Changing IT support doesn’t have to be painful. Here’s what UK SMEs should expect in the first 30 days: discovery, stabilisation, security, and quick wins.
Switching IT Support Providers: What a Good First 30 Days Should Look Like (UK SMEs)
Switching IT support providers can feel risky. Most business leaders worry about disruption: “Will we lose access to anything?”, “Will staff be frustrated?”, “Will we discover hidden issues too late?” Those concerns are valid — especially if you’ve been through messy transitions before. But a well-run onboarding should feel structured and calm. The goal is continuity first, improvement second, and only then bigger change projects.
The best first 30 days are not about ripping everything out. They’re about gaining visibility, stabilising what’s fragile, tightening the basics, and building trust with the people who rely on IT every day. When onboarding is done properly, businesses often feel relief quickly — because issues that have lingered for months finally get owned and resolved.
Amazing Support is a multi-award-winning, Microsoft Partner, Cyber Essentials and Cyber Essentials Plus certified provider supporting UK SMEs across London, Greater London and Manchester. Our onboarding approach is designed to reduce risk, create clarity, and deliver early wins without disrupting the business.
The short answer is: a good first 30 days should deliver visibility, stability, improved security basics, and a clear plan — without interrupting day-to-day work.
What you should expect in the first 30 days
Week 1: Discovery and access
- confirm admin access to key systems (Microsoft 365, backups, security tools, domains)
- document what exists and what’s critical
- identify immediate risks (unsupported devices, weak access, missing backups)
- establish support routes and SLAs so staff know how to get help
Week 2: Stabilisation and standardisation
- tighten patching and endpoint protection consistency
- confirm monitoring is in place
- reduce recurring issues and “known pain points”
- ensure leavers/joiners process is clear
Week 3: Security baselines and quick wins
- enforce MFA and access policies consistently
- review email security and user reporting
- remove obvious risky configurations
- deliver 2–3 quick wins that staff actually notice (speed, reliability, fewer recurring problems)
Week 4: Roadmap and priorities
- agree priorities with leadership
- define what’s a “must do” vs “nice to have”
- plan any projects (Wi‑Fi refresh, migrations, device refresh cycles)
- set a cadence for reporting and reviews
Red flags during onboarding
- no clear documentation being produced
- vague answers about admin access and ownership
- “we’ll look at security later”
- no quick wins or stabilisation work in the first month
- staff don’t know how to get support or what to expect
FAQ
Will switching providers disrupt our business?
It shouldn’t, if onboarding is structured and prioritises continuity.
How quickly will we see improvements?
Usually within the first few weeks — especially around recurring issues and response consistency.
What do you need from us to make onboarding smooth?
A primary contact, access to key systems, and clarity on what “good” looks like for your business.
If you’re considering a switch of your
IT Support, we can talk you through what onboarding would look like for your environment and what we’d prioritise in the first 30 days.