Overview
A growing enterprise with a hybrid workforce found that most business operations — SaaS apps, internal portals, and GenAI tools — were accessed through the browser. While productivity increased, security risks escalated rapidly.
Traditional controls like VPNs and endpoint tools were no longer enough to protect users in a web-first work environment.
The Challenge
The organization faced critical browser-layer risk:
- Rising phishing and credential theft attacks
- Data leakage via uploads, downloads, and copy-paste
- Shadow IT and unsanctioned SaaS usage
- Limited visibility into user web activity
- Over-reliance on VPN for SaaS access
- Difficulty enforcing consistent policies on unmanaged/BYOD devices
Security was fragmented — controls were applied at the network or endpoint level, but not where most work actually happened: inside the browser.
The Solution
The enterprise deployed a Secure Enterprise Browser with built-in Zero Trust and Data Loss Prevention controls.
Instead of adding more security layers, the organization secured the browser itself — embedding policy enforcement directly into the user workspace.
Key Controls Implemented
- Application-level access enforcement
- Built-in DLP for uploads, downloads, and clipboard
- Watermarking for sensitive applications
- SaaS visibility and shadow IT monitoring
- Role-based access policies
- Conditional access for managed and unmanaged devices
- Reduced VPN dependency for SaaS apps
Deployment was seamless and required no major infrastructure changes.
The Impact
🔐 Significant Reduction in Browser-Based Threats
Phishing-related compromises dropped substantially due to stronger session and identity
controls.
🚫 Data Leakage Attempts Controlled
Unauthorized file transfers and clipboard misuse were blocked in real time.
📊 Complete SaaS Visibility
IT gained full visibility into sanctioned and unsanctioned web applications, enabling stronger governance.
⚡ Improved User Experience
Reduced VPN reliance improved application performance and employee productivity.
🛡 Stronger Zero Trust Posture
Security moved from perimeter-based control to identity- and application-level enforcement.
Business Outcome
By securing the browser — the primary digital workspace — the organization:
- Reduced risk without increasing complexity
- Improved compliance readiness
- Strengthened control over hybrid and BYOD environments
- Enhanced user productivity without sacrificing security
Conclusion
As enterprises become web-first, the browser has become the new security boundary.
By implementing a Secure Enterprise Browser, the organization successfully transformed its security strategy — moving from reactive, fragmented protection to proactive, browser-native Zero Trust security.