Microsoft Intune
By Microsoft
Microsoft's cloud-native unified endpoint management for Windows, macOS, iOS, and Android, bundled into most Microsoft 365 business plans. Its tightest differentiator is native integration with Entra ID conditional access, letting device compliance directly gate access to corporate apps.
Verified Source: 1
- Product type
- Software
- Deployment
- SaaS
- Organization size
- SMBMid-marketEnterprise
- Pricing tier
- $$
How Microsoft Intune measures up against the full Mobile & Unified Endpoint Management taxonomy.
- Device enrollment & provisioning — supported
- Automates zero-touch setup of new devices with company configuration.
- Policy & configuration management — supported
- Pushes security settings, restrictions, and profiles to managed devices.
- Application management — supported
- Distributes, updates, and removes apps on managed devices remotely.
- Patch & OS update management — supported
- Enforces and tracks operating system update compliance across the fleet.
- Remote wipe & lock — supported
- Locks or wipes a lost, stolen, or offboarded device on demand.
- Conditional access integration — supported
- Feeds device compliance status into identity systems to gate app access.
- Compliance reporting — supported
- Reports fleet-wide adherence to security and configuration baselines.
Alternatives
Other Mobile & Unified Endpoint Management tools with overlapping capabilities, sized for similar teams.
Appears in stacks
Real-world stacks that include Microsoft Intune.
50-person SaaS startup
A 50-person SaaS startup with a small, generalist IT/security team (no dedicated SOC), a remote-friendly engineering culture, dozens of third-party SaaS tools in daily use, and a budget that favors managed and freemium options over heavyweight enterprise suites.
Mid-market SOC
A 500-2,000-employee company with a small, dedicated security team of perhaps three to eight people running a real, if lean, security operations function — a mix of in-house analysts and outsourced help, moderate compliance pressure from customers and regulators, and a budget that has to stretch across the whole security program rather than concentrate on one area.