It's always hard to put a value on return on investment. You avoid one breach and it's paid for a million times over. We got a penetration test company internally, just to see how secure our network is, and there happened to be one bit of software that had been overlooked by an external company that managed it. It hadn't been upgraded so that managed to get them into the network. They would've been able to access through the test thing a file that we had previously. If that was a real-life scenario they would have been able to get into our network and get full access to our organization's passwords. If they did get in, they would have gotten access to the cloud. The ROI we see is that we are completely secured compared to what we had previously where there was a vulnerability.
The stability has been rock solid. A couple of years ago, they were breached. However, if you had two-factor authentication enabled, it didn't affect you. We did, so it has been good.
Network Engineer at a tech services company with 1-10 employees
Real User
2018-11-04T07:09:00Z
Nov 4, 2018
Until now, I haven't found anything like the dashboard. It gives you a security score. I find that to be really great. The Sharing Center is really great as well. And the Security Challenge is really great too.
The shared folders is an important feature. It's the primary feature we use. Also, the ability for LastPass to autofill and hide the passwords, so we don't have to keep changing passwords every time a person leaves, is valuable.
What is a single sign-on (SSO)? Single sign-on (SSO) is an authentication method that enables a user to access multiple sessions in different applications with one set of login credentials.
Single sign-on is the most common method used for protecting sensitive data on web applications. SSO requires the user to provide an initial password when they begin creating an account. The application will then validate that the user is the intended person and has enough privileges to access the...
One feature that is really important to us is the ability to create secure notes.
It is easy to use.
The most valuable feature for me is being able to pair applications and user permissions.
It's improved security; we don't have to worry about people storing password loosely and secure them.
The most valuable feature is the liberty of keeping encrypted passwords and elevated information in a sealed vault.
The initial setup for this process is straightforward and extremely easy. It just works.
It's always hard to put a value on return on investment. You avoid one breach and it's paid for a million times over. We got a penetration test company internally, just to see how secure our network is, and there happened to be one bit of software that had been overlooked by an external company that managed it. It hadn't been upgraded so that managed to get them into the network. They would've been able to access through the test thing a file that we had previously. If that was a real-life scenario they would have been able to get into our network and get full access to our organization's passwords. If they did get in, they would have gotten access to the cloud. The ROI we see is that we are completely secured compared to what we had previously where there was a vulnerability.
The stability has been rock solid. A couple of years ago, they were breached. However, if you had two-factor authentication enabled, it didn't affect you. We did, so it has been good.
Until now, I haven't found anything like the dashboard. It gives you a security score. I find that to be really great. The Sharing Center is really great as well. And the Security Challenge is really great too.
The shared folders is an important feature. It's the primary feature we use. Also, the ability for LastPass to autofill and hide the passwords, so we don't have to keep changing passwords every time a person leaves, is valuable.
Reduction in number of sensitive passwords stored insecurely on local systems.