Creating transparency in your software assets to take measures to achieve compliance, control and cost savings, is what you as a SAM manager do on a daily base. Using the right SAM tool to get this insight, integrated with numerous of processes to support your daily tasks, are essential to grow in your SAM maturity level. Processes that are essential, indeed, but are very time-consuming as well, with always the risk of errors. What if you could automate all processes around license re-harvesting, your full software request cycle, cloud provisioning, device enrolment and many many more? 

During this webinar we will focus on:
- How you can optimise and automate your SAM processes
- How you can build a bridge between different organisational units using the same automated process solution
- How you can get a clear insight into the processes mentioned in the ISO/IEC 19770-1 standard for SAM

The House of SAM® offers organisations a systematic approach that is based on best practises, and is a visualisation of all processes needed according to the ISO/IEC 19770-1 standard for SAM. Just like a house, it needs to be built from the ground up, to ensure a solid foundation and structure to build further for the years to follow.

Presentors:
- Jeroen Frikken, Snow Software
- Martijn Braamskamp, Softline Solutions

Date & time:
- Thursday May 24th @ 10:30 CEST

If you have any questions reqarding the webinar  please contact us at [email protected]

Article 1

Today's workers use smartphones, tables and laptops from wherever they are - at home, on the move or in the office. Users are more flexible in the jobs they undertake - often crossing job roles and thus requiring software that pevious generations would never have touched. But how is it possible to balance these growing user demands and at the same tiem ensure the company is not exposed to license liability?

Article 2

Today's workers use smartphones, tables and laptops from wherever they are - at home, on the move or in the office. Users are more flexible in the jobs they undertake - often crossing job roles and thus requiring software that pevious generations would never have touched. But how is it possible to balance these growing user demands and at the same tiem ensure the company is not exposed to license liability?

Article 3

Today's workers use smartphones, tables and laptops from wherever they are - at home, on the move or in the office. Users are more flexible in the jobs they undertake - often crossing job roles and thus requiring software that pevious generations would never have touched. But how is it possible to balance these growing user demands and at the same tiem ensure the company is not exposed to license liability?

Article 4

Today's workers use smartphones, tables and laptops from wherever they are - at home, on the move or in the office. Users are more flexible in the jobs they undertake - often crossing job roles and thus requiring software that pevious generations would never have touched. But how is it possible to balance these growing user demands and at the same tiem ensure the company is not exposed to license liability?

Article 5

Today's workers use smartphones, tables and laptops from wherever they are - at home, on the move or in the office. Users are more flexible in the jobs they undertake - often crossing job roles and thus requiring software that pevious generations would never have touched. But how is it possible to balance these growing user demands and at the same tiem ensure the company is not exposed to license liability?

Article 6

Today's workers use smartphones, tables and laptops from wherever they are - at home, on the move or in the office. Users are more flexible in the jobs they undertake - often crossing job roles and thus requiring software that pevious generations would never have touched. But how is it possible to balance these growing user demands and at the same tiem ensure the company is not exposed to license liability?

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