As a business owner, you probably manage hundreds of different online accounts. Best practices say you should have a unique password for each one! That's a lot to handle, but it is an essential rule that each and every member of your team needs to follow. A standalone password manager is a super useful tool to help with this… as long as you can get your team’s buy-in.
Let’s work through it together.
Why IT Rollouts Flop (It Isn’t About the Tech)
Most business password manager deployments (and indeed, any other new IT tool) fail because they ignore the human factor. If you just buy a bunch of licenses, send out an automated invite email, and tell your team they have 48 hours to comply, you'll face massive pushback.
Your employees are people, and if you make them feel like they are just another asset—like a piece of software or a laptop—they won't perform as well. Lock things down and enforce control, but do it in a way that ensures your people feel the technology is there to help them do their jobs, not micromanage them.
The truth is, your staff is already suffering from password fatigue. They are trying to memorize a dozen different logins just to do their daily tasks, or worse, they are quietly writing them down on sticky notes hidden under their keyboards. A corporate password manager shouldn't feel like a digital leash; it should feel like relief.
The Human-First Rollout
If you want to secure your company's credentials without making your team miserable, you need a plan that takes them by the hand. Here is the exact step-by-step strategy we use to ensure a smooth transition.
Give Them a Personal Stake First
Before you force employees to use a password manager strictly for company files, show them how it protects them. If your business uses an enterprise password manager, most of the time they include free personal or family accounts for employees, so you can take advantage of that.
Once an employee realizes how nice it is to never click "Forgot Password" on their personal banking or streaming accounts at home, they will naturally welcome the tool when they log in at the office.
Set Up Shared Vaults for Departments
Stop emailing passwords or texting logins around the office when two people need access to the same utility account.
Create shared collections or "vaults" inside the manager for specific departments. This way, when a password changes, it updates automatically for everyone in that department without anyone needing to see or type out the actual password. It eliminates the "Hey, what's the login for this again?" interruptions completely.
Clean Out the Browsers
Once your team is comfortable using the password manager, you need to handle one final cleanup step. You'll want to tell your web browsers to stop remembering your passwords and delete all the old ones they're storing. They are much safer in your new dedicated tool, anyway!
Here is how to do that on your machine right now:
In Google Chrome:
- Click the three-dot icon on the top right of your browser window and select Passwords and Autofill > Google Password Manager.
- Click on Settings in the left sidebar, and turn off "Offer to save passwords."
- To purge old ones, go to Settings > Privacy and security > Clear browsing data, check "Passwords and other sign-in data," set the range to All Time, and hit Clear data.
In Microsoft Edge:
- Select the three-dot menu icon on the top right and go to Settings.
- Click on Profiles > Passwords, and toggle off "Offer to save passwords."
- Then go to Privacy, search, and services in the left menu.
- Scroll down to Clear browsing data, click Choose what to clear, select only Passwords, set the time range to All Time, and click Clear Now.
This is Your Invitation to Safer Habits
You don't need to throw money at massive, restrictive security frameworks to protect your business. Sometimes it's just a matter of using the tools you have more effectively and bringing your team into the conversation.
If your business already has an enterprise tool you aren't fully using, or if you want guidance on choosing and deploying the right password manager for your team's size without the headaches, give us a call at (225) 336-0273, and we'll help you map out a rollout plan that your employees will actually appreciate.
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