The Big Four Are Coming for Your MSP
The Big Four accounting firms — KPMG, PwC, EY, and Deloitte — are quietly becoming the biggest competitors to traditional MSPs. They're acquiring IT consultancies, hiring offshore teams, and bundling technology services with their existing audit and advisory practices.
If you work in an MSP, this matters. If you're a client, it matters more.
The Strategy
Step 1: Acquire IT Capabilities
The Big Four have been buying IT companies for years:
- Deloitte acquired multiple Australian IT consultancies, building a technology practice of 3,000+ people
- PwC bought Strategy& (formerly Booz & Company) and expanded its technology advisory
- EY acquired multiple cloud and digital transformation firms
- KPMG is the most aggressive — see the KPMG investigation series
The pattern: buy IT talent, integrate it into the advisory practice, and sell it to existing audit clients.
Step 2: Bundle Services
The Big Four's advantage is the bundle. They can offer: - Audit + IT transformation (one firm, one relationship) - Tax advisory + cloud migration (cross-sell) - Risk consulting + cybersecurity (integrated delivery)
An MSP can only offer IT. The Big Four can offer everything.
Step 3: Offshore the Delivery
Once the acquisition is complete, the Big Four do exactly what traditional MSPs do: offshore the delivery.
- PwC has expanded its offshore delivery centres
- Deloitte uses Indian offices for technical delivery
- EY has significant offshore operations
- KPMG's offshore ratio is growing (see our investigation)
The Big Four don't compete on quality. They compete on price and bundling.
The Numbers
| Firm | Technology Revenue (Global) | Australian IT Staff | Offshore Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deloitte | US$25B+ | ~3,000 | Growing |
| PwC | US$15B+ | ~1,500 | Growing |
| EY | US$12B+ | ~1,200 | Growing |
| KPMG | US$8B+ | ~1,000 | Growing rapidly |
These numbers are growing fast. The Big Four are investing heavily in technology capabilities.
What This Means for Traditional MSPs
The Squeeze
Traditional MSPs are being squeezed from two directions: - From above: The Big Four offer bundled services that pure-play MSPs can't match - From below: Indian IT majors (TCS, Infosys, Wipro) compete on price
The middle ground — where most Australian MSPs operate — is disappearing.
The Acquisition Target
Many MSPs are becoming acquisition targets for the Big Four. The playbook: 1. Big Four identifies a specialist MSP (cloud, security, data) 2. Offers a premium price 3. Acquires and integrates 4. Offshores the delivery 5. Cross-sells to existing audit clients
The MSP brand disappears. The staff are absorbed (or made redundant). The clients get bundled services.
The Talent War
The Big Four can offer things MSPs can't: - Brand prestige ("I work for Deloitte") - Career progression (structured pathways) - Cross-functional exposure (audit + technology) - Higher starting salaries (for certain roles)
This makes it harder for MSPs to attract and retain talent.
What This Means for Employees
The Integration Pain
When a Big Four firm acquires an IT company, the integration is painful: - Different cultures clash - Roles are duplicated and eliminated - Reporting lines change - Processes are imposed from the advisory practice
The pattern is predictable: 12-18 months of uncertainty, followed by restructuring.
The Offshore Shift
The Big Four are expanding offshore delivery just like traditional MSPs. The "prestige" of working for a Big Four firm doesn't protect you from offshoring.
The Skill Premium
The Big Four value certain skills more than traditional MSPs: - Client relationship management - Business advisory - Presentation and communication - Cross-functional thinking
Pure technical skills are less valued. The Big Four want people who can sell, not just build.
What This Means for Clients
The Bundling Trap
Bundled services sound attractive but often mean: - Less choice (you're locked into one provider) - Conflicts of interest (the auditor recommending IT spend) - Higher total cost (bundled doesn't mean cheaper) - Less accountability (who's responsible when things go wrong?)
The Quality Question
The Big Four's IT delivery quality varies. Some teams are excellent; others are staffed with generalists who lack deep technical expertise.
The audit-to-IT pipeline creates a specific risk: auditors who "transition" to IT advisory may understand compliance but not technology.
The Price Premium
Big Four firms charge a premium for their brand. You're paying for "Deloitte" or "PwC" on the invoice, not necessarily for better delivery.
The KPMG Case Study
KPMG is the most aggressive Big Four firm in IT services. Read our full investigation:
- The Vulture of Big Four Collapse — How KPMG's Australian IT practice collapsed and Capgemini scavenged the remains
- Capgemini Investigation — The full story of what happened to KPMG's IT staff
The KPMG story is a preview of what's coming to other Big Four IT practices: acquisition, integration, offshoring, and brand erasure.
The Bottom Line
The Big Four are becoming the biggest competitors to traditional MSPs. They have advantages that pure-play MSPs can't match: - Bundled services - Existing client relationships - Brand prestige - Cross-selling capability
But they run the same offshore playbook as everyone else. The "prestige" of the Big Four brand doesn't change the fundamental economics: clients pay premium rates, and the delivery is increasingly offshore.
For employees: the Big Four offer career progression and brand value, but not immunity from offshoring or restructuring.
For clients: bundled services sound attractive but often mean less choice, higher costs, and conflicts of interest.
The MSP landscape is changing. The Big Four are eating it from the top. The Indian majors are eating it from the bottom. The middle is disappearing.
Based on public disclosures, industry reporting, and analysis of Big Four technology practices in Australia.
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