“The Pro edition of Profile Wizard has helped immensely with the migration process of our users from an on-prem domain to a cloud-based one. The deployment toolkit helps guide you through the process of making a migration script or executable that makes the process of migrating a device easily. Reading the documentation on how to set up your deployment is crucial, but it explains things in a way that makes the process of creating a deployment simplified. I would recommend this for small to medium-sized businesses who need a tool that is not as expensive as other services and is easily deployable.”
“Unbelievably easy to use, truly a piece of clever software. It solves cross domains user migration headaches in one shot. Any serious system engineer should own it!”
“This software enables me as a consultant to migrate users profiles, when onboarding devices to Azure AD. It is super fast and saves me and the end-users for a lot of extra work.”
“I provide IT support for small businesses, and consider this to be a very useful and versatile tool. My favorite features are the ability to move local accounts into or out of domains; and to rename accounts more completely than Windows allows by default. We've all seen cases where as the result of employee turnover, a current employee has been told to sign onto a Windows PC with the username of a former employee. This tool allows you to correct that situation, to truly and genuinely put an existing account under a new name. This is often necessary due to locally installed software, access to local files, etc. Or when a company upgrades from a P2P workgroup to a AD domain, this tool allows you to properly migrate local users into a domain. I consider this an essential tool.”
“I’ve long used the free version for moving profiles when joining computers to domains. I had a larger project migrating AzureAD and I wanted to buy the pro version, the value is unquestionable. I really like how easy it is to configure a profile on the Pro edition. I only regret I didn’t get the next version up so I could script it.”