Single Sign-On
Single Sign-On is a infrastructure term PRO71 uses to explain delivery context and decision quality in practical language.
Single Sign-On is a infrastructure term PRO71 uses to explain delivery context and decision quality in practical language.
Single Sign-On is a practical term that helps PRO71 describe how a system, method, control, or business concept works in delivery. We define it in an implementation context so buyers and teams can connect the term to real decisions rather than abstract jargon.
Single Sign-On is a practical term that helps PRO71 describe how a system, method, control, or business concept works in delivery. We define it in an implementation context so buyers and teams can connect the term to real decisions rather than abstract jargon.
Did You Know
Single Sign-On is most useful when it is tied to one real decision, not explained as an isolated definition.
Common Misconceptions
Single Sign-On is just a buzzword.
Single Sign-On matters only to technical teams.
In PRO71 work, Single Sign-On matters when teams need to understand how the concept changes scope, quality, risk, or operating outcomes. We use the term to reduce ambiguity between business stakeholders and delivery teams.
Questions teams ask before they start
What does Single Sign-On mean in practice?
In practice, Single Sign-On matters when it changes how a service is scoped, governed, implemented, or measured.
Why does PRO71 define Single Sign-On on the site?
We define Single Sign-On so buyers and teams can connect the term to delivery context, not just textbook language.
Need help with Single Sign-On? Let's talk
If this term is tied to an active initiative, we can connect it to the right service, technology, and delivery path.
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