Deciding between managed IT services vs in-house IT isn’t just a budget question. It’s a staffing decision, an operational risk decision, and in many cases, a question about what kind of problems you’re willing to own directly. Both approaches work — depending on the size of your team, the complexity of your environment, and how much management overhead you’re prepared to take on.
Here’s a practical breakdown of how both models actually play out for growing businesses.
What You’re Really Comparing
An in-house IT hire gives you a dedicated person (or team) who knows your environment, sits in your building, and can be assigned directly. That’s genuinely valuable. But a single IT generalist has real limits — in expertise, in availability, and in what they can reasonably cover across security, networking, cloud, and end-user support all at once.
Managed IT services operate on a different model. You’re contracting with a provider whose team handles monitoring, support, maintenance, and security across your environment — typically for a flat monthly fee. You’re not hiring one person; you’re accessing a bench of specialists.
Neither model is automatically better. What matters is how each one maps to your actual situation.
The Real Cost Comparison (Beyond Salary)
On paper, hiring one IT person looks less expensive than a managed services contract. In practice, the math changes quickly.
A mid-level IT hire in a market like Dallas or Austin typically costs $65,000 to $85,000 in base salary — before you factor in benefits, payroll taxes, training, tools, and the downtime that happens when that person is out sick, on vacation, or gives two weeks’ notice. If your IT environment has even moderate complexity — multiple locations, cloud services, cybersecurity requirements — one person won’t cover everything well.
The hidden cost most teams miss: when your IT person is heads-down on a major project or dealing with a crisis, routine maintenance stops. Updates get delayed. Monitoring lapses. Those small gaps tend to compound quietly until they become a bigger problem.
Managed services contracts typically bundle monitoring, patching, help desk, and security tools into a predictable monthly cost. For many businesses in the 10 to 100 employee range, that predictability is itself valuable — especially for teams that need to budget accurately.
Coverage Gaps That Create Real Operational Problems
Here’s a scenario that plays out more often than it should: a business with a single in-house IT person goes through an office expansion. New network equipment needs to be configured. Phone systems need to move. Microsoft 365 accounts need to be set up for new hires. All of this lands on one person, simultaneously, while the rest of the business still has daily support needs.
The result is usually a combination of delayed setup, workarounds that never get cleaned up, and staff waiting too long for help on basic issues.
A managed services provider handles this kind of workload through a team structure — someone handles the project work while another handles day-to-day tickets. That separation of functions is hard to replicate with a single hire.
Another common gap: after-hours coverage. Most in-house hires work business hours. If your systems go down at 7 p.m. on a Tuesday, response depends entirely on whether your IT person is willing to pick up the phone. Managed providers typically include after-hours monitoring and defined response protocols as part of the contract.
Where In-House IT Has a Real Advantage
This isn’t a one-sided argument. In-house IT has genuine strengths.
A dedicated internal hire builds deep institutional knowledge over time. They understand your workflows, your quirky legacy software, your staff’s habits. That familiarity speeds up troubleshooting and makes communication easier. They’re also physically present — for hardware issues, office walkthroughs, or hands-on configuration, proximity matters.
For larger businesses with complex, specialized environments — manufacturing systems, medical devices, proprietary software — an in-house team with specific domain expertise may be the only practical option. Some environments genuinely require people who are embedded in the operation full-time.
The challenge isn’t that in-house IT is wrong. It’s that many growing businesses outpace what a single IT person can realistically handle, without realizing it until something breaks.
A Common Mistake: Treating IT Hiring as a One-Time Fix
One of the most consistent blind spots in small business IT planning is the assumption that hiring someone resolves the IT problem permanently. It doesn’t — it shifts the problem.
Now you have a new set of responsibilities: managing that person, evaluating their work, keeping them trained, and planning for their absence or departure. If your IT person leaves, you’re back to zero — and often with undocumented systems and no institutional knowledge transfer.
Managed services contracts typically include documentation as a deliverable. Your environment, configurations, and procedures are recorded. If the provider relationship ends, that documentation goes with you. That continuity is something a single-person IT setup rarely maintains consistently.
How to Make the Decision for Your Business
There’s no universal right answer, but these questions help clarify which direction makes sense:
- How many employees and locations do you have? Smaller teams and single locations can often be well-served by a managed provider. Multi-location or larger teams may need a hybrid approach.
- What’s your actual support volume? If your staff logs a handful of tickets per month, a managed contract will likely cover it efficiently. If you have constant hands-on hardware needs, some on-site presence is worth the cost.
- Do you have cybersecurity requirements? If you’re handling sensitive data or operating under compliance requirements, managed services providers often bring security tooling and expertise that a single generalist hire can’t replicate affordably.
- How much management bandwidth do you have for IT oversight? Managing an internal IT person takes time. If no one in your leadership team has the background to evaluate IT performance, a managed provider with clear SLAs and reporting can be easier to hold accountable.
Some businesses land on a hybrid model — one internal IT coordinator who handles day-to-day liaison and physical tasks, paired with a managed provider that handles monitoring, security, and specialized support. That structure works well for businesses in the 50 to 150 employee range.
If you’re evaluating outsourced IT support options for your team, the structure of the contract matters as much as the price — specifically what’s included, how response times are defined, and what happens when something goes wrong.
What This Means for Your Business
The managed IT services vs in-house IT decision comes down to a practical trade-off: dedicated presence and institutional familiarity on one side, broader coverage and predictable cost on the other. Most growing businesses don’t fail by choosing the wrong model outright — they run into trouble when the model they chose stops fitting the size and complexity of their environment, and they don’t adjust.
If your current IT setup is leaving gaps in coverage, creating recurring problems, or just feels reactive, that’s worth examining before the next disruption forces the question.
TECHZN works with growing businesses across Dallas and Austin to evaluate their current IT setup and identify where the gaps are — without pressure toward any particular answer. If you’d like a straightforward conversation about IT support strategy for your business, we’re happy to help.











