Every few months the same take does the rounds:
“MSPs are dying.” “AI will wipe out MSPs.” “The MSP model is broken.”
None of that is quite right.
MSPs aren’t dying.
They’re polarising.
What we’re watching isn’t a collapse — it’s a hard split into three very different realities. And if you don’t understand which one you’re talking to (or operating in), everything else you do — marketing, content, AI strategy, pricing — is noise.
Let’s frame this cleanly.
1. Legacy MSPs: The Majority (and the Dead End)
This is still most of the market.
Legacy MSPs compete on:
- Seat price
- RMM stacks
- “We manage your IT” as a generic promise
Their business looks fine from the outside. In reality:
- Margins are crushed
- Staff are burnt out
- Owners are trapped inside delivery
- Every new tool adds complexity, not leverage
These businesses have no spare capacity — financially or cognitively — for:
- AI adoption
- Transformation projects
- Training
- Strategic change
They are running just fast enough not to fall over.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth:
These MSPs cannot be your target market.
Not for AI. Not for Copilot. Not for advisory. Not for transformation.
It doesn’t matter how good your content is. They don’t have the oxygen to act on it. Their problem isn’t awareness — it’s structural exhaustion.
Trying to “educate” this segment is a waste of time and energy.
2. Survival MSPs: The Loud Middle (and the False Signal)
This is the group most people think is “the market” — because they’re the ones talking.
You see them in communities. You see them in comments. You see them consuming content.
They are:
- Intellectually aware they’re in trouble
- Personally curious about AI
- Smart, engaged, thoughtful individuals
But the business reality looks like this:
- No discretionary budget
- No mandate to change pricing or offers
- No execution runway
They consume content as individuals, not as businesses.
That’s the trap.
They feel like a market.
They sound like a market.
They engage like a market.
But they don’t convert.
Not because they don’t want to — but because they can’t.
This group is where the “MSPs are dying” narrative comes from. And in a very real sense, it’s true — this segment is dying. Slowly. Quietly. Frustratingly.
They will tell you they’re “exploring AI”. They will attend webinars. They will save posts. They will nod along.
And then… nothing changes.
If your strategy relies on this group, you’re building on sand.
3. Post‑MSP Firms: The Quiet Minority That Already Moved
This is the group almost no one markets to properly — because they don’t self‑identify as MSPs anymore.
These firms have already started moving away from:
- Per‑seat pricing
- Pure support contracts
- Tool‑centric value propositions
They sell:
- Advisory
- Governance
- Compliance
- Outcomes
They invest in:
- Training
- Capability
- AI
- Systems that reduce labour, not increase it
They don’t ask:
“How do we add Copilot to our stack?”
They ask:
“How do we redesign the business now that Copilot exists?”
Here’s the key insight most people miss:
These firms do not think of themselves as MSPs.
And that’s why traditional MSP messaging doesn’t land with them.
They’re not trying to save the MSP model.
They’ve already accepted it’s over.
They’re building something else.
The Real Shift (That No One Wants to Say Out Loud)
The market hasn’t disappeared.
The money hasn’t disappeared.
Demand hasn’t disappeared.
What’s disappeared is tolerance for undifferentiated IT support.
AI didn’t create this shift — it exposed it.
If your value is labour, AI compresses you.
If your value is outcomes, AI amplifies you.
This is why:
- Content engagement is high but conversion is low
- “AI curiosity” doesn’t turn into projects
- MSPs feel stuck despite knowing the right answers
The industry isn’t waiting for better tools.
It’s waiting for fewer MSPs — and more firms willing to stop being one.
The Bottom Line
MSPs aren’t dying. They’re sorting themselves.
- Legacy MSPs will grind until exit or burnout
- Survival MSPs will talk, but not move
- Post‑MSP firms will quietly compound advantage
If you’re building content, products, services, or communities, the question isn’t:
“How do we help MSPs survive?”
It’s:
“Who is already leaving — and how do we help them go faster?”
That’s where the future actually is.