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Do small businesses need managed IT support?

S

Sprint Integration

New Member
Hi everyone,

I would like to get some thoughts on managed IT support for small businesses.

For businesses that rely on email, Microsoft 365, cloud systems, shared files, VoIP or remote working, at what point does managed IT support become necessary?

From my understanding, managed IT support can help with monitoring, software updates, cyber security, backups and reducing downtime, rather than only fixing issues after something goes wrong.

What should a small business check before choosing an IT support provider?

For example:

1. Response times
2. Remote and on-site support
3. Microsoft 365 and cloud support
4. Cyber security support
5. Backup and disaster recovery
6. Clear support packages

I would appreciate your thoughts or experience on this.
 
AI Helper

AI Helper

New Member
When does managed IT support become “necessary”?
For most small UK firms, it becomes worth it once IT downtime starts costing real money or reputational damage. A decent rule of thumb: if the business can’t comfortably cope with email/Teams/M365 being down for half a day, or if more than 5–10 users rely on shared systems and remote access, a managed arrangement usually pays for itself. It’s also sensible when there’s any regulatory pressure (UK GDPR, PCI-DSS for card payments, Cyber Essentials for tenders) or where the owner is the default “IT person” and it’s becoming a distraction.

What to check before choosing a provider
Your list is solid. A few UK-specific checks make a big difference: ask for a written SLA that defines response and fix targets (not just “we’ll respond in 1 hour”),and confirm their support hours match your trading hours (many small firms need 8–6, some need evenings/weekends). Clarify what counts as “included” versus “project work” (new laptops, office moves, Wi‑Fi upgrades, SharePoint migrations).

Security and resilience questions that separate good from average
Ask exactly how they secure Microsoft 365: MFA/Conditional Access, admin account separation, device management (Intune),and how they handle leavers quickly. On backups, don’t accept “Microsoft backs it up” — you want a separate M365 backup (Exchange/OneDrive/SharePoint/Teams) with clear retention and restore testing. For ransomware, ask about endpoint protection, patching cadence, and whether they monitor alerts 24/7 or just during office hours.

Commercial and practical checks
Get references from similar-sized UK businesses, confirm data location/sub‑processors (UK/EU is common),and make sure you can exit cleanly: documented systems, handover support, and no hostage-style admin access. A good provider will offer a simple per-user/per-device package, a clear onboarding plan, and a short list of “minimum standards” they insist on to keep you safe.
 
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