MSP Service Catalog Best Practices: Selling the Right Services
Your service catalog is the blueprint for your business. It defines what you sell, how you price it, what you deliver, and where the boundaries are. A well-designed catalog drives revenue and manages expectations. A poorly designed one creates scope creep, pricing confusion, and client dissatisfaction.
Why Your Service Catalog Matters
The service catalog serves multiple purposes:
- Sales tool. It gives sales conversations structure and consistency.
- Pricing framework. It creates standardised pricing that protects margins.
- Operational guide. It tells the delivery team what to deliver for each service level.
- Scope definition. It defines what is included and — critically — what is not.
- Client expectation management. Clients know what they are paying for.
Designing Your Core Service Tiers
Most Australian MSPs structure their catalog around 3–5 core tiers:
Essential / Basic
Entry-level managed services for small businesses with simple needs:
- Monitoring and alerting
- Patch management
- Basic remote support (business hours)
- Antivirus and endpoint protection
- Monthly reporting
Target: Businesses with 5–25 users who need reliable IT support without complexity.
Professional / Standard
Full managed services for mid-sized businesses:
- Everything in Essential
- 24/7 remote support
- Proactive maintenance
- Backup management
- Basic security monitoring
- Quarterly business reviews
Target: Businesses with 25–100 users who need comprehensive IT management.
Premium / Enterprise
High-touch managed services with enhanced support:
- Everything in Professional
- Dedicated account manager
- Priority response times
- Advanced security monitoring and response
- Strategic IT consulting
- vCIO services
- Monthly business reviews
Target: Businesses with 100+ users or those in regulated industries requiring enhanced compliance and security.
Add-On Services
Modular services that complement core offerings:
- Security. Advanced endpoint detection, SIEM, vulnerability management, security awareness training
- Cloud. Microsoft 365 management, cloud migration, Azure/AWS management
- Backup. Enhanced backup with longer retention, immutable storage, disaster recovery
- Compliance. Essential 8 implementation, ISO 27001 preparation, audit support
- Projects. Hardware refresh, network upgrades, office moves
Pricing Your Services
Pricing is where most MSPs get it wrong. Key principles:
Price for Profit
Calculate your cost-to-deliver for each service tier. Include staff time, tools, overhead, and margin. If a service costs you $150/user/month to deliver, pricing it at $100/user/month is a guaranteed loss.
Our MSP Cost Calculator helps model your cost base.
Align Pricing with Value
Per-user pricing is the most common model for managed services because it scales with the client's size and aligns with how IT value is delivered. Per-device pricing can create misalignment when users have multiple devices.
Define Scope Boundaries
Every service tier should clearly define:
- What is included (number of users/devices, support hours, response times)
- What triggers an out-of-scope charge (project work, after-hours support beyond included hours, specialised applications)
- How out-of-scope work is priced (hourly rates, project quotes)
Scope creep is the silent killer of MSP margins. Your catalog is the first line of defence.
Create Transparent Pricing
Clients respect transparency. Publish your pricing (or at least your pricing ranges) rather than hiding behind "call us for a quote." This builds trust and filters out clients who cannot afford your services.
Our MSP Pricing Models guide provides detailed pricing frameworks.
Presenting Your Catalog
Keep It Simple
Clients do not want to wade through 20 service descriptions. Present your core tiers clearly and position add-ons as enhancements.
Use Plain Language
Avoid jargon. Instead of "RMM-based endpoint management with automated patching," say "We keep all your computers up to date and secure automatically."
Include Comparisons
A comparison table showing what each tier includes makes it easy for clients to understand the differences and make informed decisions.
Tie Services to Outcomes
Clients buy outcomes, not services. Frame each service in terms of what it delivers:
- "24/7 monitoring and response" → "We detect and fix problems before they impact your business"
- "Backup management" → "Your data is protected and recoverable at all times"
- "vCIO services" → "Strategic IT advice aligned with your business goals"
Maintaining Your Catalog
Your service catalog should be reviewed and updated:
- Quarterly. Add new services, remove obsolete ones, adjust pricing based on cost changes.
- Annually. Comprehensive review of service definitions, pricing, and market positioning.
- After major changes. New tools, new vendors, or new capabilities should be reflected promptly.
Related Guides
- MSP Pricing Models — Detailed pricing strategies
- MSP Cost Calculator — Model cost-to-deliver
- MSP Service Level Agreement Guide — SLA design
- MSP Client Onboarding Process — Delivering on catalog promises
- MSP Financial Breakdown — Understanding MSP unit economics
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