What managed services mean in practice can be approached by identifying gap needs, understanding the relationship between you and the managed services provider and planning out a phased approach when it’s time implement a solution.
As demand for both solutions specialization and day-to-day maintenance swells, your company has three options:
MSPs operate under a customer-first paradigm that aligns with your success. This approach is often overlooked and misunderstood because of the paradox that exists in traditional IT engagements:
On one hand…
If you’re engaging with an IT service provider, that usually means something is broken, which may lead you to question why it isn’t being maintained adequately, so it doesn’t break.
This situation can lead to suspicion about why a piece of software or hardware randomly stopped working one day.
But on the other hand…
If you don’t interact with an IT service provider at all because everything is working, you may wonder if you’re getting what you pay for.
When everything is working properly, it may seem like you’re paying for too much coverage since there aren’t any problems, or you were provided too much support to inflate your monthly bill.
Your goals go hand in hand…
The adage, “You’re damned if you do and damned if you don’t,” is a perfect encapsulation of this service contradiction. But it doesn’t have to be this way if you work with an MSP.
Your MSP’s overarching goal is to provide your organization with a stable solution. If it breaks, the MSP must devote resources to fix it and your services suffer. Your pain is the MSP’s pain, so preventing service issues is essential.
This approach lends itself to a partnership more than a traditional customer vendor relationship. Ideally, while existing solutions are maintained, your primary interactions with your MSP are around planning for new projects. In other words, you should see that the MSP is helping you achieve your current goals while moving on to the next.
MSPs typically approach solutions delivery with a three-phased cycle that repeats itself for each solution (or solutions set).
This cyclical approach exists for practical reasons. Services from an MSP with a broad portfolio like TPx can’t be implemented all at once, even for an organization with the budget to afford it. Simultaneously deploying managed communications, networking and managed security services would be incredibly disruptive for any organization. So, your MSP needs to work with you to prioritize initiatives and plan a phased approach to meeting your IT needs over the long haul and within budget.
We’re ready to answer any of your questions. Visit our Technical Support page for phone numbers and web portal links.
"*" indicates required fields