Cybersecurity and, to a lesser but growing extent, compliance are the most pressing priorities for MSPs and their customers this year, according to Kaseya?s 2020 MSP Benchmark Survey. The ninth annual survey asked 1,300 owners and technicians of MSP firms in more than 50 countries about pricing and service delivery trends, new service offerings, and operational resources and requirements.
?Respondents to this year?s survey overwhelmingly agreed that their clients need more cybersecurity support from them. This is especially true in today?s uncertain environment,? said Jim Lippie, senior vice president and GM of partner development at Kaseya. ?As more small and midsize businesses look to maintain vital security operations and decrease IT costs internally ahead of an economic downturn, they will lean on the expertise and services provided by MSPs to keep their companies operating.?
While responses to the 2020 survey were collected in December 2019 prior to the coronavirus crisis, the pandemic has only increased the focus on a need for expanded IT security measures. Companies of all sizes have recently seen an increase in cyberattacks with an influx of personal devices connecting to the corporate network and as malicious actors hope to take advantage of the uncertain times.
?More than half, or 60%, of our respondents said their clients experienced downtime from an outage in the past year,? Lippie continued. ?In our current, unprecedented climate, an outage can mean the end for a small business. So for MSPs, who are the IT backbone of these small businesses, there?s a significant opportunity to diversify their clients? cybersecurity solutions and strategy in order to respond agilely to any threat that comes their way and maintain their livelihood.?
Security is the No. 1 priority
Both MSPs and their customers have faced increased security threats year over year. Because MSPs have access to their clients? IT environments through remote monitoring and management (RMM) tools, they are an ideal target for malicious actors who see opportunity in the ability to extend the impact of their attacks. In fact, a little more than 1 in 3 respondents (37%) said they felt their MSP business was more prone to cybercrime now than it was in 2019.
On top of the concern for their own organization?s security, MSPs must contend with increased cyber risks to their clients. Almost all respondents (95%) have had either some or most of their clients turn to them for counsel on cybersecurity plans and best practices. Additionally, nearly three in four respondents said that 10 to 20% of their clients experienced at least one cyberattack in the past year.
Companies need more cybersecurity support from their MSP partners. Among a ranking of several top IT needs, such as ?supporting mobile devices,? ?legacy system replacement? and ?public cloud adoption, migration and support,? more than a quarter of respondents (29%) listed ?meeting security risks? as their clients? top IT need. ?Cybersecurity services,? like antivirus, antimalware and ransomware protection, followed closely at 14%. Together, these two options make up more than 40% of responses to the question. With ransomware and malware attacks making headlines every day, MSPs have an opportunity to protect existing and future customers by providing multi-layered security and backup services.
Other key findings from the survey include:
1. The need for compliance services is growing. With the increasing number of regulations, including the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and the New York Stop Hacks and Improve Electronic Data (SHIELD) Security Act, data privacy has become a necessity for small and large organizations alike. In fact, two-thirds of respondents reported that their clients struggle to meet compliance requirements, and nearly one-third reported an increased need for compliance services in the past two years.
As our dependence on software and other technologies grow, regulators will continue to enact data privacy laws. This presents an opportunity for MSPs to develop and leverage a niche expertise in this space to help clients maintain compliance with an increasingly complex set of regulations.
2. RMM remains MSPs? core application of choice ? but they prioritize integration above everything else. For more than half of respondents (61%), RMM remains the most important application, followed by PSA (21%) and IT documentation (11%). More important than the applications themselves, however, is integration between these core applications. In fact, nearly 70% of respondents said that integration between their core IT applications is very important, and 81% responded that this integration could help their organization drive better bottom-line profits.
3. MSPs show growth through new offerings and value-based pricing. In the past decade, MSPs have evolved greatly from simply providing break-fix services to implementing full-fledged suites of solutions. Driving this evolution is the ability of MSPs to agilely respond to emerging needs in the market. Nearly 90% of respondents consider the expansion of their service offerings important, which makes sense: The most successful, high-growth MSPs ? those with an average monthly recurring revenue growth greater than 20% ? have added about four to five new services to their offerings in the past two years.
Underlying all of this growth is a continued shift toward value-based pricing models. Similar to Kaseya?s 2019 MSP Benchmark Survey, respondents this year opted for a value-based pricing strategy rather than cost-based or price-match strategies. Value-based pricing strategies develop prices based on the end result and the value delivered to the customer.
Among all respondents, 38% reported that more than half of their revenue comes from a value-based pricing strategy. Contrastingly, only 17% of respondents reported that the majority of their revenue came from a cost-based pricing strategy.
4. Cloud support decreases but remains an opportunity for MSP growth. Public and private cloud adoption are among the top IT needs in 2020. However, respondents who manage client cloud environments dropped from 70% in the 2019 survey to 56% this year for public cloud, and from 59% in the 2019 survey to 49% for private cloud. Despite this, there still remains an opportunity for MSPs to grow their cloud management offerings, as nearly a quarter (21%) of successful, high-growth MSPs manage their clients? public cloud environments.