What's the difference between a managed profile and a managed browser?

Google offers different types of management to different types of users. There are two primary types of management which provide different levels of control:

  • Managed profile:

    • Requires a single account managed by your organization.

    • The user must be signed in.

    • Typically used for both unmanaged and managed personally-owned devices (BYOD). 

    • All other accounts (personal, guest, incognito) are not visible to the admin or available for enforcement.

  • Managed browser:

    • Requires deployment of an enrollment token managed by your organization.

    • The user does not have to be signed in.

    • Typically used in corporate-owned devices.

    • All accounts (corporate, personal, guest, incognito) are visible to the admin and available for enforcement.

Benefits of a managed profile

  • Facilitates remote working from a personal device. Users can access sensitive company data and applications from their personal devices using an issued corporate account with a separate work profile, while personal profiles are untouched.
  • Provides a clear separation between a managed work profile and a user's personal profile. This ensures flexibility and user privacy as each profile has its own bookmarks, history, extensions, passwords, and settings.
  • The user manages everything on their device for all profiles except for the work profile.
  • Admins can apply all required policies and security browser enforcements and remote commands to the user's work profile.
  • All Chrome data can be moved from device to device with user sign-in.

Benefits of a managed browser

  • Provides centralized control and management of all Chrome browser settings and policies, ensuring consistency and compliance across the organization.
  • The organization manages everything on the device such as settings, bookmarks, history, and extensions for all profiles.
  • Admins can control how users use Chrome without requiring them to sign in. They can:
    • Manage various settings such as, sign-in controls, installed apps and extensions, security, and network configurations.
    • Apply policies and security browser enforcements to all user profiles.
    • Set up or restrict certain features,
    • Monitor activity.
    • Apply remote commands to any profile on the managed device.
  • Data collection and reporting on browser usage provides valuable insights for monitoring and analyzing trends.

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