Definition
Multi-factor authentication (MFA) requires additional verification beyond a password, reducing account takeover risk from phished or leaked credentials.
Why it matters for business
Multi-factor authentication. Leaders do not need to memorize acronyms—but teams that handle compliance, security, or cloud identity will encounter this term in contracts, audits, and architecture decisions.
Example in an SMB context
A 40-person contractor using Microsoft 365 and laptops may need to explain how MFA applies to their environment when a prime asks about cybersecurity posture or when preparing documentation for CMMC-related requirements.
Need a clear baseline for your environment?
Start with a free 15-minute review. When a structured assessment is the right next step, ImpetraInsights™ can provide multi-framework scoring and an executive-ready report—including CMMC and HIPAA readiness paths.