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What’s Changed: 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration (IGA)

Analysis: The 2021 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Privileged Access Management

What’s Changed: 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration (IGA)

Technology research giant Gartner, Inc. recently released the 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration (IGA). You can download it here. Gartner researchers define identity governance and administration as “tools designed to manage digital identity and entitlements (access rights) across multiple systems and applications.” In other words, Gartner defines IGA as solutions that get the right people the right permissions at the right time for the right reasons. 

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In terms of capabilities, the 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration cites identity life cycle, entitlement management, policy and role management, and identity analytics. Perhaps the most critical capabilities include lifecycle management and entitlement management; the former involves managing identities for people and programs from creation to eventual deletion. Meanwhile, the latter helps administrators maintain the link between identities and entitlements, helping to establish who has access to what. 

Context for the Gartner Magic Quadrant Report

According to the 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration, the IGA market is mature after six years of existence. Now, IGA solution providers focus on delivering in-demand cloud solutions and fulfilling different business requirements; also, Gartner notes that many IGA vendors focus on midsize to global enterprises. Indeed, IGA clients largely rely on their solution providers for successful deployment as only a well-staffed IAM team can deploy it on their own. 

Additionally, Gartner’s researchers share their predictions for the Identity Governance and Administration market. First, they predict the importance of cleanup analytics in future ROIs by 2022. Second, researchers say over half of IGA solution providers will offer “predictive and recommendation engines leveraged by machine learning.” Currently, less than 15 percent of vendors offer these capabilities. 

The 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration warns enterprises against using the vendors’ positions in the graph as the sole tool for determining a shortlist. In fact, IGA vendors often provide a general set of IGA capabilities that may suit individual use cases. 

Researchers comment that IGA forms a foundational piece of enterprise identity management strategies; it answers essential questions about who possesses what permissions in your network. Smaller enterprises can use IGA to replace informal solutions and improve efficiencies. Simultaneously, large enterprises may adopt IGA technologies early on but fail to innovate to new versions. 

The 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration is the seventh iteration of the report. According to researchers, IGA began when user administration and provisioning (UAP) merged with identity and access governance solutions.

In this Magic Quadrant report, Gartner evaluates the strengths and weaknesses of eleven providers it considers most significant in the marketplace and provides readers with a graph (the eponymous Magic Quadrant) plotting the vendors based on their ability to execute and their completeness of vision. The graph is divided into four quadrants: Niche Players, Challengers, Visionaries, and Leaders. At Solutions Review, we read the report, available here, and pulled out the key takeaways. 

Movements in the 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration

In the 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration, Gartner did not add any vendors to their report. Instead, it dropped four vendors—Alert Enterprise, Core Security, Dell Technologies (RSA), and Microsoft. However, Gartner notes that all of the dropped vendors actually met the technical requirements of the report; Gartner changed the inclusion criteria for revenue for this report, which excluded these vendors. Additionally, Gartner includes a comprehensive list of Honorable Mentions, who fulfilled a significant majority of technical inclusion criteria. 

For this report, Gartner did not name any vendors to the Visionaries Quadrant. Gartner defines Visionaries can provide IGA requirements to their clients but not on the scale as Leaders; they receive recognition for their innovative approach to IGA and may focus on specific industries. Possibly, this relates to Gartner’s comments on Identity Governance as a mature marketplace; previously, only Dell Technologies (RSA) received the title of Visionaries in 2018. 

Meanwhile, Atos (Evidian), Broadcom (CA Technologies), and SAP all received the label of Niche Players in 2019. SAP and Atos both appeared in that quadrant in 2018, although Atos rose significantly in its Ability to Execute as did SAP. Interestingly, Gartner cites Broadcom’s acquisition of CA Technologies in 2018 and its subsequent business decisions as impacting its ranking in the Quadrant; in 2018 CA Technologies was named a Leader in the IGA report. 

In the Challengers Quadrant, we find Hitachi ID Systems, Micro Focus, and Oracle. Micro Focus moved up in its Ability to Execute thanks to its flexibility and policy management features. Hitachi similarly moved up thanks to its strong lifecycle management and CIAM performance. Both were in the same Quadrant last year. 

However, here too we see considerable movement; Oracle was in the Leaders Quadrant in 2018 and instead placed as a Challenger in 2019. Gartner acknowledges it fulfills its IGA requirements’ instead it cites an unclear strategy and some internal reorganization as its reasons for moving it to the new Quadrant. 

Of course, this leads to the five Leaders in the 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration: Saviynt, SailPoint, IBM, Omada, and One Identity. Of these, One Identity, Saviynt, SailPoint, and IBM appeared in the Leader Quadrant in the previous report. 

Saviynt rose considerably in its Ability to Execute due to its SaaS delivery and identity analytics. IBM earns its position, which stayed relatively steady, with its cloud-based solutions and hybrid deployment options. One Identity’s Leadership provides deep integration with complicated applications and integrated unstructured data access governance in its solution; however, it did sink somewhat since last year. Simultaneously, SailPoint rose dramatically in the Quadrant; Gartner praises it for its above-average identity analytics, IGA innovations, and a recent cloud-hosted service release. 

Interestingly, Omada crossed from the Challenger Quadrant to the Leaders Quadrant in 2019. In particular, Gartner singled out Omada’s go-to-market strategy improvements and its identity analytics capabilities as Leaders’ worthy.

How to Learn More 

For more on the 2019 Gartner Magic Quadrant for Identity Governance and Administration, check it out here. You can also check out our analysis of the Identity Governance market with our 2019 Buyer’s Guide. You can download it here

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