The contract landed on the desk with a number that made the room go quiet. A multi-year deal for Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) wasn’t just another line item — it was a decisive move to secure every login, every transaction, every identity touchpoint from now until the future.
MFA has shifted from a security enhancement to a core infrastructure requirement. A single password no longer stands a chance against credential theft and automated attacks. Adding a second or third factor — something you know, something you have, something you are — crushes most intrusion attempts before they even begin.
A multi-year MFA agreement locks in both price stability and technical continuity. Over time, this matters. Short-term licensing can lead to gaps in protection when renewals fail or budgets shift. With a multi-year contract, you ensure constant enforcement of MFA policies across cloud platforms, internal apps, and customer-facing portals without interruption.
Evaluating vendors for a multi-year MFA deal means looking beyond compliance checklists. Scalability, latency under load, API availability, and failover strategies determine if your authentication flow can handle growth and user demand. You don’t want an MFA system that chokes during peak traffic or fails silently when an integration breaks.