Reading time: ~6 minutes
When something breaks, calling in IT to fix it feels natural. But for most small and midsize businesses (SMBs), the smarter move is to prevent problems in the first place. Here’s a clear, no-jargon comparison to help you decide between the break‑fix model and a managed service provider (MSP).
What is Break‑Fix?
You pay per incident when something goes wrong. No monthly contract, no ongoing monitoring—just time & materials to resolve issues as they pop up.
Pros
- Only pay when you need help
- Simple, no long-term commitment
Cons
- Unpredictable costs (emergencies add up fast)
- Longer downtime while issues are diagnosed and scheduled
- No proactive maintenance, so the same problems can recur
What is an MSP?
A managed service provider delivers proactive IT: continuous monitoring, patching, backups, and help desk under a predictable monthly fee. The incentive is aligned—your MSP prevents issues so both of you avoid costly downtime.
- Predictable budgeting: Flat monthly fees vs. surprise invoices
- Less downtime: Monitoring and maintenance catch issues early
- Security-first: Regular updates, backups, MFA, and user training
- Scales with growth: Add users/devices and new services as needed
Cost, Risk, and Fit—At a Glance
- Cost volatility: Break‑fix is unpredictable; MSPs stabilize cash flow
- Business risk: Break‑fix waits for a failure; MSPs minimize outages
- Security posture: Break‑fix is reactive; MSPs harden systems continuously
- SMB fit: If every hour of downtime hurts revenue or customer trust, MSPs are usually the safer bet
Quick Decision Checklist
If you answer “yes” to most of these, lean MSP:
- Can’t afford multi-hour outages (POS, phones, email, scheduling)
- Must meet cyber insurance or compliance requirements
- Use cloud apps and remote staff that need reliable, secure access
- Want predictable monthly IT costs
- Prefer strategic help (roadmaps, budgeting, vendor management)
Practical SMB Tips
- Ask for an MSP plan that includes patching, endpoint protection/EDR, backups, MFA, and phishing training
- Look for response-time Service Level Objectives and monthly reporting you actually read
- Standardize your devices and software—it lowers support time and risk
- Pilot with 90 days, then review uptime, ticket volume, and user satisfaction
Bottom Line
Break‑fix can work for very small, low-risk environments. But if downtime, data loss, or security incidents would materially impact your business, a managed service model almost always pays for itself through fewer disruptions and clearer budgeting.


