For a long time, there’s been a belief that there is a right way to run an MSP business.
The script is familiar.
Have a sales process.
Build a sales team.
Push pay‑in‑fulls.
Chase more clients.
Fill the calendar with meetings.
All the things you’re supposed to do if you want to be taken seriously.
And for many MSPs, that script gets followed — not because it feels right, but because it’s what the industry keeps reinforcing.
On paper, it makes sense. It’s what the gurus promote. It’s what conferences reward. It’s what podcasts frame as the only path to growth. If you’re not doing these things, you must be leaving money on the table or holding yourself back.
The problem is that not everyone actually wants to run their business that way.
The Noise Is Loud — And Persuasive
The MSP industry is full of noise. Everyone has a framework, a funnel, a methodology, or a “proven system” that worked for them and therefore must work for everyone else.
So MSPs comply. Sales calls get bolted on. Events get scheduled. Teams get hired. Calendars fill up.
Not because it fits — but because opting out feels risky.
The fear usually sounds like this:
- “If this stops, will the business collapse?”
- “What if growth stalls?”
- “What if everyone else is right?”
So the behaviour continues. And often, resentment quietly builds underneath it all.
Listening to the Wrong Voice
For many MSPs, the loudest voices tend to win.
The market.
The industry.
The expectations of peers.
What often gets ignored is the quieter internal signal — the one that suggests something is off.
It doesn’t shout. It doesn’t come with a dashboard or a KPI. It simply nudges, over and over again.
“This doesn’t feel right.”
“This isn’t enjoyable.”
“There might be another way.”
Eventually, some MSPs stop arguing with that signal.
They stop doing sales calls.
They stop managing sales teams.
They stop trying to serve everyone.
They stop filling their calendars with meetings.
In short, they stop trying to become something they were never meant to be.
The Part No One Likes to Admit
This shift doesn’t feel brave at first. It feels reckless.
There’s usually a moment — right after deciding to stop — where panic sets in. The narrative becomes familiar: this is lazy, irresponsible, or short‑sighted. That stepping away from the “standard model” must lead to failure.
But then something unexpected happens.
Nothing breaks.
In many cases, things improve.
Work becomes enjoyable again. Clients align more closely. Energy returns. Thinking becomes clearer. The business starts to work with the owner, not against them.
And that’s when a crucial realisation lands.
There Is No Single “Correct” MSP Model
The MSP industry loves templates. But businesses are not templates — they are expressions of the people running them.
Some MSPs thrive on sales calls.
Some love events.
Some want large teams and aggressive growth.
That’s all valid.
What isn’t valid is assuming that success only comes packaged one way.
It doesn’t.
An MSP can be profitable, sustainable, and respected by leaning into expertise instead of hype. By attracting rather than chasing. By proving value instead of promising it. By choosing fewer, better‑aligned clients instead of trying to serve everyone.
It’s acceptable to optimise for sanity, not just scale.
Success Isn’t Always Louder — Sometimes It’s Quieter
One of the most freeing realisations an MSP owner can make is this:
If something works financially but makes life miserable, it’s not really working.
A business is meant to support a life — not consume it.
Listening to instinct doesn’t mean abandoning professionalism or discipline. It means recognising when momentum is coming from somewhere else.
The industry will keep shouting. That won’t change.
The real question is whether MSPs keep listening to it — or whether they start listening inward instead.
Because some of the best decisions aren’t the result of a plan.
They come from tuning out the noise, trusting that quiet internal voice, and giving permission to stop doing things that never felt right in the first place.
And for those who do?
Life — and business — tends to get a whole lot more enjoyable.