Gradient Resources

Why most MSP marketing doesn't work — and what to do instead

Written by Gradient MSP | May 1, 2026 10:45:01 AM

Ask a room full of MSP owners what their marketing strategy is and you'll get a familiar set of answers. A website that hasn't been updated in two years. A LinkedIn page that posts sporadically. Maybe some Google ads that "sort of worked once." And a general sense that marketing is something other kinds of businesses do — that in managed services, referrals are king and everything else is noise.

Referrals are real. But they're not a strategy — they're a byproduct of doing good work and hoping someone talks about it. MSPs that grow deliberately have learned to generate demand on their own terms, without waiting for the phone to ring.

 

MSP demand generation — clarity, channel, and conversion Three inflated 3D-style pill shapes representing the three pillars of MSP marketing: positioning clarity, channel ownership, and consistent content, rendered in pink, purple, and teal on a clean white canvas. The three things MSP marketing actually requires Positioning clarity Channel ownership Consistent content Specificity is the foundation. Everything else builds on it.

 

The real problem: you're marketing to everyone

The single most common marketing failure in managed services isn't a channel problem or a budget problem. It's a positioning problem. Most MSP websites say some version of the same thing: "We're your trusted IT partner. We offer proactive support, cybersecurity, and cloud solutions." It's not wrong — it's just invisible. If your message works for every MSP, it works for none of them.

High-performing MSPs have made a choice about who they serve and what they're exceptional at. A firm that specializes in compliance-heavy healthcare clients can speak directly to the fears of a medical practice owner in a way that a generalist never can. Specificity is the foundation of all effective marketing — and it's the thing most MSPs are most reluctant to commit to.

"The moment we stopped trying to talk to every SMB and started talking specifically to dental practices, our close rate doubled. Same services. Different words."

Three channels worth owning

You don't need to be everywhere. You need to be excellent in a small number of places where your ideal clients actually spend their time and make decisions.

Owned

Content & SEO
Helpful articles targeting real client fears — compliance, downtime, cyber risk. Slow to build, durable once established.

Earned

Referral systems
A structured ask and reward program. Most MSPs leave referrals to chance. The best ones make it a process.

Paid

Targeted outreach
LinkedIn or Google aimed at a narrow vertical. Expensive when broad, effective when specific.

What to do this quarter

  • Write down your ideal client in one sentence. Industry, size, and the specific pain they have that you solve better than anyone. If you can't write it in one sentence, your marketing won't be able to say it either.
  • Rewrite your homepage headline. Lead with the problem you solve for a specific client, not the services you offer. "We keep dental practices HIPAA-compliant and offline zero days a year" beats "Your trusted IT partner" every time.
  • Build a referral ask into your QBR template. After a good review, ask explicitly. Most satisfied clients will happily refer — they just never think to without a nudge.
  • Publish one piece of useful content per month. Answer the question your best prospect is googling at 11pm. Not a product brochure — a genuinely helpful resource that demonstrates expertise.

Marketing doesn't have to be loud or expensive to work. For most MSPs, the highest-leverage move is the simplest one: get clearer about who you serve, speak directly to them, and show up consistently. Demand follows credibility — and credibility is built one specific, useful, honest communication at a time.