Privileged accounts are available everywhere. There are many types and locations for privileged accounts. They are different from other accounts in that they can read, write, alter and modify. Privileged Access Management (PAM), refers to systems that manage, secure, manage, and monitor accounts of users with elevated permissions to corporate assets. Anyone with superuser privileges in an organization can crash your enterprise systems, change passwords, delete data, or create new accounts. This could be due to carelessness, incompetence, or malicious intent. Accounts with superuser privileges (including shared accounts) are essential. It is impossible to run enterprise IT systems without giving access to certain people for system-level tasks.