Identity Governance for Beginners
Every company has a hidden problem it can't see: thousands of digital keys handed out to employees, contractors, and software robots, with no one keeping track of who has what, why they have it, or when it should have been taken away.
This book is the no-jargon starting point for understanding Identity Governance - the discipline that decides who should have access to what, and proves it later.
You don't need a computer science degree or a background in IT security to follow along. If you've ever lent a house key to a neighbor and asked for it back, you already understand the core logic. Using everyday analogies, real-world scenarios, and a cast of relatable characters navigating their first day, a department transfer, and a rushed offboarding, this book walks you from the absolute basics to a working, practical understanding of how identity governance actually functions inside real organizations.
Across 32 chapters, you'll learn:
What identity governance is, and how it differs from IAM, PAM, and basic system administration
The identity lifecycle: joiners, movers, leavers, and everything in between
How to assess an organization's current state and build the business case for change
Roles, role mining, and the difference between RBAC and ABAC
Provisioning, deprovisioning, and handling privileged and service accounts
Access certification campaigns, recertification, and remediation
Segregation of duties, toxic combinations, and least privilege
Preparing for and surviving an identity audit
How governance maps to NIST 800-53, ISO 27001, SOC 2, PCI DSS, HIPAA, SOX, CJIS, GDPR, and CMMC
KPIs, dashboards, and governance committees
The modern frontier: AI, machine identities, cloud, SaaS, Kubernetes, and Zero Trust
The final chapter is a practical field guide, complete with templates, checklists, and a 180-day roadmap you can start using immediately.
Whether you're new to cybersecurity, transitioning into GRC or IAM, or a manager who needs to finally understand what your security team keeps talking about, this book turns an intimidating enterprise topic into something you can explain to a coworker in an elevator ride.
The mystery ends here. Come learn how the digital world really decides who gets in