ML
    • Recent
    • Categories
    • Tags
    • Popular
    • Users
    • Groups
    • Register
    • Login

    Size of MSPs

    IT Discussion
    msp
    13
    79
    21.0k
    Loading More Posts
    • Oldest to Newest
    • Newest to Oldest
    • Most Votes
    Reply
    • Reply as topic
    Log in to reply
    This topic has been deleted. Only users with topic management privileges can see it.
    • Deleted74295D
      Deleted74295 Banned
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller

      I guess it's because I worked for a shop which had 6 staff, plus contractors, X number of clients. We heard and dealt with many other shops of a similar size, none of whom had a presence on Spiceworks. In fact there are even smaller outfits with 1-2 people who have not heard of it.

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • nadnerBN
        nadnerB
        last edited by

        All the MSP's I know of have at least 20 employees.

        scottalanmillerS DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • scottalanmillerS
          scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
          last edited by

          @Breffni-Potter said:

          But surely the directory is broken even more, if a one man consultant with a website is an "IT Service Provider" on the community, then that skews the data even more.

          How does it skew the data? Are you saying that you are correct by defining shops smaller than you want to be an MSP to not be an MSP and therefore the data is correct because the answer defines the data? I don't understand.

          My whole point is that the average MSP is likely very small, based on what I've observed over the past decade, because of exactly this - tons of MSPs are one man shops. I guess you are saying that @Hubtech is not an MSP then? If so, what is that company?

          C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • ?
            A Former User
            last edited by

            @scottalanmiller who knows.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • JaredBuschJ
              JaredBusch @scottalanmiller
              last edited by JaredBusch

              @scottalanmiller said:

              NTG really isn't an MSP, we are an IT Outsourcer,

              @Carnival-Boy said:

              I have no idea what the difference in. From Wikipedia : "Managed services are the practice of outsourcing day-to-day management responsibilities and functions as a strategic method for improving operations and cutting expenses." That sounds like IT outsourcing to me.

              @scottalanmiller said:

              In practical terms, MSPs are the companies that do "managed services" which are predefined and typically billed on a per unit basis. It's that it is "managed services".
              As an IT Outsourcer we act exactly like an internal IT department, not like a managed services vendor. MSPs are like many outsources like ADP for example. You adjust to them, not them to you. They have a specific service that they offer, and it is good, but you need to make your workflow work with them.
              IT Outsourcers outsource IT only, not only IT in the form of a "managed service." It is a far more flexible service type.

              This this this.....

              Bundy & Associates is an IT Outsourcer, not an MSP. We do not sell blocks of time or managed services.

              We sell our time, billed hourly. Period. We do not resell hardware. We do not resell software.

              We are a full IT Outsourcer. Among our employees, we can do anything IT related, from networks, to servers, to desktops, to helpdesk, to software develeopment, to business intelligence.

              This is what an IT Outsourcer is. We are oyur IT department. We are just not your employee.
              To be our client you have to let us be involved in your businiess plans in order to alow us to apply the appropriate IT solutions to fit your business needs and goals.

              If you cannot do that, then we will not want to be your IT company.

              C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                last edited by

                @Breffni-Potter said:

                @scottalanmiller

                I guess it's because I worked for a shop which had 6 staff, plus contractors, X number of clients. We heard and dealt with many other shops of a similar size, none of whom had a presence on Spiceworks. In fact there are even smaller outfits with 1-2 people who have not heard of it.

                But how does that affect the data? I've worked with very large shops that use it too, but that doesn't imply that the percentages are mostly that it is large. It's a sampling, that's all, and what you are defining is the nature of sampling. There is literally no means of getting data that is not a sampling. So what do you suggest as a means of polling MSPs to find out size?

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @nadnerB
                  last edited by

                  @nadnerB said:

                  All the MSP's I know of have at least 20 employees.

                  None of the hundreds or thousands you know of here or in SW do. How do you know that they have that many? NTG does, sort of, if you include the part timers. Then we are way over twenty.

                  Because of the nature of MSP services (instead of IT Services) there is a tendency to have a lot of non-technical or L0 workers to take calls, do monitoring and run through scripts as a big piece of the value behind managed services is making them require as little IT knowledge as possible. So real VAR and MSP business models allow for larger staff than IT Outsourcing models.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    Look at where @thanksajdotcom is. He works for an MSP that is a real MSP/VAR. They focus on one product, the services are managed (predefined packages) and they have a lot of staff. Some of that staff is pretty technical. But a lot of it are not even really IT people but just call center staff who take calls and run through predefined scripts that they do not necessarily even understand.

                    When MSP models get larger, this is a very typical way that they staff up. That's not good or bad, just why they tend to get a lot of staff quickly when being successful.

                    But as someone who knows hundreds or possibly thousands of MSPs directly and has serviced many, the number that are that large are pretty small. But they certainly exist. NTG used to do all of the IT for an MSP that was over 65 people! Not one of them would I classify as an L1. They were all "bench support" or "call center" staff. Anything requiring IT knowledge, including extremely basic internal IT, had to be outsourced to NTG.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • C
                      Carnival Boy @JaredBusch
                      last edited by

                      @JaredBusch said:

                      Bundy & Associates is an IT Outsourcer, not an MSP. We do not sell blocks of time or managed services.

                      We sell our time, billed hourly. Period. We do not resell hardware. We do not resell software.

                      We are a full IT Outsourcer. Among our employees, we can do anything IT related, from networks, to servers, to desktops, to helpdesk, to software develeopment, to business intelligence.

                      This is what an IT Outsourcer is. We are oyur IT department. We are just not your employee.

                      OK. So if that is the definition of an IT Outsourcer, what is an MSP?

                      JaredBuschJ scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • JaredBuschJ
                        JaredBusch @Carnival Boy
                        last edited by

                        @Carnival-Boy said:

                        OK. So if that is the definition of an IT Outsourcer, what is an MSP?

                        See @scottalanmiller's post preceding yours.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • C
                          Carnival Boy @scottalanmiller
                          last edited by

                          @scottalanmiller said:

                          My whole point is that the average MSP is likely very small, based on what I've observed over the past decade, because of exactly this - tons of MSPs are one man shops. I guess you are saying that @Hubtech is not an MSP then? If so, what is that company?

                          Possibly the average. There are likely to be more small MSPs than large, but the large MSPs may still provide 95% of the industry. Most people I know use the massive players like Softcat and Pheonix - but there are only a handful of massive players.

                          Also, small companies may prefer to use small MSPs, so Spiceworks will see a larger number operating there. But medium and large companies will use medium and large MSPs.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • scottalanmillerS
                            scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                            last edited by

                            @Carnival-Boy said:

                            OK. So if that is the definition of an IT Outsourcer, what is an MSP?

                            I've definited it twice already. It's not outsourcing IT like an IT department. IT Outsourcer is really a broad term that MSP would fall under. But MSPs package their services and provide "managed" services, not straight IT.

                            Think of it as boxed services. You can't ask NTG or Bundy what we offer. There is no list. We offer IT. All of it. Sure, there are things we can't do, no one can actually do everything, but NTG defines what we do as the service list of an internal, enterprise IT department. Highly niche services are always outsourced to vendors or MSPs when things get unique enough, even if you are Apple, Walmart or Exxon Mobil.

                            MSPs have a service list. They do X and Y. They often are VARs too with what they sell tied to the support that they provide. They generally define how you will use their services so that what they do is predictable. You adjust to them, not them to you. This has a lot of advantages, but obviously, is less flexible. That's why the provides that @Breffni-Potter listed needed to "develop new managed services" to provide them. They have to come up with the package that they support, how they support it, how it is priced, etc. They have to make it so that non-tech or lower-tech staff can do most of the support because everything is tested, bundled and predictable and rarely needs real IT knowledge to manage.

                            C 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • C
                              Carnival Boy @scottalanmiller
                              last edited by

                              @scottalanmiller said:

                              That's why the provides that @Breffni-Potter listed needed to "develop new managed services" to provide them. They have to come up with the package that they support, how they support it, how it is priced, etc.

                              I can tell you that the list @Breffni-Potter gave are IT Outsourcers then, not MSPs, based on your definition.

                              scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • scottalanmillerS
                                scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                It's hard to define different service models without trying to sound like one is better than the other. I don't think that this is true. Straight IT Outsourcing is good for one customer, MSP is good for another. MSPs are easier to sell to customers because they are easier to explain. As an IT Outsourcer one of our biggest problems is that customers expect that everyone is an MSP plus a VAR and expect us to define everything, sell them everything and make money in places where we don't while providing a service and feature list that we don't have. Given them unlimited options makes them tend to flail and fail. So that is a tough challenge. But we almost never rip and replace to make things fit our "model" since we don't have one. Every customer is unique and treated the same as if we were their IT, not an outside firm with a package to sell. But this makes services more expensive because we can't scale in the same way and use low cost people to offload most of the labour.

                                NTG would love to develop an MSP model to run side by side but has never figured out exactly how to do that. That is something that we are looking into because it would help with offering a more complete set of services.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • scottalanmillerS
                                  scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                                  last edited by scottalanmiller

                                  @Carnival-Boy said:

                                  @scottalanmiller said:

                                  That's why the provides that @Breffni-Potter listed needed to "develop new managed services" to provide them. They have to come up with the package that they support, how they support it, how it is priced, etc.

                                  I can tell you that the list @Breffni-Potter gave are IT Outsourcers then, not MSPs, based on your definition.

                                  Nope, you didn't read their pages. They were very specifically MSPs because they provide packages, not open services. SoftCat especially was very solid MSP.

                                  You can normally tell if a vendor lists their "partners" all over their site. IT Outsourcers rarely do that because it doesn't really make any sense. Who cares who the partners are? You don't have partners for an internal IT department. That doesn't even make sense for an IT Outsourcer.

                                  Deleted74295D C 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                  • Deleted74295D
                                    Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
                                    last edited by

                                    @scottalanmiller said:

                                    You don't have partners for an internal IT department. That doesn't even make sense for an IT Outsourcer.

                                    Surely it's a form of marketing/accreditation for companies to recognise, ok if they are a Microsoft Gold Partner in Exchange, Server 2012, they probably have a clue about the Microsoft tech.

                                    Most organisations already have a product that they need supporting, if I am looking for someone to look after my Cisco network, I'm going to look for the company with the Cisco partnerships and connections.

                                    handsofqwertyH scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • handsofqwertyH
                                      handsofqwerty
                                      last edited by

                                      Basically, to reiterate what @scottalanmiller said, if you have a list of specific services you support, products you offer, and products you work on, you're an MSP, because you define what you CAN do for the customer. An IT Outsourcer is basically someone who will walk into your environment and adjust the work and fill the needs of their staff to match what your company has. So with an MSP, if you had some system they didn't know or support, you'd have to find another vendor to handle that piece. With a true IT Oursourcer, the IT Outsourcer would find someone to join the staff or partner with another company to provide the support for that product, because they do everything.

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • handsofqwertyH
                                        handsofqwerty @Deleted74295
                                        last edited by

                                        @Breffni-Potter said:

                                        @scottalanmiller said:

                                        You don't have partners for an internal IT department. That doesn't even make sense for an IT Outsourcer.

                                        Surely it's a form of marketing/accreditation for companies to recognise, ok if they are a Microsoft Gold Partner in Exchange, Server 2012, they probably have a clue about the Microsoft tech.

                                        Most organisations already have a product that they need supporting, if I am looking for someone to look after my Cisco network, I'm going to look for the company with the Cisco partnerships and connections.

                                        Not necessarily. Many partners don't have any special skillsets with the companies they're partner with. Sometimes it just means they're a very high-volume reseller, which makes them a VAR.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                        • C
                                          Carnival Boy @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said:

                                          Nope, you didn't read their pages.

                                          I don't need to, Softcat and Pheonix are vendors of mine.

                                          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • scottalanmillerS
                                            scottalanmiller @Carnival Boy
                                            last edited by

                                            @Carnival-Boy said:

                                            @scottalanmiller said:

                                            Nope, you didn't read their pages.

                                            I don't need to, Softcat and Pheonix are vendors of mine.

                                            What do they provide for you? SoftCat's site specifically says that they have to develop new services to offer. Do you get packaged services from them?

                                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                            • 1
                                            • 2
                                            • 3
                                            • 4
                                            • 3 / 4
                                            • First post
                                              Last post