Choosing between managed IT services vs in-house IT is one of those decisions that looks straightforward until you’re in the middle of it. Most growing businesses default to hiring someone internally when IT problems become too frequent to ignore. That works — until it doesn’t. Understanding the real tradeoffs between these two models helps you make a decision that fits how your business actually operates, not just how it looks on paper.
What Each Model Actually Looks Like Day-to-Day
An in-house IT setup typically means one or two employees who handle everything: user support, network issues, software licenses, security patches, vendor calls, and whatever else comes up. On paper, that sounds like full coverage. In practice, one person can only handle so much at once.
A managed IT arrangement means your business works with an external provider who takes on a defined set of responsibilities — usually monitoring, help desk support, patching, backup management, and security — under a monthly service agreement. Your staff call or submit a ticket when something breaks, and a team picks it up.
The day-to-day difference shows up most clearly when something goes wrong. With a single in-house hire, if they’re on vacation, out sick, or just buried in another issue, your staff wait. With a managed provider, there’s a team behind the response.
Where In-House IT Tends to Fall Short
This isn’t a knock on internal IT staff — it’s a structural problem. One person can’t realistically cover every discipline that modern IT requires.
Consider a common scenario: a 40-person professional services firm has one IT coordinator who handles day-to-day support well. But when a ransomware alert fires on a Friday afternoon, that person has to manage the incident response, communicate with staff, contact the backup vendor, and figure out whether data has been compromised — all at once, with no backup.
The same gap shows up in less dramatic ways too. Routine tasks like license renewals, hardware lifecycle tracking, and security patching get deferred when the help desk queue fills up. Small delays in patches create real exposure. Hardware that should have been replaced 18 months ago keeps running until it fails at the worst possible time.
The blind spot most businesses miss: in-house IT often looks fully covered until something happens that requires depth — a security incident, a compliance audit, or a complex migration. That’s when the gaps become expensive.
The Real Cost Comparison
Salary is the most visible cost of in-house IT, but it’s not the full picture. Add benefits, payroll taxes, training, certifications, and the tools that person needs to do the job — endpoint management platforms, monitoring software, backup systems — and the number climbs quickly.
For many small and midsize businesses, a single mid-level IT hire costs between $65,000 and $90,000 per year in total compensation, before tools and training. And that still leaves gaps in coverage during off-hours, vacations, and high-volume periods.
Managed IT pricing varies by provider and scope, but most agreements are structured as a flat monthly fee per user or device. That predictability matters when you’re budgeting. You’re not absorbing the cost of a surprise hardware failure or an emergency vendor call — those are typically covered under the agreement.
The comparison isn’t always straightforward. Businesses that already have a capable internal IT person often benefit most from a co-managed model, where an external team handles the deeper infrastructure work, monitoring, and after-hours response while the internal hire focuses on day-to-day user support.
What You’re Actually Buying with a Managed Provider
The value of managed IT isn’t just labor — it’s process, tools, and coverage that most small businesses can’t replicate internally.
A well-run managed IT agreement typically includes:
- 24/7 monitoring of servers, endpoints, and network gear — so issues get caught before they cause an outage
- Patch management on a defined schedule, not when someone gets around to it
- Documented backup and recovery procedures, tested on a schedule
- A help desk with defined response times so staff aren’t waiting hours for basic support
- Vendor coordination — one point of contact instead of chasing down your ISP, software vendor, and hardware supplier separately
For multi-location businesses especially, that last point matters. Managing IT across two or three offices with different networks, different vendors, and different setups is genuinely complex. Confusion between vendors is one of the most common reasons recurring problems go unresolved — each vendor assumes someone else owns the issue.
Practical Guidance: Which Model Fits Your Business?
Neither model is universally better. The right choice depends on a few honest questions:
How much does downtime cost you per hour? If an outage shuts down billable work, halts order processing, or blocks customer-facing staff, the cost adds up fast. Proactive monitoring and faster response times from a managed provider can directly reduce that exposure.
Do you have compliance requirements? If your business handles healthcare data, payment card information, or client financial records, your IT setup needs to meet specific standards. A managed provider with compliance experience can be more efficient to work with than training an internal hire from scratch.
What’s your growth trajectory? Scaling in-house IT means hiring more people. Scaling a managed IT agreement typically means adjusting your per-user or per-device count. For businesses going through hiring pushes or opening new locations, that flexibility is worth something.
Do you already have an IT person on staff? If yes, the question may not be in-house vs. managed — it may be whether a co-managed IT arrangement makes more sense than hiring a second full-timer.
If you’re a growing business in Texas evaluating your options, reviewing what outsourced IT support actually covers in practice is a useful starting point before making any staffing decisions.
What This Means for Your Business
The managed IT services vs in-house IT question rarely has a clean answer. What matters is being honest about what your current setup actually covers — not what it’s supposed to cover.
If your business is experiencing recurring IT problems, slow help desk response, deferred maintenance, or coverage gaps during off-hours, those are signals worth taking seriously. They tend to get more expensive over time, not less.
TECHZN works with growing businesses across Dallas and Austin to figure out what level of IT support makes sense for their size, structure, and risk tolerance. If you’re not sure where your gaps are, that’s usually the right place to start.











