Whitepaper

Apple for Enterprise Tech Deep Dive 2026

Your technical guide to Apple’s latest management and security capabilities

Every year, Apple’s Worldwide Developers Conference provides an early look at the technologies, platforms and management capabilities that will shape the future of the Apple ecosystem.

WWDC26 marks an important milestone for enterprise IT. Apple Business continues its evolution into a broader business management platform, Declarative Device Management is now firmly established as the standard for Apple device management, and significant new capabilities have been introduced across identity, application management, software updates and platform security.

For IT and security teams, the challenge is not keeping up with the announcements. It is understanding which changes matter, how they fit into existing management strategies, and where they may create opportunities to improve security, efficiency and user experience.

This guide brings together the most important enterprise-focused announcements from WWDC26. Rather than covering every feature, we focus on the updates most relevant to organisations deploying, managing and securing Apple devices at scale.

Download your copy today to turn WWDC26 announcements into a practical roadmap for your organisation.

Three themes shaping Apple’s enterprise roadmap

Declarative Device Management is now the standard

Apple continues its shift away from traditional command-based management. WWDC26 reinforces Declarative Device Management as the foundation for software updates, configuration, reporting and policy enforcement across Apple’s platforms.

Apple Business expands its role

What began as a device enrolment platform is evolving into a broader business management service. New capabilities around subscriptions, APIs, automation and lifecycle management position Apple Business as a more central part of the enterprise Apple ecosystem.

Identity becomes the control plane

From Platform SSO and web-based authentication to shared device scenarios and stronger authentication controls, Apple is placing identity at the centre of the user experience while reducing complexity for IT teams.

Secure Endpoints practice lead, Björn Kemps

About the author

 

Björn Kemps is Practice Lead for Secure Endpoints at CWSI and Country Lead for Belgium and Luxembourg. With more than 20 years of experience in enterprise mobility and modern workplace technologies, he helps organisations build secure, practical endpoint strategies that support both business goals and user needs. His approach is grounded in finding the right balance between security, usability and operational efficiency, helping clients move forward with confidence.

Over the course of his career, Björn has led large-scale mobility and endpoint security programmes across both public and private sector organisations. His expertise spans Unified Endpoint Management, mobile threat defence, Samsung Knox, Apple and Android ecosystems, and modern workplace platforms including Workspace ONE and Ivanti. Known for his collaborative style and deep technical knowledge, he works closely with clients to reduce complexity, strengthen security and turn technology plans into practical outcomes.