Total Economic Impact

The Total Economic Impact™ Of Island

Cost Savings And Business Benefits Enabled By Island

A FORRESTER TOTAL ECONOMIC IMPACT STUDY COMMISSIONED BY ISLAND, NOVEMBER 2025

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Total Economic Impact

The Total Economic Impact™ Of Island

Cost Savings And Business Benefits Enabled By Island

A FORRESTER TOTAL ECONOMIC IMPACT STUDY COMMISSIONED BY ISLAND, NOVEMBER 2025

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Executive Summary

Modern enterprises must balance several significant and often competing priorities, including enabling end users to work remotely across devices and SaaS applications, addressing evolving cybersecurity threats, adopting new AI capabilities, and managing a growing pile of technical debt. Adding to the complexity, knowledge workers are increasingly leveraging the browser as the central workspace from which they access their business applications. Given this new working paradigm, Forrester advocates investing in an enterprise browser technology to streamline IT controls and reduce complexity, consolidate security and remote access functions, reduce the risk of security threats, and boost user productivity.1

Island is an enterprise browser that can help organizations consolidate and enhance security, streamline IT management, and bolster workforce productivity by embedding critical controls and capabilities directly into the browsing experience. It integrates browser-based security and policy management, unmanaged device support, and built-in productivity and AI features to enable and augment browser-based workflows.

Island commissioned Forrester Consulting to conduct a Total Economic Impact™ (TEI) study and examine the potential return on investment (ROI) enterprises may realize by deploying Island.2 The purpose of this study is to provide readers with a framework to evaluate the potential financial impact of Island on their organizations.

344%

Return on investment (ROI)

 

To better understand the benefits, costs, and risks associated with this investment, Forrester interviewed four decision-makers with experience using Island. For the purposes of this study, Forrester aggregated the experiences of the interviewees and combined the results into a single composite organization, which operates globally with $500 million in annual revenue and 5,000 FTEs, including 1,000 corporate employees, 3,500 agents, and 500 contractors.

Interviewees said that prior to using Island, their organizations leveraged multiple browsers, extensions, and third-party security and remote access tools. However, these fragmented tools left security gaps, overburdened IT teams, and created unnecessary workflow bottlenecks. These issues compounded, ultimately increasing technology costs, amplifying risks, and hampering user productivity.

After the investment in Island, the interviewees’ organizations successfully consolidated numerous browser, security, and remote access tools with less comprehensive or redundant functionality. Key results from the investment include operational IT efficiencies, enhanced security and controls, technology cost savings, and improved productivity.

Key Findings

Quantified benefits. Three-year, risk-adjusted present value (PV) quantified benefits for the composite organization include:

  • Time savings of 12 minutes per day using Island’s productivity and AI tools. Island can enhance employee productivity by embedding tools directly into the browser that simplify daily workflows. Features like VPN-less access, password management, clipboard functionality, and home page customization can reduce the time the composite’s employees spend searching for applications or reentering repetitive information. Additionally, Island’s AI assistant enables employees to summarize content, query for answers, and improve communication tone quickly, saving valuable minutes on routine tasks. Over three years, these cumulative time savings result in significant productivity gains, amounting to $5.1 million for the composite organization.

  • Legacy technology cost savings of more than $1 million per year. By reducing or replacing legacy endpoint security and remote access tools such as virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI), VPNs, Zero Trust network access (ZTNA)/ secure access service edge (SASE), and endpoint data loss prevention (DLP) solutions, the composite organization eliminates redundant costs associated with software and hardware licensing. Additionally, Island enables the organization to expand its bring-your-own-device (BYOD) program to contractors, reducing the need to provide and replace corporate-issued laptops. These consolidated savings amount to $3.1 million over three years.

  • Security risk exposure reduction by up to 90%. Embedding critical controls within the browser, including device fingerprinting, IP allowlisting, and granular DLP policies, strengthens the composite organization’s security posture. These features help mitigate risks such as credential theft, phishing, and malicious browser extensions while ensuring compliance across devices and endpoints. By reducing the likelihood of security breaches and unauthorized data exposure, the composite organization avoids potential costs related to remediation, penalties, and lost trust, totaling $800,000 over three years.

  • Latency reduction of 300 milliseconds per web request. The composite optimizes its browsing performance by removing latency caused by additional security agents, unnecessary web traffic, inefficient browser extensions, and ad-ridden content delivery network overhead. Employees experience faster uploads, downloads, and web requests, allowing them to complete tasks more efficiently. The resulting time savings equal $515,000 over three years.

  • Access control management streamlined by 50% per access policy. Island simplifies the composite’s IT workflows by automating user provisioning and centralizing access control policies. IT teams can set permissions and create granular policies for individuals, departments, or clients in half the time compared to their previous environments. This streamlined process reduces the complexity of managing multiple access control tools, freeing IT resources to focus on higher-value strategic initiatives. Over three years, these efficiencies generate $121,000 for the composite organization.

Unquantified benefits. Benefits that provide value for the composite organization but are not quantified for this study include:

  • Simplified vendor management. In addition to reducing technology costs, Island also reduces the complexity of managing multiple security and productivity tools by centralizing key functionalities within its enterprise browser.

Flexibility. Customers might adopt Island and later realize additional uses and business opportunities, including:

  • Easier scaling for future growth. Island’s centralized management and flexible deployment model position organizations to scale effectively as their workforces grow or as they onboard new contractors.

Costs. Three-year, risk-adjusted PV costs for the composite organization include:

  • Software licensing costs of $1.6 million. The composite organization incurs annual licensing costs for Island’s enterprise secure browser and optional add-ons, Island Private Access (IPA), and Dedicated IP. These add-ons expand functionality by enabling secure access to on-prem resources and IP allowlisting for SaaS applications.

  • Internal deployment and administration costs of $545,000. IT engineers and administrators dedicate time to onboard users, train employees, and create documentation to support adoption. Although the composite onboards most users during the first year, it incurs incremental costs in Years 2 and 3 due to additional onboarding efforts for new users.

  • Configurations for access policies costs of $67,000. During the initial implementation phase, the composite organization invests engineering hours to configure access policies tailored to organizational needs. These upfront costs include creating and testing granular rules, group-based permissions, and integrations with existing identity and access management systems.

The financial analysis that is based on the interviews found that a composite organization experiences benefits of $9.7 million over three years versus costs of $2.2 million, adding up to a net present value (NPV) of $7.5 million and an ROI of 344%.

“By consolidating multiple tools into a single browser with Island, we’ve reduced costs, strengthened our security, and empowered our workforce. It’s a solution that’s truly delivering value across the board.”

CIO and CISO, higher education

Key Statistics

344%

Return on investment (ROI) 

$9.7M

Benefits PV 

$7.5M

Net present value (NPV) 

Benefits (Three-Year)

[CHART DIV CONTAINER]
Productivity boost from AI and workflow automation Legacy software and hardware cost-savings Strengthened security Reduced latency Streamlined access control management

 Market Overview

Enterprise Browsers

Forrester defines the secure enterprise browser as an emerging solution that “adds advanced controls to the web experience, providing better security and management of software as a service and internal web application delivery than traditional browsers.”3 Enterprise browsers are becoming strategic investments for IT and security leaders, as they address multiple pain points simultaneously. Traditional browsers, even those with centralized policy controls, lack the depth of security features and backend services enterprise browsers offer. For example, enterprise browsers can enforce data protection policies directly within the browser, such as masking sensitive information, controlling downloads, and preventing unauthorized access — capabilities that are increasingly critical in environments with diverse endpoints and hybrid workforces.4

Additionally, enterprise browsers provide VPN-free private access to internal applications while integrating seamlessly into broader security frameworks, including DLP, encryption, and persistent data control technologies. This convergence of capabilities reduces complexity, improves visibility, and enhances operational efficiency, making enterprise browsers a priority spend area for organizations looking to modernize their IT security stacks.5

Further adding to the demand for these capabilities, people are increasingly performing knowledge work on a browser. In Forrester’s Workforce Survey, 2023, nearly half of respondents (49%) could perform all functions of their work within a web browser and another 34% could perform the majority of their work via a browser.6

“How much of your work can be accomplished on your primary computer web browser?”
 

[CHART DIV CONTAINER]
All of my work The majority of my work, but some apps I need to run locally Some of my work, but most of it is completed locally

Base: 4,976 respondents employed full time or part time who use a computer at least weekly for work purposes
Source: Forrester’s Workforce Survey, 2023

These workers are also increasingly content with using a browser for work. Longitudinal data from the same survey shows that satisfaction levels while accessing internal applications has been steadily increasing, from 66% in 2019 to 77% in 2023.7

“Thinking about using the computer to access the employee intranet or company portal for work, please indicate your level of satisfaction with its overall ability to meet your needs in your job.”

[CHART DIV CONTAINER]
2019 2020 2021 2022 2023

Note: Showing responses 4 and 5 on a scale of 1 (“Not at all satisfied”) to 5 (“Very satisfied”)
Base: Variable global information workers who use the employee intranet on a computer at least weekly
Source: Forrester’s Workforce Surveys, 2019 to 2023

As organizations increasingly embrace hybrid work, BYOD, and cloud-based applications, the enterprise browser space will continue to mature and reach widespread adoption, becoming a cornerstone of the broader Zero Trust and data security ecosystem. Solutions that continue to evolve and address IT, security, and business pain points during this transition will set the new paradigm for browser-based work.

The Island Customer Journey

Drivers leading to the Island investment
Interviews
Role Industry Revenue Employees
CIO and CISO Higher education Less than $250M Fewer than 1,000
CISO Insurance $250M to $500M 1,000 to 2,000
CTO Business process outsourcing $250M to $500M 1,000 to 2,000
CISO Retail $1B+ 8,000+
Key Challenges

Before adopting Island, interviewees described a fragmented IT environment that relied on multiple third-party solutions, extensions, and browsers to enable secure work in a distributed environment. These tools added complexity and costs while failing to fully address key security and productivity needs. Interviewees noted how their organizations struggled with common challenges, including:

  • Spiraling technology costs. Interviewees described how relying on separate tools for endpoint security, remote access, and DLP drove up costs, especially as their organizations grew. IT teams struggled to justify the rising expenses associated with maintaining overlapping solutions, which drained resources from other strategic initiatives. The CISO at a retail organization noted, “We were managing multiple tools for security and remote access, and the licensing costs alone were becoming unsustainable.”

  • Complexity and inefficiencies managing multiple tools. Managing a siloed and disparate technology stack required IT teams to juggle multiple vendors, tools, and licensing agreements, leading to higher administrative overhead and slower response times. For example, configuring access policies often involved manual setups across different systems, consuming valuable engineering hours and delaying implementation. The CTO at a business process outsourcing firm noted, “We had to coordinate across multiple vendors just to enforce simple access policies, and the time and effort required slowed down operations.”

  • Insufficient security controls. Legacy tools struggled to fully address risks such as phishing, credential theft, and data exfiltration, particularly on unmanaged devices. Interviewees noted that it was difficult to secure BYOD environments without issuing corporate hardware, and stolen credentials frequently posed threats due to limited device-level authentication.

  • Productivity bottlenecks. Legacy solutions introduced latency that slowed uploads, downloads, and web requests, frustrating employees and reducing efficiency. Additionally, tools like VPNs caused frequent connection drops, forcing employees to log in repeatedly, which disrupted workflows and wasted time. The CIO and CISO at a higher education organization shared, “Whether it was waiting on slow web requests or dealing with connection issues, employees were losing valuable time every day due to inefficiencies in our legacy tools.”

  • Limited visibility into user activity. IT teams lacked transparency into where threats were coming from, which sites employees were accessing, and what they needed to block or allow. Interviewees noted that legacy tools provided incomplete views of user behavior, which made it difficult to identify risky activity or enforce policies effectively. The CIO and CISO at a higher education organization shared: “Island gave us visibility into what sites users were visiting and where risks were coming from. This allowed us to block harmful activity while enabling legitimate workflows and ensuring compliance.”

Solution Requirements

The interviewees searched for a solution that could:

  • Consolidate multiple endpoint security and remote access tools.

  • Provide robust security features.

  • Streamline user onboarding and access management.

  • Enhance employee productivity.

“We needed a solution that could simplify our technology stack, strengthen security across all endpoints, and improve workflows for employees. Island offered us a way to address multiple priorities in a single platform.”

CISO, retail

Composite Organization

Based on the interviews, Forrester constructed a TEI framework, a composite company, and an ROI analysis that illustrates the areas financially affected. The composite organization is representative of the interviewees’ organizations, and it is used to present the aggregate financial analysis in the next section. The composite organization has the following characteristics:

  • Description of composite. The $500 million organization provides customer support, sales, and administrative functions to its diverse client base. Headquartered in North America with global operations, it employs 5,000 FTEs, including 1,000 corporate employees, 3,500 customer service agents, and 500 contractors. Before adopting Island, the organization relied on a fragmented technology stack, including multiple browsers with extensions and distinct VDI, DLP, VPN, and ZTNA/SASE solutions, which added complexity and costs to its operations.

  • Deployment characteristics. The composite organization deploys Island across the enterprise in three distinct phases, each spanning one year. Phase one includes agents, contractors, and 100 IT employees. Phase two includes an additional 450 corporate employees in departments that handle sensitive data, such as HR and finance. Finally, phase three deploys Island to the remainder of the organization, which includes 450 corporate employees working in departments such as marketing and sales.

 KEY ASSUMPTIONS

  • $500 million in annual revenue

  • 125 unique access policies

  • 1,000 corporate employees

  • 3,500 agents

  • 500 contractors

Analysis Of Benefits

Quantified benefit data as applied to the composite
Total Benefits
Ref. Benefit Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total Present Value
Atr Productivity boost from AI and workflow automation $1,876,160 $2,082,080 $2,288,000 $6,246,240 $5,145,336
Btr Legacy software and hardware cost savings $1,182,600 $1,260,360 $1,308,960 $3,751,920 $3,100,152
Ctr Strengthened security $320,045 $320,045 $320,045 $960,135 $795,905
Dtr Reduced latency $187,616 $208,208 $228,800 $624,624 $514,534
Etr Streamlined access control management $48,708 $48,708 $48,708 $146,124 $121,130
  Total benefits (risk-adjusted) $3,615,129 $3,919,401 $4,194,513 $11,729,043 $9,677,057
Productivity Boost From AI And Workflow Automation

Evidence and data. Interviewees consistently reported that Island’s embedded productivity tools, such as VPN-less access, clipboard functionality, home page customization, password management, and AI assistant, significantly streamlined workflows and saved employees time on routine tasks. Employees leveraged the clipboard feature to input preprogrammed information quickly and eliminated the need to retype common text, while the password manager simplified login processes and reduced downtime caused by forgotten credentials. Additionally, IT teams customized Island’s home page to centralize access to frequently used applications, enabling employees to organize and launch their work environments frictionlessly. Finally, users leveraged the built-in AI assistant to find solutions quickly, summarize content, and improve communications.

  • The CIO and CISO at a higher education organization noted, “Since rolling out Island, agents have started using the clipboard feature thousands of times a day, reducing repetitive typing and improving workflow speeds.”

  • The CISO at a retail organization stated, “Employees save 5 to 10 minutes per day just by not having to log into the VPN or deal with dropped connections.”

  • The CISO at an insurance company said, “The home page provides a one-stop shop for all [employees’] apps, saving time compared to hunting through bookmarks or disparate systems.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes the following about the composite organization:

  • In Year 1, 4,100 employees use Island. The user base grows to 4,550 in Year 2 and 5,000 in Year 3.

  • Time saved due to productivity gains translates into hours saved per year, which the composite recaptures at a productivity rate of 25%.

Risks. Other organizations may experience varying results depending on the following factors:

  • User adoption may vary across departments, with some employees preferring legacy workflows over Island’s productivity features.

  • Initial training and onboarding may temporarily reduce productivity until employees become familiar with the platform’s features.

  • The extent of time savings could depend on the complexity of tasks performed by different user groups, with some workflows benefiting more than others.

Results. To account for these risks, Forrester adjusted this benefit downward by 20%, yielding a three-year, risk-adjusted total PV (discounted at 10%) of $5.1 million.

12 minutes

Daily time savings per user

Productivity Boost From AI And Workflow Automation
Ref. Metric Source Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
A1 Island users Composite 4,100 4,550 5,000
A2 Time saved per day by leveraging Island AI and workflow automation tools per user (hours) Interviews 0.20 0.20 0.20
A3 Workdays TEI standard 260 260 260
A4 Total user time saved by leveraging Island AI and workflow automation tools (hours) A1*A2*A3 213,200 236,600 260,000
A5 Average fully burdened hourly rate for an FTE TEI standard $44 $44 $44
A6 Productivity recapture TEI standard 25% 25% 25%
At Productivity boost from AI and workflow automation A4*A5*A6 $2,345,200 $2,602,600 $2,860,000
  Risk adjustment ↓20%      
Atr Productivity boost from AI and workflow automation (risk-adjusted)   $1,876,160 $2,082,080 $2,288,000
Three-year total: $6,246,240 Three-year present value: $5,145,336
Legacy Software And Hardware Cost Savings

Evidence and data. Interviewees highlighted how Island’s comprehensive functionality enabled their organizations to reduce reliance on multiple endpoint security and remote access solutions, leading to significant cost savings. By replacing legacy VDI, DLP, VPN, and ZTNA/SASE tools, interviewees’ organizations streamlined their technology stacks and eliminated substantial licensing costs. Additionally, Island’s BYOD capabilities allowed contractors to use their own hardware, reducing the need for hardware refreshes.

  • The CISO at a retail organization noted, “We’re actually looking to replace VDI, ZTNA, VPN, and data security solutions altogether — or at least scale them down significantly — since we now have Island handling much of that workload.”

  • The CIO and CISO at a higher education organization shared, “We eliminated almost all of our VPN licenses and scaled back our planned purchase of DLP licenses by rolling those capabilities into Island.”

  • The CISO at an insurance organization stated, “Island’s BYOD model reduced our need to provision corporate laptops for contractors, saving thousands in hardware costs annually.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes the composite organization replaces licenses for the following users:

  • VDI: Only contractors who previously worked on unmanaged corporate devices before Island.

  • DLP: Phase two corporate employees, agents, and contractors. IT teams still retain their DLP licenses for redundancy and specialized use cases.

  • VPN: All non-IT corporate employees. IT teams still retain both VPN and ZTNA licenses for redundancy and specialized use cases.

Risks. Other organizations may experience varying results depending on the following factors:

  • Some organizations may continue to require legacy tools for specific use cases, limiting the extent of savings realization.

  • Organizations may face resistance from stakeholders accustomed to legacy tools, delaying adoption and full savings realization.

Results. To account for these risks, Forrester adjusted this benefit downward by 10%, yielding a three-year, risk-adjusted total PV (discounted at 10%) of $3.1 million.

More than $1 million

Annual savings for reduced or replaced technology

“Island replaced multiple legacy tools, including our DLP solution and VPN licenses, while simplifying management and reducing our infrastructure footprint. The savings were immediate and significant.”

CTO, business process outsourcing

Legacy Software And Hardware Cost Savings
Ref. Metric Source Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
B1 VDI licenses replaced Composite 500 500 500
B2 Monthly user VDI total cost Interviews $45 $45 $45
B3 Subtotal: VDI savings B1*B2*12 $270,000 $270,000 $270,000
B4 DLP licenses replaced Composite 4,000 4,450 4,450
B5 Monthly user DLP licensing cost Interviews $6 $6 $6
B6 Subtotal: DLP savings B4*B5*12 $288,000 $320,400 $320,400
B7 VPN licenses replaced Composite 0 450 900
B8 Monthly user VPN licensing cost Interviews $10 $10 $10
B9 Subtotal: VPN savings B7*B8*12 $0 $54,000 $108,000
B10 ZTNA/SASE licenses replaced Composite 4,000 4,000 4,000
B11 Monthly user ZTNA/SASE licensing cost Interviews $12 $12 $12
B12 Subtotal: ZTNA/SASE savings B10*B11*12 $576,000 $576,000 $576,000
B13 Contractors eligible for hardware refresh Interviews 150 150 150
B14 Cost per device Interviews $1,200 $1,200 $1,200
B15 Subtotal: BYOD hardware savings B13*B14 $180,000 $180,000 $180,000
Bt Legacy software and hardware cost savings B3+B6+B9+B12+B15 $1,314,000 $1,400,400 $1,454,400
  Risk adjustment ↓10%      
Btr Legacy software and hardware cost savings (risk-adjusted)   $1,182,600 $1,260,360 $1,308,960
Three-year total: $3,751,920 Three-year present value: $3,100,152
Strengthened Security

Evidence and data. Interviewees described how Island’s layered security features embedded directly into the browser significantly reduced phishing, credential theft, and data exfiltration risks, thereby strengthening organizational security posture. They said that features such as device fingerprinting, IP allowlisting, browser hardening, and granular DLP policies enabled their organizations to enforce robust security protocols across all endpoints, including BYOD devices.

  • The CISO at a retail organization explained, “Island mitigates risks from credential theft because even if credentials are stolen, they’re effectively useless unless the attacker is coming from an approved device and location.”

  • The CIO and CISO at a higher education institution noted, “With Island, we can ensure sensitive SaaS applications are only accessible from the Island browser, reducing exposure to phishing and malicious browser extensions.”

  • The CTO at a business process outsourcing firm shared, “Island gave us the visibility and controls to enforce endpoint security even on unmanaged devices, which was critical for reducing risks in our BYOD environment.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes the following about the composite organization:

  • Based on Forrester’s Security Survey, 2024, the cumulative cost of breaches for the composite organization is $2,429,000.8

  • The likelihood of the composite organization experiencing one or more breaches per year is 61%.9

  • Island addresses 30% of these risks with its embedded security capabilities, such as device fingerprinting, granular DLP policies, and IP allowlisting.10

  • Island reduces the likelihood of exposure to breach costs from addressable risks by 90%.

Risks. Other organizations may experience varying results; effectiveness depends on the proper configuration and adoption of Island’s security features, which could vary across departments.

Results. To account for these risks, Forrester adjusted this benefit downward by 20%, yielding a three-year, risk-adjusted total PV (discounted at 10%) of $796,000.

Up to 90%

Reduction in addressable security risks

“Island’s security features drastically reduced our exposure to phishing and credential theft risks. It’s a critical tool for protecting sensitive customer data.”

CISO, insurance

Strengthened Security
Ref. Metric Source Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
C1 Cumulative cost of breaches for the composite Forrester research $2,429,000 $2,429,000 $2,429,000
C2 Likelihood of experiencing one or more breaches per year for the composite Forrester research 61% 61% 61%
C3 Percentage of those attacks addressable with Island Interviews 30% 30% 30%
C4 Annual risk exposure addressable with Island C1*C2*C3 $444,507 $444,507 $444,507
C5 Reduced risk of exposure to breach costs from addressable attacks with Island Interviews 90% 90% 90%
Ct Strengthened security C4*C5 $400,056 $400,056 $400,056
  Risk adjustment ↓20%      
Ctr Strengthened security (risk-adjusted)   $320,045 $320,045 $320,045
Three-year total: $960,135 Three-year present value: $795,905
Reduced Latency

Evidence and data. Interviewees noted that Island’s platform significantly reduced latency caused by legacy solutions, improving browsing speed and optimizing workflows. By eliminating inefficiencies created by VDIs, DLP agents, and VPN tools, employees experienced faster uploads, downloads, and web requests. These improvements enhanced productivity by removing delays associated with excessive web traffic and inefficient browser extensions.

  • The CISO at a retail organization stated: “Island removed the latency caused by legacy tools like DLP and ZTNA. Employees now upload and download data much faster, which has streamlined their workflows.”

  • The CISO at an insurance company mentioned, “With Island, web requests are noticeably faster, and employees can complete tasks more efficiently without interruptions or delays.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes the following about the composite organization:

  • Employees make an average of 30 web requests per hour during their workdays.

  • In Year 1, 4,100 employees use Island. The user base grows to 4,550 in Year 2 and 5,000 in Year 3.

  • Time saved due to reduced latency translates into hours saved per year, which the composite recaptures at a productivity rate of 25%.

Risks. Other organizations may experience varying results depending on the following factors:

  • Latency improvements may vary depending on the types of web requests employees make, with some workflows benefiting more than others.

  • Organizations may continue to require legacy tools for certain use cases, which could limit the extent of latency reduction.

Results. To account for these risks, Forrester adjusted this benefit downward by 20%, yielding a three-year, risk-adjusted total PV (discounted at 10%) of $515,000.

500 milliseconds to 200 milliseconds

Reduction in latency

Reduced Latency
Ref. Metric Source Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
D1 Average latency per web request pre-Island (seconds) Interviews 0.5 0.5 0.5
D2 Percentage reduction in latency with Island Interviews 60% 60% 60%
D3 Reduced latency per web request with Island (seconds) D1*D2 0.3 0.3 0.3
D4 Average web requests per hour Interviews 30 30 30
D5 Island users Composite 4,100 4,550 5,000
D6 Time saved due to reduced web latency (hours) (D3*D4*D5*2,080)/3,600 21,320 23,660 26,000
D7 Average fully burdened hourly rate for an FTE TEI standard $44 $44 $44
D8 Productivity recapture TEI standard 25% 25% 25%
Dt Reduced latency D6*D7*D8 $234,520 $260,260 $286,000
  Risk adjustment ↓20%      
Dtr Reduced latency (risk-adjusted)   $187,616 $208,208 $228,800
Three-year total: $624,624 Three-year present value: $514,534
Streamlined Access Control Management

Evidence and data. Interviewees reported that Island’s centralized management platform and automation capabilities significantly reduced the complexity and time required to configure and adjust access control policies. By enabling group-based permissions and automated provisioning, IT teams streamlined processes that previously required manual intervention and coordination across multiple tools. These improvements saved engineering hours and freed IT resources for higher-value strategic initiatives.

  • The CISO at an insurance organization shared: ”Island’s centralized access controls have drastically simplified our workflows. Adjustments that used to require hours of engineering time across multiple tools can now be completed in less than half the time and within a single platform.”

  • The CISO at a retail company stated: “With Island, configuring access control policies is much faster and easier. We’ve cut the time spent on these adjustments by half, allowing IT teams to focus on other priorities.”

  • The CTO at a business process outsourcing firm noted: “Island’s automation capabilities have been a game changer for managing access controls. It’s simplified what used to be a highly manual process.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes the following about the composite organization:

  • The composite organization manages 41 access policies annually, with 10 adjustments per policy per year.

  • Time saved due to streamlined access control management translates into hours saved per year, which the composite recaptures at a productivity rate of 75%.

Risks. Other organizations may experience varying results, as access policies may require complex customizations that could limit automation efficiencies.

Results. To account for these risks, Forrester adjusted this benefit downward by 10%, yielding a three-year, risk-adjusted total PV (discounted at 10%) of $121,000.

50%

Faster configurations of access policies

Streamlined Access Control Management
Ref. Metric Source Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
E1 Access policies Composite 41 41 41
E2 Adjustments to rules per access policy Interviews 10 10 10
E3 Engineering time to adjust rules and configurations per access policy pre-Island (hours) Interviews 4 4 4
E4 Percentage reduction in engineering time needed for policy configurations Interviews 50% 50% 50%
E5 Engineering time to adjust rules and configurations per access policy with Island (hours) E3*E4 2 2 2
E6 Fully burdened hourly rate for an IT engineer TEI standard $88 $88 $88
E7 Productivity recapture TEI standard 75% 75% 75%
Et Streamlined access control management E1*E2*E5*E6*E7 $54,120 $54,120 $54,120
  Risk adjustment ↓10%      
Etr Streamlined access control management (risk-adjusted)   $48,708 $48,708 $48,708
Three-year total: $146,124 Three-year present value: $121,130
Unquantified Benefits

Interviewees mentioned the following additional benefits that their organizations experienced but were not able to quantify:

  • Simplified vendor management. In addition to reducing technology costs, Island also reduces the complexity of managing multiple security and productivity tools by centralizing key functionalities within its enterprise browser. This reduction in vendor sprawl simplifies management and allows IT teams to focus on optimizing their security posture rather than maintaining a fragmented technology stack. As the CIO and CISO at a higher education institution shared, “We were able to consolidate tools like VPN and password managers into Island, reducing the complexity of our environment and giving us a more streamlined approach to managing our security stack.”

Flexibility

The value of flexibility is unique to each customer. There are multiple scenarios in which a customer might implement Island and later realize additional uses and business opportunities, including:

  • Easier scaling for future growth. Island’s centralized management and flexible deployment model position organizations to scale as they grow their workforces or onboard new contractors. With features such as group-based access controls and automated provisioning, IT teams can accommodate increased user demands without proportional increases in administrative workloads.

Flexibility would also be quantified when evaluated as part of a specific project (described in more detail in Total Economic Impact Approach).

“When we onboard new hires, all we need to do is assign them to the correct group in Island, and everything is provisioned automatically — permissions, access, and applications. What used to take an hour now takes 5 seconds, and it’s already set up for future scalability.”

CIO and CISO, higher education

Analysis Of Costs

Quantified cost data as applied to the composite
Total Costs
Ref. Cost Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total Present Value
Ftr Software licensing $0 $586,200 $632,100 $678,000 $1,896,300 $1,564,697
Gtr Internal deployment and administration $0 $503,685 $55,283 $55,283 $614,251 $545,118
Htr Configurations for access policies $67,470 $0 $0 $0 $67,470 $67,470
  Total costs (risk-adjusted) $67,470 $1,089,885 $687,383 $733,283 $2,578,020 $2,177,285
Software Licensing

Evidence and data. Interviewees outlined the costs associated with Island’s enterprise browser licensing and its optional add-ons, including ZTNA-based IPA and Island Dedicated IP. Although the base licensing provides comprehensive capabilities for security and productivity, interviewees’ organizations added IPA to enable secure access to on-premises resources and Dedicated IP to facilitate IP allowlisting for SaaS applications.

  • The CIO and CISO at a higher education organization explained: “Island’s licensing costs were justified by the breadth of functionality. The ability to centralize tools like DLP and VPN into the browser made the investment cost-effective.”

  • The CTO at a business process outsourcing firm noted, “Island’s pricing structure is straightforward, and while the add-ons come at a premium, they provide significant value for organizations with complex security requirements.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes the following about the composite organization:

  • Island provides base enterprise browser licenses to all users according to the phased approach outlined in the Composite Organization section. In Year 1, this group includes 4,100 users. The user base grows to 4,550 in Year 2 and 5,000 in Year 3.

  • Only agents and contractors receive IPA add-on licenses.

  • Agents, contractors, and IT employees receive dedicated IP add-on licenses.

Results. Forrester made no adjustments to software licensing costs since these reflect standard pricing. Island licensing represents a three-year, total cost PV (discounted at 10%) of $1.6 million.

72%

Software licensing percentage of total costs

Software Licensing
Ref. Metric Source Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
F1 Enterprise secure browser licensing Interviews   $295,200 $327,600 $360,000
F2 IPA add-on licensing Interviews   $168,000 $168,000 $168,000
F3 Dedicated IP add-on licensing Interviews   $123,000 $136,500 $150,000
Ft Software licensing F1+F2+F3 $0 $586,200 $632,100 $678,000
  Risk adjustment 0%        
Ftr Software licensing (risk-adjusted)   $0 $586,200 $632,100 $678,000
Three-year total: $1,896,300 Three-year present value: $1,564,697
Internal Deployment And Administration

Evidence and data. Interviewees described the effort required to deploy and administer Island across their organizations as minimal. Key steps included initial user setup, ongoing training, documentation, and communication. IT engineers spent time configuring user accounts and ensuring compatibility with existing systems, while administrators provided training and created materials to support adoption.

  • The CISO at an insurance organization shared: “We focused on creating detailed onboarding materials and providing hands-on training for our teams. It paid off, as users quickly adapted to Island and were able to leverage its features without much follow-up support.”

  • The CIO and CISO at a higher education organization shared: “We prioritized training and documentation early to ensure users felt confident with the platform. The feedback we received was overwhelmingly positive, with most users finding Island intuitive and easy to use.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes that the composite organization onboards 4,100 users to Island in Year 1, followed by an additional 450 users in both Year 2 and Year 3 as per the phased approach outlined in the Composite Organization section.

Risks. Other organizations may experience varying costs depending on the following factors:

  • Larger organizations with diverse workflows may require more extensive training and documentation, increasing administrative costs.

  • Resistance to change from users accustomed to legacy tools may necessitate additional communication and support.

Results. To account for these risks, Forrester adjusted this cost upward by 5%, yielding a three-year, risk-adjusted total PV (discounted at 10%) of $545,000.

25%

Internal deployment percentage of total costs

Internal Deployment And Administration
Ref. Metric Source Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
G1 FTEs onboarded to Island Composite   4,100 450 450
G2 Engineering time needed for setup, configuration, and change management per user (hours) Interviews   1 1 1
G3 Fully burdened hourly rate for an IT engineer TEI standard   $88 $88 $88
G4 IT admin time needed for training, documentation, and communications per user (hours) Interviews   0.5 0.5 0.5
G5 Fully burdened hourly rate for an IT admin TEI standard   $58 $58 $58
Gt Internal deployment and administration (G1*G2*G3)+(G1*G4*G5) $0 $479,700 $52,650 $52,650
  Risk adjustment ↑5%        
Gtr Internal deployment and administration (risk-adjusted)   $0 $503,685 $55,283 $55,283
Three-year total: $614,251 Three-year present value: $545,118
Configurations For Access Policies

Evidence and data. Interviewees explained that initial configurations for access policies required upfront engineering effort to build rules and settings tailored to their organization’s needs. IT teams spent time creating granular controls, group-based access policies, and integrations with existing identity and access management (IAM) systems. This investment was a one-time effort that enabled their organizations to realize long-term efficiencies in managing and adjusting policies over time. The CTO at a business process outsourcing firm stated, “We took some time to build rules, configurations, and integrations at the start, which made any future adjustments much easier.”

Modeling and assumptions. Based on the interviews, Forrester assumes the following about the composite organization:

  • The composite organization configures 41 access policies during the initial implementation phase. This reflects the deployment for a large enterprise using Island broadly across internal and customer-facing use cases. Organizations leveraging Island for smaller, more targeted deployments may configure less than 20 access policies in its tenant.

  • Each policy requires 17 hours of engineering time to build initial rules, configurations, and user acceptance testing. Usually, the testing efforts are passive and require little more than observation.

Risks. Other organizations may experience varying costs depending on the following factors:

  • The complexity of access policies may vary across organizations, requiring more engineering hours for policies tied to sensitive data or multi-factor authentication.

  • Integrations with existing IAM systems or legacy tools may introduce unforeseen technical challenges, increasing setup time.

  • Organizations may require external professional services or consultants to assist with configurations, adding to initial costs.

Results. To account for these risks, Forrester adjusted this cost upward by 10%, yielding a three-year, risk-adjusted total PV (discounted at 10%) of $67,000.

3%

Configurations for access policies percentage of total costs

Configurations For Access Policies
Ref. Metric Source Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
H1 Access policies Composite 41      
H2 Engineering time needed to build initial rules and configurations per access policy (hours) Interviews 17      
H3 Fully burdened hourly rate for an IT engineer TEI standard $88      
Ht Configurations for access policies H1*H2*H3 $61,336 $0 $0 $0
  Risk adjustment ↑10%        
Htr Configurations for access policies (risk-adjusted)   $67,470 $0 $0 $0
Three-year total: $67,470 Three-year present value: $67,470

Financial Summary

Consolidated Three-Year, Risk-Adjusted Metrics

Cash Flow Chart (Risk-Adjusted)

[CHART DIV CONTAINER]
Total costs Total benefits Cumulative net benefits Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Cash Flow Analysis (Risk-Adjusted)
  Initial Year 1 Year 2 Year 3 Total Present Value
Total costs ($67,470) ($1,089,885) ($687,383) ($733,283) ($2,578,020) ($2,177,285)
Total benefits $0 $3,615,129 $3,919,401 $4,194,513 $11,729,043 $9,677,057
Net benefits ($67,470) $2,525,244 $3,232,019 $3,461,231 $9,151,023 $7,499,772
ROI           344%

 Please Note

The financial results calculated in the Benefits and Costs sections can be used to determine the ROI, NPV, and payback period for the composite organization’s investment. Forrester assumes a yearly discount rate of 10% for this analysis.

These risk-adjusted ROI, NPV, and payback period values are determined by applying risk-adjustment factors to the unadjusted results in each Benefit and Cost section.

The initial investment column contains costs incurred at “time 0” or at the beginning of Year 1 that are not discounted. All other cash flows are discounted using the discount rate at the end of the year. PV calculations are calculated for each total cost and benefit estimate. NPV calculations in the summary tables are the sum of the initial investment and the discounted cash flows in each year. Sums and present value calculations of the Total Benefits, Total Costs, and Cash Flow tables may not exactly add up, as some rounding may occur.

From the information provided in the interviews, Forrester constructed a Total Economic Impact™ framework for those organizations considering an investment in Island.

The objective of the framework is to identify the cost, benefit, flexibility, and risk factors that affect the investment decision. Forrester took a multistep approach to evaluate the impact that Island can have on an organization.

Due Diligence

Interviewed Island stakeholders and Forrester analysts to gather data relative to Island.

Interviews

Interviewed four decision-makers at organizations using Island to obtain data about costs, benefits, and risks.

Composite Organization

Designed a composite organization based on characteristics of the interviewees’ organizations.

Financial Model Framework

Constructed a financial model representative of the interviews using the TEI methodology and risk-adjusted the financial model based on issues and concerns of the interviewees.

Case Study

Employed four fundamental elements of TEI in modeling the investment impact: benefits, costs, flexibility, and risks. Given the increasing sophistication of ROI analyses related to IT investments, Forrester’s TEI methodology provides a complete picture of the total economic impact of purchase decisions. Please see Appendix A for additional information on the TEI methodology.

Total Economic Impact Approach
Benefits

Benefits represent the value the solution delivers to the business. The TEI methodology places equal weight on the measure of benefits and costs, allowing for a full examination of the solution’s effect on the entire organization.

Costs

Costs comprise all expenses necessary to deliver the proposed value, or benefits, of the solution. The methodology captures implementation and ongoing costs associated with the solution.

Flexibility

Flexibility represents the strategic value that can be obtained for some future additional investment building on top of the initial investment already made. The ability to capture that benefit has a PV that can be estimated.

Risks

Risks measure the uncertainty of benefit and cost estimates given: 1) the likelihood that estimates will meet original projections and 2) the likelihood that estimates will be tracked over time. TEI risk factors are based on “triangular distribution.”

Financial Terminology
Present value (PV)

The present or current value of (discounted) cost and benefit estimates given at an interest rate (the discount rate). The PV of costs and benefits feed into the total NPV of cash flows.

Net present value (NPV)

The present or current value of (discounted) future net cash flows given an interest rate (the discount rate). A positive project NPV normally indicates that the investment should be made unless other projects have higher NPVs.

Return on investment (ROI)

A project’s expected return in percentage terms. ROI is calculated by dividing net benefits (benefits less costs) by costs.

Discount rate

The interest rate used in cash flow analysis to take into account the time value of money. Organizations typically use discount rates between 8% and 16%.

Payback

The breakeven point for an investment. This is the point in time at which net benefits (benefits minus costs) equal initial investment or cost.

Appendix A

Total Economic Impact

Total Economic Impact is a methodology developed by Forrester Research that enhances a company’s technology decision-making processes and assists solution providers in communicating their value proposition to clients. The TEI methodology helps companies demonstrate, justify, and realize the tangible value of business and technology initiatives to both senior management and other key stakeholders.

Appendix B

Supplemental Material

Related Forrester Research

Endpoint Security Market Insights, 2025, Forrester Research, Inc., March 26, 2025.

The State Of Bring Your Own Device, 2024, Forrester Research, Inc., November 14, 2024.

Predictions 2025: Cybersecurity, Risk, And Privacy, Forrester Research, Inc., October 1, 2024.

Budget Planning Guide 2025: Security And Risk, Forrester Research, Inc., August 1, 2024.

Leading Practices To Secure The Anywhere-Work Browser, Forrester Research, Inc., February 8, 2024.

Securing The Browser In The World Of Anywhere Work, Forrester Research, Inc., November 3, 2022.

How To Secure Your Virtual Desktop Infrastructure Deployment, Forrester Research, Inc., April 13, 2022.

Appendix C

Endnotes

1 Source: The Forrester Tech Tide™: End-User Computing, Q2 2025, Forrester Research, Inc., April 25, 2025.

2 Total Economic Impact is a methodology developed by Forrester Research that enhances a company’s technology decision-making processes and assists solution providers in communicating their value proposition to clients. The TEI methodology helps companies demonstrate, justify, and realize the tangible value of business and technology initiatives to both senior management and other key stakeholders.

3 Source: The Forrester Tech Tide™: End-User Computing, Q2 2025, Forrester Research, Inc., April 25, 2025.

4 Source: Paddy Harrington, Enterprise Browsers Reignite The Browser Wars But This Time For Businesses, Forrester Blogs.

5 Source: The Guide To Data Security Controls, Forrester Research, Inc., July 25, 2024.

6 Source: Forrester’s Workforce Survey, 2023.

7 Source: Forrester’s Workforce Surveys, 2019 to 2023.

8 Regression analysis of the reported total cumulative costs of all breaches experienced by security decision-makers’ organizations in the past 12 months. The composite organization’s revenue is used as the input to the regression formula. Source: Forrester’s Security Survey, 2024, “Using your best estimate, what was the total cumulative cost of all breaches experienced by your organization in the past 12 months?” Base: 1,660 global security decision-makers who have experienced a breach in the past 12 months.

9 Regression analysis of the likelihood of experiencing one or more breaches, using the frequency that organizations experienced breaches in the past 12 months as reported by security decision-makers. The composite organization’s revenue is used as the input to the regression formula. Source: Forrester’s Security Survey, 2024, “How many times do you estimate that your organization’s sensitive data was potentially compromised or breached in the past 12 months?” Base: 2,769 global security decision-makers.

10 Percentage of breaches by primary attack vector for breaches, as reported by security decision-makers whose organizations experienced at least one breach in the last 12 months. Source: Forrester’s Security Survey, 2024, “Of the times that your organization’s sensitive data was potentially compromised or breached in the past 12 months, please indicate how many of each fall into the categories below.” Base: 1,542 global security decision-makers who have experienced a breach in the past 12 months.

Disclosures

Readers should be aware of the following:

This study is commissioned by Island and delivered by Forrester Consulting. It is not meant to be used as a competitive analysis.

Forrester makes no assumptions as to the potential ROI that other organizations will receive. Forrester strongly advises that readers use their own estimates within the framework provided in the study to determine the appropriateness of an investment in Island.

Island reviewed and provided feedback to Forrester, but Forrester maintains editorial control over the study and its findings and does not accept changes to the study that contradict Forrester’s findings or obscure the meaning of the study.

Island provided the customer names for the interviews but did not participate in the interviews.

Consulting Team:

David Park
Marianne Friis

Published

November 2025