
From Snap’s Success to Your Strategy: Assessing Your Fleet for the Secure Enterprise Browser
In today’s evolving threat landscape, the browser is no longer just a gateway to the internet. It has become the primary workspace for employees and one of the most critical surfaces to protect. For modern, cloud-focused organisations like Snap Inc., security begins with strengthening the browser itself.
Snap’s approach shows how a secure enterprise browser strategy can reduce risk, support global scale, and simplify device management. By adopting Chrome Enterprise as their secure enterprise browser, they created a model that blends strong security with an efficient user experience.
The question many enterprises face now is simple: how do we move toward that level of browser-centric security with the devices we already have?
The ChromeOS Readiness Tool provides that path. Before any organisation can adopt a secure, cloud-first model, it must understand the capabilities of its current hardware fleet. The ChromeOS Readiness Tool helps bridge that gap and prepares enterprises for a future where the browser leads their security strategy.
Why the Browser Matters: Insights From Snap
Snap has been managing Chrome Enterprise across a large global workforce for more than four years. Their implementation highlights why the Chrome Enterprise Browser has become a foundational layer in modern IT security.
Defense in depth: Nick Reva, Head of Enterprise Security Engineering at Snap, shared that by hardening Google Chrome as their secure enterprise browser, they reduced browser attack surface and introduced layered controls that protect employees from account takeover threats.
Extension control: Using Chrome Enterprise Core, the team evaluated and blocked high-risk extensions while creating a trusted list. As Vaidehi Thakur, Enterprise Security Engineer at Snap, explained, this prevented the types of supply chain attacks that often target browser extensions.
Built in DLP controls: Instead of depending solely on heavy CASB or SASE tooling, Snap used Chrome Enterprise Premium to limit risky transfers of code and sensitive information. These protections worked immediately with minimal overhead for security teams.
Through this strategy, Snap delivered strong security protections without slowing down productivity. They supported zero trust access for more than four hundred internal applications and reduced risky data movement, all within the browser.
The Reality for Most Organisations
While Snap’s cloud native foundation makes adoption straightforward, many organisations operate mixed fleets of older Windows and Mac devices. Leaders often want to move toward a secure, cloud-first environment such as ChromeOS or ChromeOS Flex, but lack clarity about which devices can support this transition.
Visibility is the missing piece, and without it, IT teams cannot prepare their environment for a browser-first security strategy.
How the ChromeOS Readiness Tool Supports Your Transition
Moving toward a secure, cloud-focused operating model begins with high-quality fleet insights. The ChromeOS Readiness Tool delivers those insights and identifies which devices can run ChromeOS Flex, giving you a clear path toward modernising your endpoints.
Here is how the tool supports your strategy.
1. Automated Fleet Assessment
The ChromeOS Readiness Tool scans your Windows devices and identifies the models that are certified for ChromeOS Flex. This removes guesswork and gives you a clear view of how much of your fleet can transition immediately without new hardware purchases.
2. Cost Conscious Security Modernization
Snap strengthened their security posture by focusing on the browser. The ChromeOS Readiness Tool helps you apply the same philosophy by converting eligible devices to ChromeOS Flex. This brings proactive protections such as sandboxing, background updates, and verified boot to your existing fleet while reducing the cost of device refresh cycles.
3. Sustainability and Reduced Waste
By identifying devices that can be renewed with a lightweight, cloud-first operating system, the tool supports sustainability efforts and helps organisations reduce e-waste. It also extends the usable life of hardware already in service.
4. Readiness for Zero Trust
Snap used Chrome Enterprise Premium to support zero-trust access across its environment. The ChromeOS Readiness Tool is the first step toward this model. It identifies devices that can move into a managed ChromeOS experience, where identity-centric policies and advanced access controls can be applied consistently.
5. Data Driven Migration Planning
The tool provides a clear report that supports phased rollouts. IT teams can identify a pilot group of ready devices, test Chrome Enterprise policies such as data protection rules and extension controls, and build toward a full organisation-wide deployment.
The Next Step
Snap showed that the future of enterprise security lives in the browser. The ChromeOS Readiness Tool helps you take the first step toward that future by revealing what your current devices can already support. With the right insights and a clear path forward, you can modernise your fleet and move confidently toward a secure, cloud-first environment powered by the Chrome Enterprise Browser.
(You can read Snap’s full case story here: https://chromeenterprise.google/resources/customer-stories/snap/)



