The managed services market has spent the last decade in a kind of comfortable growth phase. Demand for outsourced IT expanded steadily, margins were reasonable, and the bar to win new business was relatively low if you showed up professionally and had a few references. Word of mouth carried a lot of weight. A handshake and a site visit closed deals that a slick proposal never needed to.
That era isn't exactly over, but it's thinning fast.
The number of MSPs operating in North America has grown significantly over the past few years, and the profile of those providers has shifted. It's not just mom-and-pop shops anymore. Private equity has moved aggressively into the space. Well-funded regional consolidators are absorbing smaller operators. And a new wave of digitally-native MSPs has emerged — shops with no physical footprint, lean cost structures, and marketing that punches well above their size.
The market is growing, yes. But the slice available to any one provider isn't automatically growing with it. When prospects have more options, they also have more ways to say no to you specifically.
For years, being a full-service generalist MSP felt like the safe play. Cast a wide net. Don't limit your prospect pool. Say yes to any client who can fog a mirror and needs IT support.
The problem is that this positioning, once neutral, now actively works against you. When a 30-person dental practice is evaluating three MSPs and all three say "we support businesses of all sizes across all industries," none of them have actually said anything. The prospect has no reason to prefer one over the other — so they fall back on price. And when every conversation trends toward price, margins follow.
Generalist positioning feels safe because it seems to protect revenue opportunity. But in practice, it makes every sales conversation harder, every prospect less pre-sold, and every deal more price-sensitive. You're working harder to win business that's less profitable and less sticky.
Differentiation isn't just a marketing concept — it's a business fundamentals issue. MSPs with clear positioning tend to close faster, retain clients longer, and generate stronger referrals because the clients they do win are the ones they were actually built to serve well.
This is where a lot of MSP owners get stuck. Differentiation sounds abstract. And the usual advice — "niche down," "find your ICP," "develop a specialty" — can feel risky when you're staring at payroll and a pipeline that needs filling.
It's worth being specific about what differentiation is and isn't:
Even MSPs that have done the hard work of figuring out who they serve and why they're different often struggle with a second layer of the problem: no one knows.
Most MSPs have inconsistent or inactive marketing. A website that hasn't been meaningfully updated in two years. A LinkedIn page that posts once a quarter. No regular content that demonstrates expertise, builds trust, or keeps the MSP top of mind when a prospect's current IT situation finally tips them toward making a change.
In a market where a competitor can show up tomorrow with a well-run LinkedIn presence and a targeted message for your exact prospect pool, invisibility is a slow-moving risk. The MSPs that will grow through the next cycle of market consolidation are the ones who are consistently present in the channels where their clients and prospects spend time — not just the ones with the best technical skills or the longest track record.
This doesn't mean you need a full-time marketing hire or a six-figure agency retainer. It means showing up consistently, with content that reflects your expertise and reinforces your positioning. Done well and maintained regularly, it compounds. A post from eight months ago that clearly articulates your take on a security issue is still working for you today if a prospect searches for it.
The MSPs that navigate the current market well won't necessarily be the biggest or the most aggressive. They'll be the ones who are the clearest — about who they serve, what they do differently, and how they communicate that consistently over time.
That clarity shows up in a sales conversation that moves faster because the prospect already feels like they're in the right room. It shows up in referrals that are pre-qualified because your clients know exactly what kind of business to send your way. And it shows up in a marketing presence that builds your reputation while you're busy running the business.
None of this is fast. But the alternative — continuing to compete as a generalist in a market that is rapidly rewarding specialists — is increasingly a race to the bottom on price.
The good news is that most MSPs haven't done this work yet. Which means the ones that start now still have real room to own something meaningful in their market before that window closes.