The top 5 takeaways from Omnissa ONE 2025 Las Vegas
- Last updated 09/22/2025
-
Omnissa ONE 2025 Las Vegas, our flagship end-user computing conference, just wrapped up and we are honored by the customers, community members, partners, and analysts that joined us.
We have already published a full range of detailed blog posts and press releases with announcements and updates, but we would like to share some more color on the event itself. So, here are the top five takeaways from Omnissa ONE 2025 Las Vegas.
1. The scope of Omnissa ONE
Last year at our first Omnissa ONE, we were excited to introduce our new brand to the world with a streamlined, one-day event. This year, Omnissa ONE was much broader and deeper. We had a 90-minute general session, 40 breakout sessions, a large expo hall, and countless other events for customers, partners, practitioners, and the community.
Bottom line, the feedback that I heard over and over again was that it was great to have so much content and so many people, all dedicated to end-user computing, all in one space for two and a half days.
2. The three key principles of the Omnissa platform
Omnissa CEO Shankar Iyer set the stage in our general session. He outlined today’s biggest challenges in EUC (fragmentation and AI); talked about the need for a platform approach; and shared how the autonomous workspace concept is now a reality. (Read “The platform imperative: From chaos to consolidation” for more from Shankar.)
Bharath Rangarajan, Chief Product Officer, shared our detailed approach to the Omnissa platform.
Of course, it’s still based the on the familiar Workspace ONE and Horizon product families; features our solutions for UEM, virtual apps and desktops, digital employee experience, and security and compliance; and is based on common platform services.
At Omnissa ONE, we went up a level and described the platform as grounded in three key principles: consolidation without compromise; an open ecosystem; and AI-driven core capabilities. And within consolidation without compromise, instead of just talking in terms of our products or solutions, we organized around jobs to be done. These are onboard any persona, manage any endpoint, deliver all apps, secure all touchpoints, and optimize all experiences.
For those that are familiar with how we have talked about the platform over the last few years, this shouldn’t be a huge departure. Rather, it acknowledges that many IT tasks leverage multiple parts of the Omnissa platform. Secondly, it elevates the core principles we have followed as we re-architected the platform.
(More on the architecture farther down; plus, you can learn more about these principles in Bharath’s blog, “From fragmentation to fruition: Why a platform approach wins.”)
3. Depth and breadth across all solutions and the ecosystem
The last year has brought an incredible number of product updates, and there were many standouts at Omnissa ONE.
Some of the most talked about updates were Windows Server management; same-day support for Apple operating system updates; support for Horizon on Nutanix AHV; Vulnerability Defense; DEX Playbooks and Quickflows; and App Volumes support for complete app lifecycle management on physical PCs.
There were plenty of other product updates, but it suffices to say that it was a productive year, and there was a lot to talk about at Omnissa ONE, no matter what your interest.
4. UEM modern architecture in the spotlight
Omnissa has been rolling out the modern architecture for UEM—or ModStack, as many call it—throughout the year. In fact, it was the catalyst for many of the big product updates we announced, and it is the reason why we talked about a new platform in the general session.
But there was one moment that was extra special. Chandana Nagaraj, the VP of Engineering who led the ModStack project, did an interview segment during the Omnissa ONE general session. Chandana shared deep insights into why and how ModStack was developed, what it means for customers, and how the engineering team evolved over the course of developing ModStack. It was a candid look at a part of the organization that isn’t always in the spotlight.
5. The next steps in the Omnissa AI journey
A year ago, Omnissa unveiled our four-part AI trust model: alert, assist, advise, and autonomous.
The alert and assist parts of the model are realized in our Insights and Guided Root Cause Analysis features in Omnissa Intelligence, which are both already available.
Omni – the AI chat assistant we announced last year – forms the advise part of our model. It’s going to be available soon. Omni uses an LLM-powered chat interface to query data in the Omnissa platform; search all of our documentation resources; and write scripts and sensors.
This year, we announced the next step—Omnissa AI agentic service. This will provide frameworks for creating complete workflows, using the extensive range of capabilities across the Omnissa platform. One key thing to note is that these agentic workflows are another capability that is enabled by all the work we put into the UEM architecture update.
Final words
We are just so excited to share all of our progress at our most ambitious event so far as Omnissa, and so grateful to everyone who came and enjoyed it. So, thank you!
These top 5 takeaways just scratch the surface of all the activity at Omnissa ONE, so head to the Omnissa blog to go deeper. We look forward to seeing many of you soon in Amsterdam and Tokyo for our Omnissa ONE events taking place in those cities.