Veza is the identity security company, helping organizations secure access across the enterprise, including cloud infrastructure, data systems, SaaS apps, and on-prem apps. Powered by the Authorization Graph, Veza’s platform delivers visibility and control of permissions so that organizations finally achieve least privilege. Global enterprises trust Veza for privileged access monitoring, cloud access management, data lake governance, SaaS access security, automated access reviews and access provisioning.
Do You Manage Peer Insights at Veza?
Access Vendor Portal to update and manage your profile.
Ease of use, visibility, simplification of UAR process. Veza has provided a streamlined way to reconcile user licenses, resulting in significant savings.
- Powerful role definition capabilities that help optimize directory groups. - Strong integration support for major ERP, ITSM, and CRM platforms. - Innovative Open Authorization APIs (OAA) framework enabling rapid application integration. - Advanced dashboard for threat hunting and risk profiling. - Excellent support team engagement and responsiveness. - Strong capabilities in IAM directory hygiene and access intelligence. - Effective tools for modern lifecycle management and role engineering. - Extensible and complimentary APIs for UI features. - Intuitive report creation and alerting capabilities.
It is extremely easy to set up integrations, and the tool provides a lot of out of the box queries and dashboards to provide instant value to our organization. Creating new queries and dashboards is very simple as well. They also provide a comprehensive breakdown of each identity and resource, which allows us to do really granular filtering to get the exact data we are looking for.
As a newer company, Veza lacks some out of the box connectors, however they are willing to develop as needed.
- More streamlined processes needed for scaling custom application integrations. - Could benefit from more focused and richer features for technical debt reduction and continuous management (operations).
For AWS integrations, they don't currently support AWS Orgs, so we need to on-board each account manually. The same issue applies for Github, where each org needs an app built instead of doing it enterprise wide. Lastly, adding integration licenses can start to get pricy.