How to choose an MSP partner: 7 questions that reveal everything
24 June 2026 · 7 min read
Choosing the firm that will run your IT isn't choosing the cheapest quote. It's a decision about who holds the keys to your data, your access and your business continuity. The following seven questions quickly separate a serious partner from one that just fights fires and bills per call.
1. How do you charge — per call or fixed?
The billing model reveals the incentive. With "per call" pricing, the partner earns when something breaks, so there's no reason to prevent failure. A fixed monthly fee (the managed model) flips the incentive: the more stably the system runs, the more profitable it is for the partner. Ask exactly what's included in the monthly fee and what's billed separately.
2. What exactly do you monitor, and when do I find out about a problem?
A serious MSP knows about a problem before you do. Ask:
- Do they proactively monitor servers, network, backups and security events?
- Will you hear about a failed backup from them, or only when you need a restore?
- How and how quickly do they notify you?
If the answer depends on you noticing and calling first, that's not management — it's standby duty.
3. What's your response-time agreement (SLA)?
Ask for concrete numbers, not "we respond fast." What's the response time for a critical outage versus a minor issue? What happens outside business hours? An SLA without numbers is marketing, not a commitment.
4. Who owns the data and access — me or you?
This question gets skipped far too often, and it's the most expensive one to raise too late. You must own all accounts, domains and licenses. Ask:
- Are admin accounts and the domain registered to you, not to them?
- If we part ways, how and within what timeframe do I get full access and handover?
A good partner wants you to be the owner — it builds trust. A bad one holds you hostage through access.
5. How do you approach security?
Security can't be an add-on billed at the end. Ask how they handle the basics: multi-factor login, patching, access management, backups that get tested, and what they do when an incident happens. If the answer is vague and the only word you've heard is "antivirus," that's a signal.
6. Do you keep documentation, and do you share it?
IT that lives in one person's head is a risk. A serious MSP documents your environment and shares it with you. Without it, every change of technician or end of contract means starting from zero. Ask to see an example of what their environment handover looks like.
7. Can I talk to an existing client?
References are the cheapest check you have. Ask to speak with a company of similar size and industry. Ask that company one question that reveals everything: "How do they behave when something goes wrong?" It's easy to look good when everything works.
Red flags to watch for
Beyond the answers, pay attention to behavior during the sales process:
- Pressure to sign quickly, without a clear description of the service.
- A price that's suspiciously low — something is being cut, usually security or response time.
- Reluctance to make you the owner of the accounts.
- Everything verbal, nothing in writing.
A real MSP partner doesn't sell you repairs, it sells you peace of mind — a predictable system, clear commitments, and the fact that you remain the owner of everything that's yours. If a candidate answers these seven questions clearly, in writing, and without dodging, you've probably found the right one. If they squirm — better to know now than after the first serious outage.