Managing devices for in-office employees is a solved problem, more or less. You know where they are. You can touch them. When something breaks, someone walks over to the IT desk. The whole operation runs on physical proximity.
Remote device management removes proximity from the equation and introduces a category of operational problems that most IT playbooks weren’t written to handle. This post covers the ones that actually cause pain — not the theoretical risks, but the day-to-day friction that accumulates into real cost and real employee frustration.
The simplest version of the remote device problem is also the most common: how do you get a properly configured device into the hands of an employee who’s 1,200 miles away before their start date?
For small teams, this is a logistics project. For scaling organizations, it becomes a logistics operation — and most IT teams aren’t set up to run one. You’re managing procurement timing, imaging lead times, carrier selection, address verification, last-mile delivery variability, and the near-universal experience of the new hire who moved between offer acceptance and device shipment.
When day-one device delivery fails, you don’t just have a logistics problem. You have an employee experience problem. A new hire who can’t work on their first day has an impression of the organization that’s hard to walk back.
Zero-touch enrollment platforms have made the configuration piece significantly more manageable — but they only work when they work. The failure modes matter:
In an office, a technician resolves these issues in ten minutes. Remotely, you’re troubleshooting over a video call with an employee who has varying levels of technical comfort, on a network you can’t see, on a device you can’t touch. Mean time to resolution goes up. Employee frustration goes up with it.
Remote support tooling (RMM platforms, screen sharing, remote access software) has matured considerably. But there’s a category of device problems that software can’t solve: a cracked screen, a failed keyboard, a battery that won’t hold a charge.
For distributed teams, hardware repair and replacement logistics are a genuine operational burden. Do you ship a loaner while the primary device is in repair? Do you rely on the employee to locate local service? Do you have a process for managing warranty claims across multiple states or countries? Most organizations’ answers to these questions range from “it depends” to “we figure it out each time” — a reliable sign that the process hasn’t been designed.
The hidden cost here is employee downtime. A remote worker without a functional device isn’t partially productive — they’re often completely blocked. The cost of one week of reduced productivity from a mid-level employee typically exceeds the cost of a loaner device and next-day shipping combined.
When devices are distributed across remote locations, maintaining consistent security posture becomes materially harder. The challenges are well-documented:
None of these are unsolvable, but they require intentional architecture — MDM policies that work off-network, conditional access rules that enforce compliance before granting resource access, and enrollment verification processes that confirm security controls are active before a device is considered “deployed.”
Organizations that treat remote device security as an extension of their office model (same policies, different location) typically find the gaps when something goes wrong rather than before it does.
Employee offboarding is where remote device management friction becomes most visible. Getting a corporate device back from a departing employee requires the employee’s cooperation, a return shipping process, a clear chain of custody, and ideally a data wipe verification before the device is redeployed or resold.
In practice, this process fails regularly. Devices are returned without power adapters. Devices aren’t returned at all and require escalation. Devices are returned but not wiped, creating a data security issue. The return happens weeks after the employee’s last day, during which the device status is ambiguous.
The cumulative asset loss from poor offboarding logistics is real — industry estimates suggest organizations lose 5–15% of their distributed device fleet annually to offboarding failures. At average laptop values, that’s a meaningful line item that rarely shows up as “device management” in any budget.
The organizations that manage distributed device fleets well have a few things in common:
This isn’t an aspirational list — these are operational capabilities that exist and can be built or bought. The question is whether it makes sense to build and operate each of them internally, or whether a managed device lifecycle partner can cover the gaps more efficiently.
For most mid-market IT teams managing a distributed workforce, the honest answer is somewhere in between: zero-touch configuration stays internal because it’s tightly coupled to your identity and security stack, while the logistics pieces — shipping, kitting, repair routing, and return management — are better handled by a partner with the infrastructure to do them at scale.
How do you manage devices for remote employees?
Effective remote device management combines MDM/UEM platforms for configuration and policy enforcement, zero-touch enrollment for initial setup, remote support tools for ongoing troubleshooting, and a defined logistics process for device delivery, repair, and return.
What is the biggest challenge of managing remote employee devices?
For most IT teams, the logistics layer — getting devices to employees, handling hardware failures without physical access, and recovering devices at offboarding — creates more day-to-day friction than the technical management does.
How do you retrieve company devices from remote employees when they leave?
Best practice includes initiating the return request on or before the employee’s last day, providing a prepaid shipping label with packaging, tracking the return with confirmation, and verifying device wipe before redeployment. Many organizations partner with a device lifecycle provider to manage this process systematically.
What MDM tools work best for remote device management?
The leading platforms for remote endpoint management include Microsoft Intune, Jamf Pro (Apple-focused), VMware Workspace ONE, and Kandji. The right choice depends on your device mix, OS environment, and integration requirements with your identity stack.
Can zero-touch deployment work for remote employees?
Yes — zero-touch is actually well-suited for remote deployment. A device can ship directly to an employee from a distributor or depot and self-configure on first boot using Apple Business Manager, Windows Autopilot, or Google Zero-Touch without any technician involvement.