The 3 problems Purple solves across every vertical
Walk into almost any organisation and the WiFi setup tells the same story: a password on a sticky note, a portal nobody finishes, and an IT team fielding the same access requests they were fielding five years ago.
The sector changes — corporate office, student accommodation, hotel, hospital — but the underlying problems don't. That consistency is exactly why Purple's solutions translate so cleanly across verticals, and why the partner conversation tends to follow a similar shape regardless of who you're selling into.
There are three problems that come up again and again. Understanding them, and being able to articulate them in client terms, is the foundation of a good conversation when it comes to Purple's identity-based networks.
Problem 1: Shared passwords
Shared credentials are the path of least resistance, and most organisations have been following that path for years. The password goes on the onboarding sheet, the welcome card at reception, the sign behind the café counter. It gets shared freely by design, and then further than intended because there's no mechanism to prevent it.
The consequences vary by sector but the root cause is consistent. A corporate IT team has no real visibility into who's on their network — only what devices have connected. A student accommodation provider can't stop former residents passing credentials to friends who moved out months ago. A hospitality group can't prevent guests extending their WiFi access well beyond checkout. In every case, shared passwords mean anonymous connections, and anonymous connections mean no control over who's actually on the network or what they're doing there.
The Purple solution to shared passwords
Purple replaces shared passwords with identity-bound credentials. Staff are provisioned through their organisation's directory. Guests and residents receive unique credentials generated at the point of authentication. There's nothing to share because the credential only works for the person it was issued to.
Purple also offers private micro-segments for students, hotel guests, and residents. Identity PSK gives each person their own network space where their devices can discover each other—AirPlay, Chromecast, smart speakers—while remaining completely isolated from neighbours.
Problem 2: Leavers staying connected
When a password is shared across the whole organisation, removing one person's access means disrupting everyone else's. When access is managed manually, it depends on someone doing the right thing at the right time — and that doesn't always happen.
The implications play out differently depending on the context. For a corporate client, a former employee retaining network access after leaving is a security exposure that most IT policies explicitly prohibit, but few have a clean technical answer to.
For a university, thousands of student accounts cycling in and out each academic year creates a deprovisioning workload that manual processes can't reliably handle. For a hotel or serviced apartment operator, guests who remain connected after checkout represent both a revenue and a network integrity issue.
The Purple solution to leavers staying connected
Because Purple ties access to a verified identity rather than a shared secret, deprovisioning happens automatically. For staff environments, it syncs with the identity provider — remove someone from the directory and their network access is gone. For guest and residential deployments, access is scoped to the duration of the stay from the outset. No manual process, no risk of it being overlooked, no collateral disruption to anyone else.
Problem 3: A poor user experience
The captive portal is the most familiar symptom of a network that doesn't know who its users are. Every sector has its version: the business traveller trying to get online in a hotel room at 11pm, hunting for a confirmation email with their access code. The conference delegate clicking through a terms page on a phone screen.
Completion rates on captive portals are low, which means businesses often aren't capturing the visitor data the portal was supposed to collect. The security benefit is minimal. And the friction, however familiar, still generates complaints and support overhead.
The Purple solution to a poor user experience
Purple removes the friction. Guests and residents authenticate without portals or forms — the process runs in the background using Passpoint and OpenRoaming, standards already built into the devices your clients' users are carrying. It connects the way a mobile network does: without asking anything of the person using it.
Enterprise security without the complexity
To summarise, Purple's identity-based network platform addresses three distinct scenarios, each with its own requirements but sharing a common foundation:
1) Staff WiFi: Passwordless zero-trust access for employees, with automatic provisioning and revocation tied to your directory.
2) Guest WiFi: Frictionless visitor access that eliminates captive portals while maintaining security and compliance.
3) Multi-Tenant: Private network experiences for residents in student accommodation, hotels, and multi-dwelling units.
One identity. Three use cases. Enterprise security without the complexity.
Recent Posts










