Mac-First Environment, Windows-First Tools
Solv operates with a remote workforce and little to no on-premise infrastructure. It’s a small physical footprint, but a massive online presence serving urgent care providers across the country. Jake manages it all solo: 81 full-time employees, with a strict regiment of HIPAA requirements, SOC 2 audits, and partner compliance assessments to manage too.
Before Jake, Solv wasn’t using an MDM solution at all; everything ran through Google Workspace with manual processes. So Jake implemented Hexnode MDM to put some basic device workflows in place. And while Hexnode worked, it was built for a different world than the one Jake was dealing with.
"Hexnode was definitely more geared towards a Windows environment," Jake explained. "The feature set was much more Windows-heavy versus what the Mac offerings were."
A perfect example: macOS update management. "You could either prohibit or allow macOS updates. That was it. There was no major updates, minor updates, deferment, anything. That granularity wasn't there before.”
For a company whose devices were 95% Mac, that amounted to a fundamental mismatch. Jake needed the ability to get specific and defer major OS updates while allowing security patches, critical for testing compatibility with Solv's other products before rolling out changes.
The Two-Vendor Problem
Hexnode also didn't include what some vendors refer to as “privileged access management”: the ability to regulate admin access on devices while still allowing users to elevate permissions when needed.
"I had to use a separate vendor called BeyondTrust, formerly Bomgar," Jake said. Again, the product was solid, but he ran into a similar issue. "It was geared more towards Windows users, not Mac users."
Managing two separate vendors for MDM and privilege management meant double the portals, double the overhead, and gaps in the overall experience for Jake and his users.
It also led to acute pain points. When Jake's users forgot their local passwords on their Macs – which happened frequently, as people got used to logging in with Touch ID – the process to recover access was hugely annoying for Jake to manage.
"When somebody forgot their password to their local account on the Mac, it was beyond a nightmare to get them back into it with those two solutions in place, Jake said.”
For an IT director wearing every hat — compliance, vendor management, daily operations — every inefficiency compounds.
Jake Frese
Director of IT









