Suppose you are totally dependent and have requirements where you have a cloud application or several applications for integration with the cloud. In that case, I will suggest the use of Oracle Identity Cloud Service. Oracle Identity Cloud Service has much scope for customization. If you have a high customization level, then I would suggest IAM. The tool's multifactor authentication capabilities are easy to implement. If a client has a banking system, they need a strong authentication service, and only a password is not required; the user has to authenticate via fingerprint, face recognition, or go for or any RSA token. Double authentication is required where the banking department has access to very critical applications, or else they cannot go ahead and give the password. It is very difficult to hack once you have MFA in place. You have to either give the print fingerprint or any RSA token, making it not so easy to hack the system. We suggest MFA to clients who have the most critical application with them. I recommend the tool for every client we have, but it depends on how they want to have it because some customers don't want to go for the cloud application, and they might be thinking about changing the cloud vendors. Suppose a company has some costs in mind, and if they have a large number of employees, like 50,000 or 1,00,000 users, then it will be costlier for them than having an on-prem tool, like IAM. If a customer has 5,000, 10,000, or 20,00 employees, Oracle Identity Cloud Service can be a cheaper tool than the IAM product. I will suggest Oracle Identity Cloud Service only for smaller organizations. The tool does not have any AI capabilities. I would recommend the tool to everyone. I rate the tool an eight out of ten.
Assistant Manager at a integrator with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
2019-07-28T07:35:00Z
Jul 28, 2019
It depends on the business. It depends on what exactly the customer is looking for from Identity Access Management, his business needs, and what he needs from this product. It's an excellent product and the integration adapts well with all things around the solution. Before choosing the product, they should decide on what their requirements are. From my knowledge and I'm not fully aware of the outside research, I would rate this as a nine or ten out of ten.
A good foundation product to support the other cloud services, but improvements are needed in the user interface to simplify the experience and allow customer services to be involved in using the cloud service effectively. I would rate this solution a seven out of ten.
Find out what your peers are saying about Oracle, Microsoft, Okta and others in Identity and Access Management as a Service (IDaaS) (IAMaaS). Updated: November 2024.
Identify the exact use case of what you need before you move forward with a solution out there. Some of our partners insisted that we have this type of product installed.
Identity and access management (IAM) is the process of managing individual network identities (this includes devices as well as users) to determine access privileges for cloud and on-premise applications.
Suppose you are totally dependent and have requirements where you have a cloud application or several applications for integration with the cloud. In that case, I will suggest the use of Oracle Identity Cloud Service. Oracle Identity Cloud Service has much scope for customization. If you have a high customization level, then I would suggest IAM. The tool's multifactor authentication capabilities are easy to implement. If a client has a banking system, they need a strong authentication service, and only a password is not required; the user has to authenticate via fingerprint, face recognition, or go for or any RSA token. Double authentication is required where the banking department has access to very critical applications, or else they cannot go ahead and give the password. It is very difficult to hack once you have MFA in place. You have to either give the print fingerprint or any RSA token, making it not so easy to hack the system. We suggest MFA to clients who have the most critical application with them. I recommend the tool for every client we have, but it depends on how they want to have it because some customers don't want to go for the cloud application, and they might be thinking about changing the cloud vendors. Suppose a company has some costs in mind, and if they have a large number of employees, like 50,000 or 1,00,000 users, then it will be costlier for them than having an on-prem tool, like IAM. If a customer has 5,000, 10,000, or 20,00 employees, Oracle Identity Cloud Service can be a cheaper tool than the IAM product. I will suggest Oracle Identity Cloud Service only for smaller organizations. The tool does not have any AI capabilities. I would recommend the tool to everyone. I rate the tool an eight out of ten.
Overall, I would rate the solution an eight out of ten.
We are looking for alternative competitive products. My role is as an ID Domain Controller. I would rate this solution a seven out of ten.
It depends on the business. It depends on what exactly the customer is looking for from Identity Access Management, his business needs, and what he needs from this product. It's an excellent product and the integration adapts well with all things around the solution. Before choosing the product, they should decide on what their requirements are. From my knowledge and I'm not fully aware of the outside research, I would rate this as a nine or ten out of ten.
I would rate this product seven out of ten.
A good foundation product to support the other cloud services, but improvements are needed in the user interface to simplify the experience and allow customer services to be involved in using the cloud service effectively. I would rate this solution a seven out of ten.
Identify the exact use case of what you need before you move forward with a solution out there. Some of our partners insisted that we have this type of product installed.