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Growth Culture For MSPs: Rethinking My Position on the ‘Startup’ Mentality

Over four years ago, I published an article on SmarterMSP about integrating startup culture into a Managed IT business. I’ll never forget that article, because it was one of the first times that I published something that got an immediate “reaction” from members of the IT community. We had just launched this blog a few months prior and mostly to the sound of crickets, so finally getting feedback from readers was exactly the high we needed at the time to keep publishing. 

While it makes for a delightful story, looking back on it now, the article itself seems a little disjointed. I still agree with the general premise and the anecdotes ring just as true as they did back then, but there are major points of emphasis that I missed or brushed over without the depth that they deserve. This could have been due to lack of time and effort, but most likely it was because I didn’t have the knowledge that I now have, four years (and 2 more start-ups) later. 

For all of these reasons, I want to give this topic another go, but this time I hope to really connect the dots in a way that I did not before and in a more organized fashion. I will do this by clearly drawing the intersection between the values of a start-up and the characteristics of an MSP and how one can apply this ideology to their business immediately:

Values of a Startup

Let’s first start by introducing what I believe to be the core values that make up the “startup mentality.” It’s not about what industry the company is in, how many employees they have, or what product / service they sell. These values can be applied to any business of any type, size, and maturity. It’s a mindset and a culture first and foremost, and one that often cultivates growth as a result. This is the special sauce. 

To truly embrace a startup mentality, one must have: 

Characteristics of an MSP  

Now that we have a good understanding of the mindset of a true startup, let’s just take a look at the construct of a Managed Services Provider. Typically, you can identify an MSP by the offering of very specific core services on a recurring basis. Bear with me as this will all seem a little obvious to those who walk in these shoes everyday, but defining these characteristics will prove to be important later on when we map these together. 

To characterize a business as an MSP, it generally provides: 

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Connecting The Dots

Now that we have a firm understanding of both the values of a startup and the characteristics of an MSP, let’s put them together and see what comes out the other end. I have conveniently aligned these in the order of appearance (and on a one-to-one basis) but you could draw these lines any way you wish. What is important is that we find tangible ways to introduce the startup values into our core offerings in ways to increase our likelihood of growth:

Customer-Focus ➡ Help Desk Support

Applying a customer-focused approach to your Help Desk is easier said than done. Most MSPs will slap on the “white glove support” label, meet their SLAs, and consider that an achievement in customer service. That’s the expectation, not the exception. The exception is meeting your customer where they are, even when it is inconvenient (or nearly impossible) for you to achieve. 

Here are a few ways to accomplish this: 

Speed & Agility ➡ IT Project Management

IT Projects are an equalizer when it comes to MSP competition. When an MSP becomes “too busy” to complete projects, they are essentially falling back into the pitfall of reactive support, which is incredibly difficult to climb out of. Introducing more speed & agility into your project management will not only allow you to complete more projects in less time, but it takes immediate pressure off of other parts of your business. 

You might achieve this by introducing the following:

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Risk Tolerance ➡ vCIO Consulting 

We tend to glorify startups when it comes to their risk tolerance by focusing on these mental pictures of living on a ramen noodle diet and sleeping on a futon. What we often miss is the Founder’s confidence to make these decisions and live with the result. This is why I believe that all vCIOs should have a similar stomach for risk, because it will give them the confidence to produce tangible outcomes (rewards) for their clients. This is opposed to what I see many MSPs do now with this offering, as they are all too concerned with checking boxes (thus introducing more costs) and forget that the goal is to actually help their clients win. 

Here are some methods to introduce these ideas: 

Open Mindedness ➡ Vendor Management 

One of the fundamental truths of our lifetime is that technology is and will continue to be constantly evolving at a pace that only accelerates over time. What is useful and sometimes necessary today, may be obsolete tomorrow. It’s about time that MSPs have fully embraced this idea and introduced it into their vendor management practice. If you are still renewing the same three year vendor contracts and pushing a tech stack that looks like it’s from 2015 then you need to rethink your position on this. 

Consider introducing these strategies into your business: 

I hope that this helps to close the loop on what it actually means to implement a growth culture into your organization. As you hopefully learned, this isn’t just a cool buzzword that gets clicks. These are true methodologies that we all can embrace to stay more competitive and become market leaders. 

One disclaimer that I would like to add, which was absent from the first piece I published, is that this is not a guide on how to make your company more profitable. In fact, you could almost say it is the opposite. The objective here is to grow your customer base as quickly as possible, and in a direction of their choosing, while punting the idea of profitability well into the future (in true startup fashion). If your primary goal is to make an income today, then this advice may not be relevant to you and it’s important for you acknowledge that.

If you would like to chat more about installing these values into your Managed IT Business, feel free to reach out via LinkedIn. I am happy to take a moment to talk you through it.

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