Confused by IT support SLAs? Learn what response time really means, how priorities work, what’s missing from many SLAs, and what SMEs should ask.
IT Support SLAs Explained: What “Response Time” Really Means (and What SMEs Should Ask)
Most SMEs are told they have an SLA, but few are given a clear explanation of what it means in practice. “One-hour response time” sounds great—until you’re dealing with a real issue and you realise response doesn’t always mean resolution, priorities can be interpreted differently, and some issues fall into grey areas. The result is frustration: leadership thinks they’ve bought peace of mind, while staff feel like they’re still chasing support.
A good SLA is useful, but only if it’s understood. It should set expectations for how incidents are triaged, how quickly you’ll hear back, how escalation works, and what happens when something is business-critical. It should also be paired with operational discipline: clear ticket handling, proactive monitoring, and transparent reporting.
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. We believe SLAs should reduce stress, not create arguments—so we focus on clear priorities, consistent communication, and measurable performance reporting.
The short answer is: SMEs should look beyond “response time” and understand priority definitions, escalation routes, resolution expectations, and how performance is reported over time.
What “response time” usually means (and what it doesn’t)
Response time typically means:
- you’ll receive acknowledgement and initial contact within X time
- triage begins and information is gathered
It doesn’t always mean:
- the issue will be fixed within X time
- the right engineer is already working it
- parts/vendors/third parties won’t affect timelines
How priorities should work (in real life)
A sensible model:
- P1 (critical): business stopped / major outage
- P2 (high): serious impact, workaround limited
- P3 (medium): productivity impacted, workaround exists
- P4 (low): minor issue / request
The key is agreeing what qualifies—so “everything is urgent” doesn’t become the norm.
What SMEs should ask before signing
- how do you define priorities (examples, not just labels)?
- what’s the escalation path if we’re stuck?
- do you measure resolution time as well as response time?
- what’s included in support vs project work?
- how do you handle out-of-hours incidents (if needed)?
- what reporting will we receive monthly/quarterly?
FAQ
Is a one-hour response SLA good?
It can be, but only if priorities are clear and escalation works.
Should we demand resolution SLAs?
Sometimes, but resolution depends on complexity. More important is transparency, ownership, and consistent communication.
How do we know if an SLA is being met?
You should receive regular reporting showing performance by priority and trend over time.
If you’re comparing
Managed IT Service Providers or renegotiating your current agreement, we can help you sanity-check SLAs and make sure the contract matches what your business actually needs.