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How to Negotiate a Raise at an MSP: A Practical Guide - MSP Guide Australia

Career 2026-06-11 🕐 7 min 1314 words

How to Negotiate a Raise at an MSP: A Practical Guide

Most MSP technicians are underpaid. The reasons are structural: opaque pay scales, no formal review processes, guilt about "asking for more when the team is stretched," and management that knows silence is cheaper than raises.

But here's the thing — asking for a raise is a professional skill, not an emotional confrontation. With the right preparation and approach, you can significantly increase your income. This guide gives you the framework.

Before you start, check your current position against the market with our salary benchmark tool. Knowing your market value is the foundation of any negotiation.

Step 1: Build Your Case

Negotiations aren't won in the meeting room — they're won in the preparation.

Document Your Contributions

Create a "brag document" with concrete evidence:

Technical contributions: - Projects you've led or significantly contributed to - Systems you've built, migrated, or optimised - Automations you've implemented (and the time/money they save) - Certifications you've earned since your last salary review - Documentation you've created

Business impact: - Client retention you've influenced - Revenue you've protected or grown - Costs you've reduced - Processes you've improved

Scope expansion: - New responsibilities you've taken on - Teams you've mentored - On-call duties you've absorbed - After-hours work you've done

Specificity matters. "I managed the Azure migration" is weak. "I led the Azure migration for Client X, completing it two weeks ahead of schedule, on budget, with zero downtime, and documented the entire process for the team" is strong.

Know Your Market Value

Use multiple sources to establish your worth:

  • Our salary guide 2026 for MSP-specific benchmarks
  • Glassdoor, Seek, and LinkedIn salary data
  • Conversations with recruiters who specialise in IT
  • Industry contacts at other MSPs

Document the range. If you're currently at $85k and the market range is $95k-$115k for your role and experience, that's your negotiating position.

Understand the MSP's Position

Before you ask, consider:

  • Financial health. Is the MSP growing, stable, or struggling? Check recent contract wins, hiring patterns, and any news.
  • Budget cycle. Many MSPs set salaries annually. Know when budget decisions are made and ask 2-3 months before.
  • Your replaceability. Be honest — how hard would it be to replace you? Technical specialists and those with deep client relationships have more leverage.
  • Management style. Does your manager respond to data, relationships, or competitive pressure? Tailor your approach.

Step 2: Choose Your Strategy

The Market Rate Argument

The most straightforward approach: "Based on market data, someone in my role with my experience should be earning $X. I'd like to discuss how my compensation can be brought in line with the market."

Best when: You're demonstrably underpaid and have clear market data.

The Value Creation Argument

Focus on what you've done and what you'll continue to do: "In the last 12 months, I've [specific achievements]. I'd like to discuss a salary adjustment that reflects this contribution and my commitment to the team."

Best when: You have strong documentation of your impact and a good relationship with management.

The Expanded Role Argument

You've taken on more responsibility without corresponding pay: "Since my last review, my role has expanded to include [X, Y, Z]. I'd like to discuss adjusting my compensation to reflect this expanded scope."

Best when: You've genuinely grown into a broader role without a corresponding salary adjustment.

The Competing Offer Argument

You have (or can get) an outside offer: "I've been approached about a role at [company] at $X. I'd prefer to stay here, but I need my compensation to reflect my market value."

Best when: You have a genuine offer you'd actually accept. Never bluff.

Step 3: The Conversation

Timing

  • Request a dedicated meeting. Don't ambush your manager in the hallway or tack it onto a status update.
  • Best days: Tuesday-Thursday. Mondays are hectic, Fridays are wind-down.
  • Best times: Mid-morning when energy is up, or after lunch when defenses are lower.
  • Avoid: During crises, end-of-quarter crunch, or when your manager is clearly stressed.

The Script

Here's a framework you can adapt:

Opening: "Thanks for making time. I'd like to discuss my compensation. I've prepared some context and I'd appreciate your feedback."

Context: "Over the past [timeframe], I've taken on [responsibilities] and delivered [achievements]. I've also [certifications/developments]. I want to make sure my compensation reflects my contributions and the current market."

The ask: "Based on my research and contributions, I'd like to discuss adjusting my salary from $[current] to $[target]. I believe this is fair given [reasons]."

The pause. After stating your case, stop talking. Let them respond. Silence is uncomfortable — don't fill it.

Handling Responses

"Let me think about it." Good response. Set a follow-up: "That's reasonable. Can we schedule a follow-up next week?"

"We don't have budget right now." Fair, but incomplete. Ask: "What would it take to make this happen? Can we agree on a timeline and criteria?" Get specifics in writing.

"You're already at the top of the band." Then the band is too low. "I understand there may be band limitations. Can we discuss reclassifying my role or creating a path to a higher band?"

"We value you, but the answer is no." This is information. Thank them, and then decide what this tells you about your future at the MSP. If you're genuinely undervalued and they won't address it, it's time to look at leaving for an in-house role or another MSP.

"What would it take?" They're open. This is your opportunity to lay out clear, measurable criteria. Get it in writing.

Step 4: After the Conversation

If They Say Yes

  • Get it in writing. A verbal agreement isn't a raise. Ask for a revised offer letter or written confirmation.
  • Confirm the timeline. When does the new salary take effect? Is it backdated?
  • Don't immediately ask for more. Accept graciously and deliver on any commitments you made.

If They Say Not Yet

  • Get specific criteria. "What do I need to achieve to earn this raise?" Make it measurable.
  • Set a timeline. "Can we revisit this in 3 months with these criteria?"
  • Document everything. Save the email, note the conversation, track the criteria.

If They Say No

  • Thank them professionally. Burning bridges helps no one.
  • Start your exit strategy. Update your resume, check our MSP interview questions to prepare, and begin networking.
  • Don't check out immediately. Continue performing while you plan your move. A reference from your current employer is valuable.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Apologising. Don't say "I'm sorry to ask, but..." You're having a professional conversation about fair compensation. Own it.

Making it personal. "I need more money because my rent went up" is weak. "My contributions and market data support this adjustment" is strong.

Accepting the first counter-offer too quickly. If they offer 5% when you asked for 15%, negotiate. Meet in the middle with a plan to revisit.

Comparing yourself to colleagues. "I know Dave earns more" is uncomfortable and unprofessional. Focus on your value and market data.

Threatening to quit without a plan. Ultimatums backfire. If you're going to leave, have a real alternative.

Negotiating via email for the first time. This conversation should be face-to-face or video. Email lacks nuance and creates paper trails that make people defensive.

The Long Game

Salary negotiation isn't a one-time event. Build these habits:

  • Annual benchmarking. Check your salary against the market every year, whether you're negotiating or not.
  • Ongoing documentation. Keep your brag document updated quarterly.
  • Relationship building. The better your relationship with management, the easier every future conversation.
  • Skill development. The more specialised and in-demand your skills, the stronger your negotiating position. See our best certifications for MSP engineers for high-value options.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the average salary increase when negotiating at an MSP?
Typical successful negotiations yield 8-15% increases. However, this depends heavily on your current salary relative to market, your leverage, and the MSP's financial health. Use our salary benchmark tool to check where you stand.
When is the best time to ask for a raise at an MSP?
The best times are after completing a major project, during performance reviews (or just before budget cycles), when you've taken on new responsibilities, or when you have a competing offer. Avoid asking during periods of company financial stress.
What if my MSP says no to a raise?
A flat no tells you something important about how the MSP values you. Ask for specific criteria to earn a raise within 3-6 months. If they can't articulate those criteria, it's time to consider your options — our guide on leaving an MSP for in-house roles covers your alternatives.
Should I use a job offer as leverage to get a raise?
It can work, but it's risky. Only use a real offer you'd actually accept. If you bluff and stay, you've lost credibility. If you have a genuine offer, it demonstrates your market value and gives you a real alternative.
How do I negotiate a raise as an MSP technician with no formal review process?
Many MSPs lack structured review processes. Request a meeting specifically to discuss compensation. Frame it as a business conversation: 'I'd like to discuss how my compensation aligns with my contributions and market rates.' If the MSP won't have the conversation at all, that tells you everything.

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