I like it because of the granularity of permissions you can apply within it, and the auditing features. Multiple sites (which I'm assuming is where the extra cost is) is only needed if you're looking to have the system actively manage passwords on remote systems, if it's just users logging in from other sites, that's not needed. Self serve passsword resets we don't have licenses for, as we don't need it (use o365 for that). 350 users puts you in the enterprise level (anything over 200 users is the same price as enterprise), so you're getting unlimited users for that (not much of a benefit if you don't need it admittedly). $96/user/year for the hoi polloi is completely off the table for us, though.īrianinca - $10K seems a bit high. Not so many fancy features.įor cloud hosted, besides the KeePass and LastPass I had a chat with and that $240/yr for a team of 10 may be the bargain of the year. <- unlimited users $4K, so divide by 350-400 and it's a bargain the first year, and maintenance only after at $800. Kenny8416 good feedback on Passwordstate, they're in my recent list, lots of fancy features but $10K to start for 350 users and support and multiple sites and self-serve password reset. The regular US hosted variant is less expensive but a long way from free, ~$45/year/user.įor our regular users, I'm looking for something not BitWarden but self-hosted and cost effective, so different to your cloud hosted goal. It's very, VERY impressive, given that it's just a basic password manager, right? The 2FA integration is an excellent carrot to draw people into using it, very well done, and the shared folder system for rando standalone devices with no brains (serial to Ethernet converters, anyone?) is great. We just started using Keeper for the team, as they are the only option for the CMMC 2.0 certification we're working towards.
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