Enterprises are embedding identity governance into Zero Trust and AI operations, but most still measure activity more easily than risk reduction, leaving leaders confident without clear proof of control effectiveness.
Findings from EMA’s Navigating the Identity Crisis
Organizations still treat identity governance as critical, but breach risk concentrates when Identity Governance and Administration programs stall under integration gaps, complexity, and poor scalability. This blog argues that sustainable governance depends on an operating model that keeps humans accountable for AI-assisted decisions, lets control requirements shape tool choice, and matches deployment architecture to regulatory and ownership needs.
Eighty-seven percent of organizations consider identity governance very important. Despite this, thirty percent have abandoned or scaled back IGA or Zero Trust programs. Of those that scaled back, 56.4% experienced an identity-related breach in the past year, against 18.7% of those that did not. Stalled governance and elevated breach incidence are tightly correlated in the data.
EMA’s Navigating the Identity Crisis examines why identity governance programs stall and what the consequences are for organizations that let them. The findings draw on a January 2026 survey of 135 IT decision-makers and practitioners at enterprises with 750 or more employees.
Strategic alignment is universal. More than half of organizations rank improving security posture as their single most important priority for investing in Identity Governance and Administration (IGA), ahead of compliance, hybrid environment support, and workflow automation. IGA Programs are now justified by what they prevent, not by what they document.
Operational execution is breaking. The 30% who have scaled back have not lost strategic conviction. They have run into tools that do not integrate, systems that do not scale, and processes overwhelmed by complexity. The IGA test has shifted: a program is now measured by whether it can be sustained, not by whether it can be deployed.
The sections that follow examine why programs stall, the risk that accumulates when they do, and what the operating model that sustains governance looks like.
The data is consistent: when IGA programs fail, they fail on execution, not intent.
Integration with existing systems is the most-cited IGA challenge, named by 60.7% of organizations, followed by complexity of use at 53.3%. Nearly two-thirds find scaling their current solution difficult, with almost a quarter calling it the single hardest aspect of their implementation. These are not strategic failures, they are operational ones.
Switching vendors does not solve this. The 12.6% of organizations who have already switched IGA vendors in the past two years due to dissatisfaction, and the 3.7% planning to will not remedy this unless the replacement also changes the integration model, governance design, and operating burden that produced the dissatisfaction.
Forty-three percent of EMA respondents name overprovisioning and privilege creep as the most pressing risk facing their organization, more than double the share who cite insider threats. Access accumulates faster than reviews catch it, roles expand past their original boundaries, and non-human identities multiply across environments without consistent ownership. This is access drift: the widening gap between the access an identity has and the access it needs. The longer a program sits in scaled-back mode, the more drift compounds.
Whether legacy IGA models need to change is no longer in dispute. 59.3% of organizations are actively transitioning from legacy or homegrown systems, 28.9% have completed the transition, and only 2.2% have no plans to move. The question is whether those transitions close the gaps that caused governance to stall in the first place. Three shifts in the operating model determine whether they do.
Across the EMA findings, the programs that have not stalled share three properties: they pair AI capability with human oversight, they let security and control requirements drive tool selection, and they choose deployment architectures that fit those requirements. These are choices about how the program is built and run, not about what technology was bought, and they are the choices that will separate programs that sustain from those that stall.
EMA’s Navigating the Identity Crisis contains the full data behind these findings, the governance principles informing them, and the benchmark organizations can use to position their own programs against peers.
For organizations whose control requirements include tenant ownership, data residency, or change-control authority, deployment architecture is part of the governance decision. Omada Identity Cloud Private delivers cloud-native identity governance inside the organization’s own cloud tenant, for the regulated and sovereignty-constrained segment the EMA data describes. To see what continuous, integrated identity governance with full tenant ownership looks like in practice, schedule a conversation with Omada.
FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
EMA’s findings show that identity governance is widely seen as essential, with 87% of organizations calling it very important. The research also shows that Identity Governance and Administration (IGA) investment is now driven mainly by security posture, which places prevention ahead of compliance, hybrid support, and workflow automation.
The data links scaled-back governance programs with much higher breach incidence. Among organizations that reduced IGA or Zero Trust efforts, 56.4% experienced an identity-related breach in the past year, compared with 18.7% of those that did not, which suggests that stalled governance allows exposure to build over time.
The report says these programs usually stall because execution breaks down, not because strategy loses support. Organizations most often cite poor integration with existing systems, complexity of use, and difficulty scaling, which means the real test of IGA is whether it can be sustained in daily operations.
The findings point to overprovisioning and privilege creep as the most pressing risks, ahead of insider threats. Access rights accumulate faster than reviews can correct them, roles expand beyond their original scope, and non-human identities grow across environments without consistent ownership, creating ongoing access drift.
The article says sustainable programs share three traits. They use artificial intelligence (AI) to reduce manual work while keeping humans accountable for decisions, let security and control requirements guide tool choice, and choose deployment models that match needs such as tenant ownership, data residency, and change-control authority.
FEATURED RESOURCES
Enterprises are embedding identity governance into Zero Trust and AI operations, but most still measure activity more easily than risk reduction, leaving leaders confident without clear proof of control effectiveness.
This blog explores how organizations can govern AI agents through defined authority, runtime oversight, and auditability.
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