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The decision is no longer binary

A decade ago, the choice between managed and in-house IT was largely a question of headcount cost. Today, it is a question of access to talent, speed of response, and the ability to keep pace with a security and compliance landscape that changes monthly.

For organisations between 100 and 2,000 employees, the right answer is almost never fully one or the other. The relevant question is which functions are core to your business and which are commodity.

Three lenses for evaluating the trade-off

When advising boards on this decision, we apply three lenses: capability depth, response economics, and strategic optionality. Each surfaces a different set of trade-offs that traditional cost-comparison spreadsheets miss entirely.

Capability depth asks whether you can credibly recruit and retain the specialists you need on the schedule you need them. Response economics asks what your true cost of an outage looks like, including the second-order effects on customers and revenue. Strategic optionality asks how easily you can change direction if your business model shifts.

A pragmatic recommendation

In our experience, the most resilient operating models combine an in-house leadership layer with a managed services partner for run-the-business functions. The in-house team owns architecture, vendor management, and the relationship with the business. The partner owns 24/7 operations, security monitoring, and surge capacity.

This is the model we operate for the majority of our enterprise clients, and it consistently outperforms both fully in-house and fully outsourced alternatives on every measure that matters at the board level.

MA

Moris Adam

Managing Partner, OpenLoop

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