MSP Onboarding Best Practices: Setting Client Relationships Up for Success
The first 30 days with a new client define the relationship. Get onboarding right, and you build trust, reduce churn, and set the stage for years of productive partnership. Get it wrong, and you're fighting fires from day one.
Most MSPs treat onboarding as a technical exercise — audit the environment, migrate the data, set up monitoring. But onboarding is primarily a relationship exercise. The technical work matters, but how you communicate, set expectations, and demonstrate competence matters more.
If you're reviewing an MSP's onboarding process, our MSP client onboarding process provides an independent evaluation framework.
Why Onboarding Matters
The data is clear: client churn is most likely in the first 90 days. If a client is going to leave, it usually happens early. The reasons:
- Misaligned expectations. What the sales team promised vs. what the service team delivers.
- Communication gaps. The client doesn't know who to contact, how, or when.
- Undocumented environments. The previous MSP's documentation is incomplete or wrong.
- Trust hasn't been built. The client is nervous about the change and looking for reasons to regret it.
Good onboarding addresses all four. It's not just about getting the technical environment right — it's about making the client feel confident they made the right choice.
The Onboarding Framework
Phase 1: Pre-Onboarding (Week Before Start)
Internal preparation:
- [ ] Assign an onboarding lead (one person owns the process)
- [ ] Review the sales handover (what was promised, client expectations)
- [ ] Prepare the onboarding checklist (customise per client)
- [ ] Set up internal project tracking (PSA or project tool)
- [ ] Brief the team on the new client (industry, size, key concerns)
Client preparation:
- [ ] Send a welcome pack (introduction, key contacts, what to expect)
- [ ] Schedule the kick-off meeting
- [ ] Request initial documentation (network diagrams, credentials, existing contracts)
- [ ] Identify client-side stakeholders (IT contact, decision makers, end users)
- [ ] Confirm communication channels (email, portal, phone)
Phase 2: Discovery & Audit (Week 1)
The discovery phase is about understanding what you're inheriting. Never assume the previous MSP's documentation is accurate.
Technical discovery:
- [ ] Full network audit (switches, firewalls, wireless, cabling)
- [ ] Server inventory (physical and virtual, including cloud)
- [ ] M365/Azure tenant audit (licensing, security, configuration)
- [ ] Backup verification (is it working? when was it last tested?)
- [ ] RMM deployment and monitoring verification
- [ ] Security assessment (firewall rules, antivirus, MFA status)
- [ ] Documentation review (what exists, what's missing, what's wrong)
Business discovery:
- [ ] Understand the client's business (what they do, who their customers are)
- [ ] Identify critical systems (what can't go down?)
- [ ] Understand compliance requirements (Essential 8, Privacy Act, industry-specific)
- [ ] Map stakeholders (who makes decisions, who's the day-to-day contact)
- [ ] Understand pain points (why did they leave their previous MSP?)
Document everything. Create an environment baseline that's accurate, comprehensive, and accessible. This documentation is your foundation.
Phase 3: Expectation Setting (Week 1-2)
This is the most critical phase. Get this wrong and nothing else matters.
The kick-off meeting agenda:
- Introductions. Who's who, roles, how to reach them.
- Scope review. Walk through the agreement line by line. What's included, what isn't.
- SLA review. Response times, resolution targets, escalation paths.
- Communication plan. How often you'll meet, what reports they'll receive, who to call for what.
- Transition timeline. What's happening when, who's responsible, what they need to do.
- Known issues. Be honest about what you found during discovery and your plan to address it.
- Questions. Let them ask everything. Answer honestly.
The golden rule of expectation setting: Underpromise and overdeliver. If you think it'll take two weeks, say three. If you think it'll cost $5,000, quote $6,000. The client will be delighted when you come in under. They'll be furious when you go over.
Phase 4: Implementation (Weeks 2-4)
Technical implementation:
- [ ] Deploy RMM agent to all workstations
- [ ] Set up monitoring and alerting
- [ ] Verify backup schedules and test restores
- [ ] Implement security baseline (MFA, patching, AV)
- [ ] Configure email filtering and security
- [ ] Set up documentation and knowledge base
- [ ] Create standard operating procedures for the client
Process implementation:
- [ ] Train client on support portal (how to log tickets)
- [ ] Establish regular meeting cadence (weekly, monthly, quarterly)
- [ ] Set up reporting (ticket summaries, SLA performance, security metrics)
- [ ] Define escalation paths (who to call for what severity)
- [ ] Create a client-specific runbook
Phase 5: Handover & Stabilisation (Week 4+)
Transition to BAU:
- [ ] Handover from onboarding team to service team
- [ ] Introduce the client to their regular technicians
- [ ] Confirm all monitoring is active and alerting correctly
- [ ] Review outstanding issues and action plan
- [ ] Schedule 30-day review meeting
- [ ] Update client health score
The 30-day review:
- How has the transition gone?
- Any outstanding issues?
- Feedback on communication and response times?
- Adjustments needed to scope or processes?
- Confirm next steps and ongoing meeting cadence
Common Onboarding Mistakes
Skipping Discovery
"We'll figure it out as we go" is the fastest path to problems. Thorough discovery prevents surprises that damage trust.
Over-Promising During Sales
If the sales team promised something the service team can't deliver, the client will feel deceived. Align sales and service before signing.
Poor Documentation
"Where's the password for the firewall?" shouldn't require a scavenger hunt. Complete, accurate, accessible documentation is non-negotiable.
No Single Owner
If no one owns the onboarding process, it falls through the cracks. Assign one person who's accountable for the client's transition experience.
Rushing
Pressure to "get them live" fast leads to mistakes, missed items, and poor first impressions. Quality onboarding takes time. Protect that time.
Not Asking for Feedback
Don't assume the client is happy. Ask. Regularly. Silence doesn't mean satisfaction — it often means the client has already decided to leave.
Measuring Onboarding Success
Track these metrics:
- Time to full deployment. How quickly did you get the client fully onboarded?
- First-ticket satisfaction. How did the client experience their first support interaction?
- 30-day satisfaction score. Survey the client at 30 days.
- Outstanding issues at 30 days. How many unresolved items remain?
- Client health score trend. Is the client's health improving or declining?
See our MSP health score for a structured evaluation framework.
Related Resources
- MSP Client Onboarding Process — Independent evaluation framework
- MSP Contract Checklist — Define scope properly
- MSP Client Management Tips — Ongoing relationship management
- MSP Client Retention Strategy — Keep clients long-term
- MSP SLA Guide — Set realistic expectations
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