Is on-site support a competitive advantage?
Paul Green's MSP Marketing Podcast - En podcast af Paul Green's MSP Marketing Edge - Tirsdage

The podcast powered by the MSP Marketing Edge Welcome to Episode 305 of the MSP Marketing Podcast with me, Paul Green. This week… Is on-site support a competitive advantage?: Does your MSP still provide onsite support or are you thinking that maybe you should? Your decision could affect how successful your MSP is. How to find your MSP’s next 5 clients: Let me introduce you to the concept of the Dream 100 and how it could completely change your idea of marketing forever. Is this the only way MSPs should increase profits?: When profits are down should you reduce costs or focus your time on increasing sales? My special guest is an expert at operations and she’s got a unique spin on this exact problem that you are going to want to hear. Paul’s Personal Peer Group: Do you have a live chat or instant messaging option on your MSP’s website? There’s so many options it’s hard to know the right one to choose. But I have the answer for you. Is on-site support a competitive advantage? Some MSPs do do it, some MSPs make a point of saying, no way. We’re talking about providing onsite support. Obviously back in the day it went without saying, you just did it. But in our modern, remote first world, the need for in-person onsite support has completely changed. So are you still providing it or are you thinking that maybe you should or that you never ever will again, Your decision could affect how successful your MSP is. So let’s explore your options right now. Let’s be honest, a few years ago having engineers who could turn up at a client’s office and fix something kind of felt like a major selling point, but here we are in 2025 and most businesses now are hybrid or remote, that happened very quickly. Almost everything can be fixed remotely, so is onsite support still something worth shouting about in your marketing or is it yesterday’s news? Let’s look at both sides of this. The case for onsite support being a competitive advantage, first of all. It starts with the fact that some clients love knowing that someone will actually physically come out if needed. You think about clients with manufacturing equipment, specialist hardware, or those who just feel reassured by a human coming into the office. For them, we’ll be there in person if you need us, that’s a big comfort factor. And as we know, comfort sells. And not every MSP is offering this anymore, of course, so if most of your competitors have gone fully remote you’ll be standing out as we’re local, we’re personal, we’ll come onsite. That could be a differentiator in your marketing. It’s a trust builder. It says, we are not just faceless techs in the cloud, we are real people here for you. Now let’s look on the other side, the case against onsite support being a competitive advantage. Because on the flip side, as we know, most day-to-day issues don’t need it. Clients are used to remote support now, in fact they expect you to fix things fast online, over the internet. And for many, the idea of waiting for someone to drive over and come into an office kind of feels old fashioned, it’s not special anymore. And then of course there’s the cost. Offering onsite support means travel time, scheduling headaches, and of course engineers are less productive if they’re onsite. They’re not doing three things at once like they are if they’re in the office or working from home. So if your competitors are leaner because they don’t offer it, that could make your prices look higher for something the client doesn’t even value.