MSPs' fear of 'missing out'

New research reveals MSPs struggling to keep pace with changing market dynamics and customer preferences face significant hurdles in the race to capture market share and grow profitably.

  • 6 years ago Posted in
A new report from ConnectWise highlights how rising demand for IT managed services means managed service providers (MSPs) face significant pressure to adapt fast to capitalise on new opportunities, or risk losing out to more nimble providers that have a greater grasp of what customers want and need. 

As demand for managed services continues to surge, 87 percent of MSPs surveyed for the ConnectWise report Managed services: the winners and losers in 2018 admit their organisation is at risk of missing out to competitors should they fail to get their service portfolio right or deliver new services better and faster.

The research, conducted among decision-makers at MSP firms based in the UK and Australia, reveals that while over half (53 percent) had experienced increased customer demand for managed services in the past 12 months, over two-fifths (43 percent) say fast-paced growth is already proving too much for their organisation which, they concede, is having to take short cuts to keep up with the pace of demand.

“The race to the top of the MSP sector is already underway and MSPs will have to develop, innovate and adapt to ever changing technological and business conditions as fast as they can, if they want to keep up,” says Greg Lalle, VP, International Sales & Strategy ConnectWise. 

“But in the rush to scale up service delivery, organisations must not lose sight of the fact that building a sustainable and profitable business is also dependent on identifying the right solution strategy and maintaining a strong customer focus.”

The report findings indicate how the current pace of growth is already putting a strain on the operations and customer-facing interfaces of many MSPs:
  • 92 percent plan to introduce additional services over the next year, with security services (57 percent), cloud services (45 percent) and/or cloud service monitoring services (45 percent) being the most popular solution areas that will be launched in response to customer demands
  • Over half (57 percent) are finding it harder to meet the needs of customers compared to 12 months ago, and say this is having a knock-on effect on customer satisfaction
  • Over four-in-ten (42 percent) admit to lacking the insights required to offer the right variety of solutions to customers
Other key findings include:

The changing landscape of delivery: top challenges for MSPs

Evolving security threats, maintaining margins in the face of service commoditisation and building market share all represent a constant challenge for providers of IT managed services:
  • the ever-changing threat landscape is proving a top challenge for 47 percent of MSPs
  • almost half (47 percent) say offering services at a competitive price, and/or offering a service that is cost-effective for their organisation (45 percent) is high on their list of priorities
  • over one-third (37 percent) are finding it difficult to develop new business and cultivate new customers
  • over one-third (35 percent) admit the pressure to deliver innovation in the face of fierce competition is proving difficult.
The service expansion conundrum: MSPs risk falling down a technology ‘rabbit hole’

With the pressure on to keep up with technology innovations and launch new services, many MSPs are struggling to keep their eye on the ball when it comes to improving customer interfaces and interactions:
  • seven-out-of-ten employees work in an IT/technology role; just one-in-ten employees work in a sales role, with one-in-ten of the workforce engaged in marketing
  • half (50 percent) don’t prioritise the use of customer experience to evaluate the success of their managed services; and one quarter (25 percent) don’t measure customer satisfaction at all
  • profitability (89 percent) and service reliability (86 percent) remain the primary measurements of success for the majority of MSPs.
The ConnectWise research also benchmarks the operational capabilities and readiness of MSPs against a select number of providers who are members of an MSP peer group, whose members collaborate to achieve business transformation.

The findings indicate that MSPs who are members of an industry peer group already appear better prepared to exploit the opportunities offered by a rapidly expanding managed services market:
  • just 23 percent anticipate that keeping up with customer demands will prove challenging
  • these high-growth providers are more likely to offer value add services such as on-site visits (97 percent), remote management (94 percent), consulting services (90 percent) and out-of-hours support (81 percent)
  • on average, these providers already deliver 14 different managed services to customers, compared to 5 of the primary survey group of MSPs
“In an increasingly competitive marketplace, differentiation derived from technological advantage will not in itself be enough,” comments Todd McQuilkin, Chief Executive Officer at MSP, Air-IT.

“MSPs looking to embrace new revenue streams and remain pertinent to their existing customer base will need to master the ability of expanding their service delivery options in line with customer expectations, while adopting a more strategic approach to enabling new levels of efficiency and profitability.”
New state-of-the-art data centre features Vultr’s first AMD GPU supercompute cluster.
Only a quarter (25%) think their approach to the cloud is carefully considered and successful.
Moving to AWS Cloud will enable The Co-operative Bank to adopt cutting edge IT Infrastructure.
The global airline group will upgrade the value of its data and get its AI & generative AI ready...
Barracuda Networks’s award-winning Email Protection and Cloud Backup security solutions will be...
Leading company in renewables to leverage HPE’s unique turnkey AI infrastructure solution to...
The four-year project extension focuses on cloud transformation and enhanced operational efficiency...
Businesses in the UK are risking slower development as they fail to fully embrace technologies that...