How to operationalize Zero Trust security across the digital workspace
- Last updated 06/29/2026
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As federal agencies and enterprise organizations continue modernizing their digital environments, one thing has become clear: security can no longer operate as a separate layer bolted onto the workspace. It must be built directly into how users access applications, how devices are evaluated, how risk is assessed, and how remediation is executed in real time.
That’s the promise behind Zero Trust.
But for many IT and security teams, the challenge is no longer understanding the principles of Zero Trust. The challenge is how to operationalize them.
Users access applications from managed and unmanaged devices. Applications span SaaS, web, virtual, and native environments. At the same time, organizations are expected to continuously assess posture, reduce vulnerabilities faster, and demonstrate measurable progress in reducing risk.
That’s exactly what we’ll be discussing in our upcoming webinar on July 16th focused on operationalizing security.
And it starts with access.
Not every application requires the same delivery or access model. Some applications may be best delivered through a browser. Others may require virtualized access or additional isolation controls. The ability to choose the appropriate access method based on user context, device posture, location, and risk is critical to balancing security with usability.
By combining access controls, posture assessment, risk intelligence, and automation, organizations can move beyond static policies and continuously evaluate access decisions based on changing conditions. Rather than relying solely on one-time authentication events, organizations can adapt security controls in real time as risk changes.
Equally important is understanding what “good” looks like in the environment.
Without a clearly defined desired state for devices, applications, and security posture, security becomes reactive. Teams spend their time responding to alerts rather than proactively reducing risk.
During the session, we’ll discuss how organizations can define desired state configurations, continuously assess posture and compliance, identify drift, and prioritize remediation efforts using real-time risk and vulnerability data.
This shift toward risk-based remediation is increasingly important.
Security teams cannot patch everything immediately. Resources are limited, and not every vulnerability presents the same level of risk. Understanding which vulnerabilities are actively exploitable, which devices are exposed, and which users or applications are most critical allows organizations to focus efforts where they can have the greatest impact.
At the same time, security cannot come at the expense of user experience.
Employees expect seamless access across devices and locations, while organizations still need strong protections behind the scenes. By leveraging contextual signals, adaptive policies, automated posture checks, and integrations across the broader security ecosystem, organizations can reduce friction while strengthening security.
That operational integration is what transforms Zero Trust from a framework into a working strategy.
In this webinar, we’ll discuss how the Omnissa platform helps organizations operationalize security across access, posture management, risk assessment, and vulnerability remediation while integrating with existing security investments and workflows.
Zero Trust isn’t a product or a policy. It’s an operational model. Success depends on an organization’s ability to continuously evaluate trust, prioritize risk, and automate response across users, devices, and applications.
Join us as we explore practical approaches for making that shift and discuss how organizations can operationalize security without sacrificing the employee experience. Register here.