How to Use Incognito Mode to Access HR Command
Sometimes you may want to access HR Command without your browser storing history, cookies, or temporary files. Incognito Mode (also known as Private Browsing) can help with this. It won’t make you invisible online, but it will stop information from being saved on your device.
This guide explains how Incognito Mode works and how to enable it on the most common browsers when accessing HR Command.
What Incognito Mode Does
When you open a private browsing window:
- Your browsing history isn’t stored
- Cookies and site data aren’t saved after the window is closed
- Autofill details aren’t stored for future use
This can help if you’re troubleshooting login issues, switching between multiple HR Command accounts, or using a shared device.
App or network administrators may still see activity, and websites can still identify your device using your IP address.
How to Open Incognito Mode
Google Chrome
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Open Chrome.
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Select the three dots in the top-right corner.
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Choose New Incognito Window.
Shortcuts:
- Windows/Linux: Ctrl + Shift + N
- macOS: Command + Shift + N
Mozilla Firefox
Firefox labels this as Private Browsing.
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Open Firefox.
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Select the menu button in the top-right corner.
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Choose New Private Window.
Shortcuts:
Windows/Linux: Ctrl + Shift + P
macOS: Command + Shift + P
Microsoft Edge
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Open Edge.
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Select the three dots in the top-right corner.
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Choose New InPrivate Window.
Shortcuts:
- Windows/Linux: Ctrl + Shift + N
- macOS: Command + Shift + N
Apple Safari (macOS)
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Open Safari.
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Select File from the menu bar.
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Choose New Private Window.
Shortcut:
macOS: Command + Shift + N
Apple Safari (iPhone/iPad)
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Open Safari.
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Tap the tabs icon at the bottom.
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Tap the current tab group and choose Private.
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Select + to open a new private tab.
When You May Want to Use Incognito Mode
Troubleshooting login or session issues in HR Command
Using HR Command on a shared device
Testing features without cached site data
Logging in to additional HR Command accounts