// Buyer's Guide

How to choose a managed IT provider.

Handing your business technology to an outside provider is a real decision, and the wrong one is painful to unwind. This is a plain-English guide to what a managed IT provider actually does, the questions worth asking before you sign, how pricing usually works, and the red flags that should give you pause. No jargon, no sales spin, just what to look for so you can pick well.

A managed IT provider, often shortened to MSP, looks after your technology for an agreed monthly fee rather than charging only when something breaks. The shift matters: instead of paying a stranger to firefight after your systems have already stopped, you are paying someone to keep them running in the first place. Good providers catch problems before you notice them, keep your setup documented, and stand between you and the telcos and suppliers so you are not the one chasing faults.

In practice the work spans a helpdesk for everyday problems, proactive monitoring and patching, vendor management, and clear documentation of what you have and how it is configured. The better arrangements also fold in the things that sit next to IT, such as your internet, phones, cameras, backup and cyber security, so one accountable provider owns the whole picture.

  • An agreed monthly fee, not a surprise invoice when something breaks
  • Proactive monitoring and patching, so issues are caught early
  • A real helpdesk with a response time you can hold them to
  • Vendor management, so you are not chasing the telcos yourself
  • Documentation you own, not a setup only they understand

// The questions that matter

What to ask before you sign.

A provider worth hiring will answer these clearly and without flinching. Vague answers, or a push to sign before you have them, tell you most of what you need to know.

  • Who actually answers the phone, and how fast? Find out whether you reach a technician or a queue, and what the guaranteed response time is. Ask for it in writing.
  • Is support unlimited or capped? Some plans throttle the helpdesk after a certain number of tickets or hours. Know the limit before it bites.
  • What does onboarding involve? A good provider audits and documents your environment up front, so nothing about your setup is a mystery later.
  • Are you vendor-agnostic? A provider tied to one brand will tend to recommend that brand. One that fits the solution to the job acts in your interest.
  • Who owns the systems and accounts if I leave? Your passwords, licences and configuration should be yours. Make sure leaving is clean.
  • How does pricing change as I add or remove staff? Understand how the fee flexes so growth, or a quiet quarter, does not become a billing surprise.

// How it is priced

Pricing models, explained.

There is no single right model, only the one that suits your size and how much certainty you want. Here is how the common approaches differ, and what each is good for.

Per user, per month

A flat fee for each person you support. This is the most common model because it is predictable and scales naturally as your team grows or shrinks. Good for most small and medium businesses that want a number they can budget around.

Per device

Priced by the number of machines, servers and devices rather than people. This can suit businesses with shared workstations or a lot of unattended hardware, though it gets harder to predict as device counts move around.

Ad-hoc, by the hour

Pay only when you call, with no monthly commitment. Useful for very small teams or businesses that just want a safety net, but you lose the proactive side, the monitoring and patching that stops problems before they start.

Onboarding and audit

Usually a one-off cost at the start, where the provider audits, documents and tidies your environment. It is not padding. A documented setup is what lets everything afterwards run smoothly, and it is what you take with you if you ever leave.

// What to avoid

The red flags.

Most providers are fine. A few are not. These are the warning signs that tend to show up before the regret does.

  • Long lock-in with no clear exit. A multi-year contract is fine if leaving is clean. It is a trap if it is not.
  • Won't put response times in writing. If a guarantee cannot survive being written down, it is not a guarantee.
  • Hidden pricing. Real numbers up front are a sign of confidence. "Contact us for pricing" too often means "brace yourself".
  • No documentation handed over. If only they understand your setup, you are dependent on them by design.
  • Vendor finger-pointing. A provider who blames the telco, the supplier or the last guy is a provider not owning the fix.
  • Only ever sells what they resell. If every answer is the same product, the advice is about their margin, not your problem.

// One throat to choke

Why one accountable provider helps.

When the same provider looks after your IT support, internet, phones, hosting, cameras and cyber security, there is no gap for problems to fall into. Nobody can blame the internet provider, the phone provider or the camera installer, because it is all theirs to fix. That single point of accountability keeps your setup documented in one place and makes it simple to add capability, such as backup, cloud or automation, without onboarding a new supplier every time. It is also why Alien IT Solutions runs the whole stack rather than just one slice of it.

// Questions

Choosing a provider, answered.

What is a managed IT provider (MSP)?

A managed IT provider, often called an MSP, looks after your business technology for an agreed monthly fee instead of charging only when something breaks. The work usually covers a helpdesk for day-to-day problems, proactive monitoring and patching so issues are caught early, vendor management with your telcos and suppliers, and documentation of your systems. The point is that someone is responsible for keeping IT running, not just for fixing it after it has already stopped.

What questions should I ask a managed IT provider before signing?

Ask who actually answers the phone and how fast they respond, what their guaranteed response time is and whether it is in writing, whether support is unlimited or capped, what the onboarding and documentation process looks like, whether they are vendor-agnostic or tied to particular brands, who owns your systems and accounts if you leave, and how pricing works as you add or remove staff. Clear, specific answers are a good sign. Vague answers or pressure to sign quickly are not.

How is managed IT support usually priced in Australia?

The most common model is a flat fee per user per month, which makes budgeting predictable and scales as your team changes. Some providers price per device instead, and most also offer ad-hoc hourly support for businesses that do not want a contract. Onboarding, where the provider audits and documents your environment, is often a one-off cost. The right model depends on your size and how much certainty you want, not on which sounds cheapest on the first invoice.

What are the red flags when choosing an IT provider?

Watch for long lock-in contracts with no clear exit, refusal to put response times in writing, pricing that is hidden until you have shared a lot of detail, no documentation handed over so you are dependent on them, and a habit of blaming other vendors instead of owning the fix. A provider who holds your passwords and accounts hostage, or who only ever sells the product they happen to resell, is a provider to avoid.

Should I choose a provider that handles more than just IT support?

It often helps. When one provider also looks after your internet, business phones, hosting, cameras and cyber security, there is no finger-pointing between vendors when something breaks, because it is all theirs to fix. A single accountable provider also keeps your setup documented in one place and makes it easier to add capability, such as backup, cloud or automation, without onboarding a new supplier each time.

Does Alien IT Solutions provide managed IT across Australia?

Yes. Alien IT Solutions is based in Sydney and provides managed IT on-site across Greater Sydney and remotely Australia-wide, including regional and rural properties through its specialist connectivity arms. It is vendor-agnostic, publishes indicative pricing, documents everything it sets up, and starts every engagement with a free consultation before any work begins.

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