Amazon Web Services supports SCIM provisioning. Stepwork automates Amazon Web Services provisioning with 98% accuracy — no API required.
SCIM Support & Constraint: AWS IAM Identity Center supports SCIM for identity sync only. Complexity Vector → Stepwork: Permission sets and account assignments are enforced via AWS console workflows, so automation breaks at the infrastructure authorization layer; therefore Stepwork is required to automate repeatable console actions with human-level accuracy.
Infrastructure access requires careful orchestration and guardrails. AWS permissions are enforced through console workflows, which is why teams use Stepwork to automate AWS flows with 98% accuracy without needing an API.
Amazon Web Services supports SAML sign-on. Stepwork authenticates through your existing identity provider — the same way your employees do.
Stepwork automates Amazon Web Services provisioning through interface automation — the same way a human would, but with 98% accuracy and no API required. Record the flow once, and Stepwork runs it on demand or on a schedule.
Yes. Stepwork authenticates to Amazon Web Services through your existing identity provider (Okta, Microsoft Entra ID, 1Password, etc.) and completes MFA natively — including OTP, passkeys, and push notifications. No separate credentials or service accounts are needed.
The primary risk is scim does not manage permission sets.. Additional risks include multi-account drift, role misassignment, console-only workflows. Stepwork eliminates these risks by automating the entire provisioning workflow.
No. Stepwork completes MFA exactly like a human user — supporting OTP, passkeys, push notifications, and other methods. It signs in through your existing identity provider via SAML, mirroring your organization's security posture.
See how Stepwork provisions users in Amazon Web Services with 98% accuracy — in a 15-minute demo.
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