TechOps Engineer at a financial services firm with 201-500 employees
Real User
Top 5
Apr 11, 2026
Kandji is used in our organization to manage all of our Mac devices. Kandji is an MDM tool which we use to manage our devices. For example, we set up our devices and directly enroll them in Kandji from the AVN, and then we can manage them from there. We can check the users' applications, redeploy applications on the user's MacBook, reset passwords, lock the MacBook, check disk encryptions, see all of our deployed applications, and deploy any policy or script we can run from a remote device. When I see Kandji for the first time and encounter an issue with a user's MacBook, I first go on Kandji to see all applications they have, how their disk encryptions appear, and which OS they are running. I check everything from there, and I also send OS updates from Kandji. If I go deeper into anything, creating a script to run on a device is very easy. The policies we have set up differ for US devices and new devices, as well as VPN connections. We have different teams where specific applications are sent, and this setup is very friendly and easy to use for us, making our work easier. We use Kandji in our organization as a public cloud solution.
My main use case for Kandji is to manage our MDM, all of our devices, the softwares that we distribute, and mainly everything regarding the Mac computers in the company. A specific example of how I use Kandji for managing my devices is that we created Blueprints first, but then they changed it to assignment map. We created an assignment map for all the MacBook computers, meaning we added the softwares that we want to distribute, all the configurations, all the settings, and everything. When there is an enrollment of the device, Liftoff installs all the basic softwares and settings. Kandji is a great tool with great support, and it is a really unique product that works perfectly.
IT Operation Manager at a retailer with 201-500 employees
Real User
Top 5
Apr 9, 2026
My main use case for Kandji is securing and controlling the endpoints. A specific example of how I use Kandji for securing and controlling endpoints is that we are trying to be compliant with NIS 2, so we are controlling the endpoints with endpoint security and controlling security. We know what apps we have and possess total control over the devices.
IT Support Technician at a tech vendor with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 5
Apr 7, 2026
My main use case for Kandji is device management, providing end-to-end device management from the moment we receive the device to the moment it is in a user's hands and after, for managing updates, deploying apps, and more. A specific example of how I used Kandji for device management involves multiple blueprints of devices: we had engineering spec devices, sales devices, and IT devices. Having a different blueprint for teams that needed their own customized available apps for them to download and install or for security management made it very easy to deploy the right tools, software, and permissions to the right devices. For example, engineers would have admin permissions and able to script the blueprint such that engineers got admin permissions, but nobody else did, made the deployment seamless. We deployed many scripts, and Kandji support was always amazing. They have been far and away the best to deal with, head and shoulders above all the companies that I have worked with to submit support tickets. Posting in chat or requesting a chat results in talking to an engineer within minutes; you cannot beat that.
IT support engineer l 1 at a tech services company with 501-1,000 employees
Real User
Top 20
Apr 6, 2026
My main use case for Kandji is supporting Mac devices.I use Kandji to support Mac devices by configuring them, deploying them, resetting remote support, app deployment, and security patch deployment.
My main use case for Kandji is that within my organization, I have a Mac as my work laptop, and Kandji is used for self-service platforms so that we can download tools, as well as secondly, automated updates of tools such as the browser or the macOS version, so it is a security platform that is used for Mac administration, of which I am an end user of it. A specific example of how I use Kandji in my day-to-day work is that rather than having to watch for updates to Google Chrome, the browser I use, or updates to the OS, Kandji notifies me of that, and then it comes with an automated pop-up so that I can upgrade to the latest version, allowing me to quickly update instead of needing to check for updates myself or potentially vet them from a security standpoint.
Kandji offers a comprehensive device management platform, ideal for managing Apple devices. Its intuitive interface and automation streamline device workflows, enhancing security and ease of use.Kandji stands out with its efficient administration of iOS and Mac devices, featuring a user-friendly interface, exceptional support, and reliable management capabilities. The intuitive blueprinting aids in remote device management, while automated functions streamline workflows. Users benefit from...
Kandji is used in our organization to manage all of our Mac devices. Kandji is an MDM tool which we use to manage our devices. For example, we set up our devices and directly enroll them in Kandji from the AVN, and then we can manage them from there. We can check the users' applications, redeploy applications on the user's MacBook, reset passwords, lock the MacBook, check disk encryptions, see all of our deployed applications, and deploy any policy or script we can run from a remote device. When I see Kandji for the first time and encounter an issue with a user's MacBook, I first go on Kandji to see all applications they have, how their disk encryptions appear, and which OS they are running. I check everything from there, and I also send OS updates from Kandji. If I go deeper into anything, creating a script to run on a device is very easy. The policies we have set up differ for US devices and new devices, as well as VPN connections. We have different teams where specific applications are sent, and this setup is very friendly and easy to use for us, making our work easier. We use Kandji in our organization as a public cloud solution.
My main use case for Kandji is to manage our MDM, all of our devices, the softwares that we distribute, and mainly everything regarding the Mac computers in the company. A specific example of how I use Kandji for managing my devices is that we created Blueprints first, but then they changed it to assignment map. We created an assignment map for all the MacBook computers, meaning we added the softwares that we want to distribute, all the configurations, all the settings, and everything. When there is an enrollment of the device, Liftoff installs all the basic softwares and settings. Kandji is a great tool with great support, and it is a really unique product that works perfectly.
My main use case for Kandji is securing and controlling the endpoints. A specific example of how I use Kandji for securing and controlling endpoints is that we are trying to be compliant with NIS 2, so we are controlling the endpoints with endpoint security and controlling security. We know what apps we have and possess total control over the devices.
My main use case for Kandji is device management, providing end-to-end device management from the moment we receive the device to the moment it is in a user's hands and after, for managing updates, deploying apps, and more. A specific example of how I used Kandji for device management involves multiple blueprints of devices: we had engineering spec devices, sales devices, and IT devices. Having a different blueprint for teams that needed their own customized available apps for them to download and install or for security management made it very easy to deploy the right tools, software, and permissions to the right devices. For example, engineers would have admin permissions and able to script the blueprint such that engineers got admin permissions, but nobody else did, made the deployment seamless. We deployed many scripts, and Kandji support was always amazing. They have been far and away the best to deal with, head and shoulders above all the companies that I have worked with to submit support tickets. Posting in chat or requesting a chat results in talking to an engineer within minutes; you cannot beat that.
My main use case for Kandji is supporting Mac devices.I use Kandji to support Mac devices by configuring them, deploying them, resetting remote support, app deployment, and security patch deployment.
My main use case for Kandji is that within my organization, I have a Mac as my work laptop, and Kandji is used for self-service platforms so that we can download tools, as well as secondly, automated updates of tools such as the browser or the macOS version, so it is a security platform that is used for Mac administration, of which I am an end user of it. A specific example of how I use Kandji in my day-to-day work is that rather than having to watch for updates to Google Chrome, the browser I use, or updates to the OS, Kandji notifies me of that, and then it comes with an automated pop-up so that I can upgrade to the latest version, allowing me to quickly update instead of needing to check for updates myself or potentially vet them from a security standpoint.
Kandji is mostly meant for the Apple ecosystem and Apple devices.