MSP Burnout: Warning Signs and How to Recover
MSP burnout is endemic. The combination of high ticket volumes, constant context-switching, after-hours support, and understaffing creates a perfect storm. If you're in MSP, you've probably experienced it or know someone who has.
What Causes MSP Burnout
Structural Causes
Volume pressure: - Ticket counts that keep climbing - Expectations to close more tickets per day - Constant context-switching between issues - No time for deep work or learning
Understaffing: - Teams that are always "just one person short" - Covering for colleagues who leave - Doing the work of 2-3 people - Management aware but unwilling to hire
Compensation misalignment: - Salary doesn't reflect workload - Overtime unpaid or untracked - Bonuses that never materialise - Seeing client invoices vs your pay
After-hours burden: - On-call rotations with inadequate compensation - "Just this once" requests that become regular - Weekend and holiday work - No real disconnect from work
Role-Specific Causes
Service Desk (L1): - Repetitive, unchallenging work - High-pressure, high-volume environment - Feeling like a "ticket machine" - Limited career progression
Engineers (L2-L3): - Project work stacked on top of support tickets - Urgent client issues interrupting planned work - Constant firefighting with no time for improvement - Watching the same issues recur due to poor decisions
Managers: - Accountable for everything, empowered to change nothing - Client pressure without organisational support - Team members leaving repeatedly - Impossible SLA targets
Early Warning Signs
Physical Signs
- Chronic fatigue that sleep doesn't fix
- Frequent headaches or migraines
- Muscle tension, especially neck and shoulders
- Changes in appetite or sleep patterns
- Getting sick more often
Emotional Signs
- Dreading Monday morning
- Feeling emotionally flat or numb
- Irritability over small things
- Loss of motivation for things you used to enjoy
- Feeling trapped or hopeless
Behavioural Signs
- Procrastinating on tickets
- Avoiding client calls
- Reduced quality of work
- Social withdrawal
- Increased alcohol or substance use
- Checking emails compulsively outside work
Cognitive Signs
- Difficulty concentrating
- Making more mistakes than usual
- Feeling overwhelmed by simple tasks
- Memory problems
- Indecisiveness
[!WARNING] If you're experiencing multiple warning signs for more than 2 weeks, you're likely experiencing burnout. Don't wait until you crash — take action now.
Recovery Strategies
Immediate Actions (This Week)
- Take a mental health day — Use sick leave if needed. You're not faking it.
- Set boundaries — Turn off email notifications after hours. Start with one evening.
- Talk to someone — A friend, family member, or counsellor. Don't bottle it up.
- Exercise — Even a 30-minute walk helps. Physical activity is the fastest way to reduce stress hormones.
- Review your contract — Know your rights around leave, working hours, and fair work.
Short-Term (Next 1-2 Months)
- Use your leave — Take annual leave to actually rest, not just catch up on life admin
- Set work boundaries — Define when you're available and stick to it
- Reduce commitments — Say no to non-essential work and social obligations
- Get professional help — A psychologist or counsellor can help. Mental Health Care Plans provide Medicare rebates.
- Reassess priorities — What matters most right now? Health, relationships, career growth?
Long-Term (3-6 Months)
- Address root causes — If the MSP is the problem, change the MSP
- Build skills — Invest in certifications that open doors to better roles
- Set career goals — Burnout often comes from feeling stuck
- Build a support network — Connect with other MSP professionals
- Consider a different MSP — Not all MSPs are the same
When to Leave
Signs It's Time to Go
- Recovery isn't working — You've tried to improve things but nothing changes
- The culture is toxic — Management doesn't care about wellbeing
- You dread every workday — Not just bad days, but consistently
- Your health is suffering — Physical or mental health deteriorating
- Your relationships are suffering — Work stress spilling into personal life
- You've outgrown the role — No room for growth or challenge
How to Leave Safely
- Secure another role first — Don't resign without a backup
- Use your leave — Take accumulated leave between roles
- Don't overshare — "I'm pursuing a new opportunity" is sufficient
- Get references — Secure written references before you leave
- Take a break — Even 2-4 weeks between roles helps
For MSP Managers: Preventing Burnout
Structural Changes
- Hire enough people — Understaffing is the #1 cause of burnout
- Track workload metrics — RHEM (Reactive Hours per Endpoint per Month) helps identify overloaded teams
- Implement follow-the-sun — Use after-hours teams instead of burning out local staff
- Automate repetitive tasks — PowerShell, Rewst, or similar tools
Cultural Changes
- Normalise taking leave — Don't guilt people for using annual leave
- Set realistic SLAs — SLAs that are consistently breached are a morale killer
- Provide mental health support — EAP, counselling, mental health days
- Recognise good work — Acknowledgement is free but powerful
- Allow flexible work — WFH and flexible hours reduce stress
Compensation Changes
- Pay on-call properly — Standby + call-in rates
- Track overtime — Pay for extra hours or provide TOIL
- Performance bonuses — Tie to realistic metrics, not just revenue
- Salary reviews — At least annually, ideally biannually
Resources
- Beyond Blue — 1300 22 4636 (24/7 mental health support)
- Lifeline — 13 11 14 (24/7 crisis support)
- Fair Work Australia — 13 13 94 (workplace rights)
- Heads Up — headsup.org.au (mental health in the workplace)
- Mensline Australia — 1300 78 99 78
[!NOTE] Burnout isn't a personal failure — it's a systemic issue. If your MSP is burning through staff, the problem is with the organisation, not the individuals. You deserve better.
Related Guides
- How to Escape the MSP Trap — Your complete escape plan
- MSP Exit Strategy — How to leave without getting screwed
- Fair Work Rights — Know your legal rights around working hours
- MSP Health Score — Rate your current MSP
- How to Leave an MSP — Step-by-step exit guide
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