SCCM is a powerful enterprise device management solution that provides centralized control over operating system deployment, application management, and patching. It continues to play a critical role in environments that require strict control, offline capabilities, and hybrid management alongside modern tools like Microsoft Intune. This page will serve as a dedicated hub for all SCCM-related content, including real-world insights, best practices, and implementation guides.
Operating System Deployment (OSD)
Deploy and image Windows devices at scale using task sequences, custom images, and driver management. In real-world environments, SCCM OSD is still widely used for controlled, on-premise deployments, especially in secure or offline networks.
Application Deployment & Packaging
Package and deploy applications using MSI, EXE, and scripts with detection rules and dependencies. In enterprise scenarios, proper packaging ensures reliable installations and reduces application conflicts across thousands of devices.
Software Updates & Patch Management
Manage Windows and third-party updates through Software Update Points (SUP) and ADRs (Automatic Deployment Rules). SCCM provides granular control over patching, making it ideal for environments requiring strict compliance and phased rollout strategies.
Monitoring, Reporting & Compliance
Track deployment status, compliance levels, and device health using built-in reports and dashboards. Real-world use includes identifying failed deployments, patch gaps, and ensuring devices meet organizational security standards.
Co-Management with Intune
Co-Management is manage hybrid AD based device at same we can use Intune and SCCM and Both MDM solution to manage Windows Devices
Endpoint Protection & Security Management
Configure security policies, antivirus (Microsoft Defender), and compliance baselines. SCCM helps enforce enterprise security standards, especially in regulated environments where control and auditing are critical.
Recent Comments