When something breaks, you call someone, they fix it, you pay. That is the break-fix model, and on paper it looks cheaper than a monthly plan. In practice, it usually costs more — you just do not see the bill all at once.
What break-fix really costs
- Downtime. The clock starts when something breaks and does not stop until a technician is available. Hours of lost productivity rarely show up on the invoice — but they hit your bottom line.
- Surprise bills. Emergencies are billed at emergency rates, and the incentive is to fix the symptom, not prevent the next one.
- No prevention. Patching, monitoring, and security are nobody’s job until after something goes wrong.
What managed IT changes
With managed IT, you pay a flat monthly fee and the provider is responsible for keeping things running — not just fixing them after they fall over. That flips the incentives: now your IT partner makes more money by preventing problems.
- Proactive monitoring catches issues before they cause downtime.
- Patching and security happen on a schedule, automatically.
- Costs are predictable, so IT becomes a line item instead of a gamble.
When break-fix still makes sense
If you are a one-person shop with a single laptop, break-fix may be fine. Once you have a team relying on shared systems, email, and data, the math tips quickly toward managed IT — usually well before owners expect.
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