You may already be familiar with . It’s an exemplary and comprehensive password and identity management tool, that not only offers support for individuals, but teams, as well. In fact, is designed, specifically, for business teams. From smaller business and home-office teams to remote, large-scale teams, it’s an efficient way to manage and share passwords and much more.
One benefit, if you will, is a productivity boost for all who use it. Imagine the traditional password and account-sharing method. You’d have to share the login details, maybe even share the process. If multi-factor authentication is enabled, then forget it. You have to pass on codes, pre-plan access, and much more. Not to mention, none of that is secure or safe. Once multiple people know the login details that account is effectively compromised, no matter how much you trust them.
With LastPass Teams, you can manage up to 50 users’ work credentials and generate reports to view user activity. Teams can share passwords without ever allowing the plain text password to be seen. They can log in fast, easily, and pretty much seamlessly with whatever sites or apps your team uses. They can get in and out quickly, without ever having to organize across the team.
But there’s so much more to it, and frankly, you’re doing yourself and your team a disservice by not using LastPass Teams. Let’s dig in.
LastPass Teams’ specific features
Now, keep in mind, that you also get all of the great features found in LastPass Personal. We’ll talk a bit more about those later. But the point is that builds upon that individual access.
It offers:
- Support for up to 50 users
- Each user gets an encrypted vault with individual account storage
- Administrative console access to manage users set security controls, enforce restrictions, and configure team policies
- Choose from up to 25 security policies to meet your team’s needs
But most importantly, it promotes improved productivity thanks to the effortless credential sharing that can happen across connected teams. Your users, and you, can also share secure notes and files, and store individual account credentials to keep their personal lives safe and secure. Moreover, you get streamlined user management for administrative tasks, plus native SSO integrations and integrations with top SaaS applications.
Here’s why employers should care
Those features and support options sound great, but from a business perspective why should you care? Why pay for another subscription for your team? For starters, the security and reliability that LastPass offers, even just to store standard account credentials, is paramount. In today’s world, it’s tough to keep track of all those accounts, passwords, notes, and beyond. LastPass makes it super easy and convenient.
Outside of that, employees must manage many passwords across various apps, services, and work-related tasks. Sometimes, there’s no other option but to share credentials which can come with a series of setbacks. You’re tethered to other users, the account is no longer secure, and sharing can definitely hinder productivity.
Remote and hybrid work opportunities also increase the use of personal accounts for work purposes. Deploying LastPass can minimize that problem and make sure everyone still has access to the mission-critical apps and services they need for work, without compromise.
Finally, overwhelmed employees who have to manage many accounts often end up creating weak or easy-to-guess passwords, compromising security. It makes the login and memory process easier for them, but also puts the business and the rest of the team at risk.
LastPass Personal features included
Taking all of that a step further, all users get access to the same excellent features as LastPass Personal. For example, the convenience and ease-of-use features, auto-generating password tool, auto-save features when logging into sites and apps for the first time, one-click autofill, and passwordless logins.
All users benefit from cross-platform device synching, too. So, you can easily access the same login details on your phone as you can from your desktop PC or Mac. You’d be surprised how much of a seamless experience that provides. You don’t ever have to wait to log in to certain sites or apps because access is only restricted to one device — unless, of course, that’s a security policy set up by administrators.
Try free for 14 days
Here’s the thing: You can try for free for up to 14 days. Get started with password management, introduce your team, and see how everyone benefits firsthand. Then, when you’re ready, you can subscribe for premium access, starting at just $4 per user per month, billed annually.