August 31, 2020 By Martijn Loderus 2 min read

Consumer identity and access management (CIAM) is the connective technology between consumers and brands. CIAM is an important consideration when navigating routes to market for your products and services. A consumer’s journey navigating solutions to problems is where you can leverage the CIAM building blocks — capture, engage, manage and administration — for more personalized campaigns and direct consumer engagement. Read on to learn the meaning and drivers of these building blocks.

Explore CIAM for your organization

CIAM vs IAM

CIAM has a different objective compared to traditional workforce identity and access management (IAM) solutions. It aims to bring in as many consumers as possible while authenticating them in an engaging and personal manner.

Where traditional IAM is all about access control, CIAM is geared toward consumer data capture and engagement. CIAM opens the door to more personalized offers through progressive profiling and secure interactions with consumers — from discovery to online shopping to brand advocacy. That leads us to the building blocks of CIAM.

The Building Blocks of CIAM

Capture: Every business will need to capture users’ identities and profiles to engage with them in a personal manner. This is an important step in enticing unknown users to provide information and helps the organization establish a relationship with the consumer.

Engage: At this stage, the organization must balance security and experience to connect with consumers on a deeper level. Your stakeholders will want to look at improving the user experience through social login and single sign-on and employ multifactor authentication (MFA) to protect personally identifiable information (PII).

Manage: This building block is an important consideration as it relates to managing PII and sensitive data for consumers. CIAM solutions can help the enterprise deliver self-serviced profile and consent management.

Administration: Finally, administration, or admin, is an important aspect of the operations and maintenance of a CIAM platform. IT managers are most concerned with this area as it relates to provisioning new web applications and user accounts. In other words, IT managers will be most concerned with this building block because it deals with how consumer profiles are migrated, imported or exported throughout the business environment. The IT team will need to put relevant policy and regulatory controls in place.

Different Uses for Different People

Each of these building blocks is a key element for many different stakeholders within the company. A chief marketing officer may be primarily concerned with how to capture and engage the consumer to shift toward a brand loyalist. A security leader may be more concerned with the security management and administration of the data and where the identity profiles are stored.

Each of the building blocks above provides a framework in which to think about the use cases and entry points into CIAM. These entry points can provide an organization with the right lens and perspective to drive toward success.

More from Identity & Access

Taking the complexity out of identity solutions for hybrid environments

4 min read - For the past two decades, businesses have been making significant investments to consolidate their identity and access management (IAM) platforms and directories to manage user identities in one place. However, the hybrid nature of the cloud has led many to realize that this ultimate goal is a fantasy. Instead, businesses must learn how to consistently and effectively manage user identities across multiple IAM platforms and directories. As cloud migration and digital transformation accelerate at a dizzying pace, enterprises are left…

“Authorized” to break in: Adversaries use valid credentials to compromise cloud environments

4 min read - Overprivileged plaintext credentials left on display in 33% of X-Force adversary simulations Adversaries are constantly seeking to improve their productivity margins, but new data from IBM X-Force suggests they aren’t exclusively leaning on sophistication to do so. Simple yet reliable tactics that offer ease of use and often direct access to privileged environments are still heavily relied upon. Today X-Force released the 2023 Cloud Threat Landscape Report, detailing common trends and top threats observed against cloud environments over the past…

Artificial intelligence threats in identity management

4 min read - The 2023 Identity Security Threat Landscape Report from CyberArk identified some valuable insights. 2,300 security professionals surveyed responded with some sobering figures: 68% are concerned about insider threats from employee layoffs and churn 99% expect some type of identity compromise driven by financial cutbacks, geopolitical factors, cloud applications and hybrid work environments 74% are concerned about confidential data loss through employees, ex-employees and third-party vendors. Additionally, many feel digital identity proliferation is on the rise and the attack surface is…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today