Somewhere between “call the guy when the printer breaks” and “hire a full IT team,” there's a window where a business needs more structure than break-fix but can't justify headcount. Most companies spend too long in that window, and the cost shows up in strange places — missed days, half-finished projects, a vague sense that …
When Does It Make Sense to Build an Outsourced IT Department?

Somewhere between “call the guy when the printer breaks” and “hire a full IT team,” there’s a window where a business needs more structure than break-fix but can’t justify headcount. Most companies spend too long in that window, and the cost shows up in strange places — missed days, half-finished projects, a vague sense that technology is always one bad week away from becoming a real problem.
An outsourced IT department is designed for that exact window. But it isn’t the right answer for every stage, and it isn’t the right answer forever. Knowing when it fits — and when it doesn’t — saves you years of false starts.
The three basic models, briefly
There are really only three ways small and mid-sized businesses handle IT:
- Break-fix. You call a local vendor hourly when something breaks. Reactive, low commitment, low accountability.
- Outsourced IT department. You pay a flat monthly fee for a provider that owns your whole IT function — help desk, monitoring, patching, vendor management, strategy.
- In-house IT team. You hire employees. One person first, then a small team.
The question isn’t which is best in the abstract. It’s which fits your current size, growth rate, and risk tolerance.
When break-fix stops working
Break-fix works fine up to a certain scale. Companies under roughly 15 to 20 users, with simple stacks and no regulated data, often don’t need anything more.
Break-fix stops working when three things happen, usually at once:
- Downtime becomes expensive. Once an hour of your team sitting on their hands costs more than what a proactive provider charges per month, you’re paying for peace of mind by accident, not on purpose.
- Compliance or insurance enters the picture. Cyber insurance underwriters, HIPAA, PCI, and procurement questionnaires from enterprise customers all ask questions that break-fix vendors can’t answer.
- You’re making IT decisions with no framework. You bought tools because a vendor recommended them. You have no idea who’s on your network. Your backups might work, or they might not.
If two of those three are true, break-fix is already costing more than it looks on the invoice.
Why hiring too early backfires
The instinct, when break-fix stops working, is often to hire. “We’ll bring it in-house.” It’s intuitive but usually wrong at this stage.
One IT hire becomes a single point of failure. They’re on vacation, or out sick, or interviewing at another company, and suddenly your whole IT function stalls. They’re also asked to be everything at once — help desk, network admin, security lead, strategist. Nobody is actually all of those things, and the ones who claim to be will leave in a year.
The economics usually don’t work until you’re around 75 to 100 employees, depending on industry. Before that, a salaried IT person is underutilized 60% of the time and out of their depth the other 40%.
Where an outsourced IT department earns its fee
An outsourced IT department gives you a bench instead of a person. Help desk engineers for the routine work. Senior engineers for projects. A named account manager for strategy. Monitoring tooling you couldn’t afford on your own.
For a company between 20 and 100 users, the economics tend to land in this range:
- Base monthly fee: $100–$250 per user, depending on stack complexity and security tier.
- Typical all-in cost: 50 to 70 percent of what a single full-time IT hire would cost, once you include tools, training, and turnover risk.
That per-user range is real. If a provider is quoting $50 per user for the same scope, someone is cutting corners. If they’re quoting $400, make sure you’re getting proportional value.
Signs you’ve hit the inflection point
You’re probably ready for an outsourced IT department if:
- You have 20 or more employees, or you’ll be there within 12 months.
- Your team depends on three or more SaaS platforms for day-to-day work.
- You’ve had at least one IT incident in the last year that felt genuinely expensive.
- Someone on your leadership team has become the de facto IT person, and it’s eating strategic hours.
- A customer, insurer, or regulator has asked you to document your security or IT controls, and the documentation doesn’t exist.
Check three of those five and the math almost always favors outsourcing.
One caveat
The wrong outsourced IT department is worse than break-fix. If your provider doesn’t have a dedicated account manager, doesn’t publish response SLAs in writing, or can’t show you how they plan technology on a quarterly cadence, you’re paying for a rebranded break-fix vendor.
The good ones behave like a department. Regular reviews, a technology roadmap, documented decisions, clear accountability when things break. If that isn’t what you’d expect from an internal IT director, it isn’t really an outsourced IT department — it’s a subscription to helplessness.
The short version
Break-fix is for small or simple. A real IT team is for large or complex. The middle — twenty to a hundred users, growing, with anything resembling regulated data — is where outsourcing fits best. If you’re in that range and haven’t made the switch, the question isn’t whether it’s time. It’s why you haven’t yet.
