduces the time and resources spent by your IT team on resetting passwords or configuring new users and credentials.
You simply create the user in your existing 365 or Workspace account, and they can instantly access your QContact platform.
Improved security.
By having a single authentication entrypoint to your business systems, you reduce the attack surface and gain a complete audit log of all user authentication attempts across all your company’s platforms.
Enabling two-factor methods such as physical tokens or authenticator apps adds another layer of security without your users having to remember multiple different methods of logging in.
Improved security.
By having a single authentication entrypoint to your business systems, you reduce the attack surface and gain a complete audit log of all user authentication attempts across all your company’s platforms.
Enabling two-factor methods such as physical tokens or authenticator apps adds another layer of security without your users having to remember multiple different methods of logging in.
Reduce password fatigue.
Users having to set up yet another password with unique password constraints, means many users resort to using the same password with small variations across multiple sites or systems.
Many users will use the same password for both their personal and business accounts, meaning any hack of websites they visit personally, may expose their work credentials too. By having a single secure password backed by 2FA, you can help reduce the risks of password fatigue.
Reduce password fatigue.
Users having to set up yet another password with unique password constraints, means many users resort to using the same password with small variations across multiple sites or systems.
Many users will use the same password for both their personal and business accounts, meaning any hack of websites they visit personally, may expose their work credentials too. By having a single secure password backed by 2FA, you can help reduce the risks of password fatigue.