Sapho
Sapho is an enterprise software company that provides a micro app and workflow platform designed to surface actionable business data and tasks from existing systems into modern user interfaces.
- Micro app platform that connects to existing enterprise systems and surfaces targeted workflows
- Integration with common business applications and data sources for contextual notifications and tasks
- Delivery of micro apps and alerts through channels such as mobile, web, and messaging interfaces (digital workplace)
- Focus on simplifying access to routine enterprise workflows and approvals for employees and managers
- Tools for IT and development teams to configure, secure, and manage micro apps and integrations
More About Sapho
Sapho focuses on enabling organizations to expose discrete, task-centric user experiences, commonly referred to as micro apps, that System Integration Testing (SIT) on top of existing enterprise systems such as Emergency Response Plan (ERP), CRM, HR, ITSM, and custom line-of-business platforms (digital workplace).
The core concept behind Sapho’s offering is to abstract complex enterprise workflows into small, purpose-built micro apps that perform a limited set of functions, such as approving purchase orders, updating tickets, or acknowledging alerts, without requiring users to navigate full legacy applications.
From an architectural standpoint, Sapho typically operates as an intermediary layer that connects to systems of record through APIs, web services, database connectors, or other integration mechanisms, then exposes relevant events and actions to end users via mobile applications, web portals, or messaging and collaboration tools (integration platform / workflow automation).
The platform is commonly associated with the use of push notifications and context-aware cards or tiles that present users with data and available actions when certain business conditions are met, for example when a threshold is exceeded or an item requires approval.
Sapho’s tooling is oriented toward IT and development teams that need to configure data connectors, define business rules, and design micro app interfaces while maintaining compliance with existing authentication, authorization, and governance policies; the platform is typically integrated with enterprise identity providers via standard protocols such as Single Sign-On (SSO) and Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) where supported (enterprise access management).
In enterprise environments, Sapho is positioned alongside categories such as digital workplace platforms, workflow automation, and low-code / no-code application frameworks, with a particular emphasis on augmenting rather than replacing existing systems of record by providing lighter-weight front ends.
Organizations use Sapho to reduce the time employees spend navigating legacy applications for routine tasks, to increase completion rates for approvals and updates, and to surface data from multiple back-end systems into a single, consolidated experience that can be accessed on mobile devices or within collaboration tools.
For directory and taxonomy purposes, Sapho fits within enterprise software categories including digital workplace enablement, workflow and task automation, micro app delivery platforms, and integration middleware that connects front-end user experiences to existing business applications.