MSP Client Communication Tips: Building Trust Through Transparent Communication
The number one reason clients leave their MSP is not poor technology — it is poor communication. Clients leave because they do not know what is happening, because they feel ignored, or because they discovered a problem before their MSP told them about it.
Communication is not a soft skill in the MSP business. It is the foundation of client retention.
Why Communication Breaks Down
MSP communication problems are usually structural:
- Technicians are not communicators. They are trained to fix things, not to explain things.
- Reactive culture. MSPs communicate when something breaks, not proactively.
- Volume. With dozens of clients and hundreds of tickets, personal communication feels impossible.
- Assumption of understanding. Technicians assume clients understand technical concepts. They do not.
- Fear of bad news. Nobody enjoys telling a client something is wrong, so they delay or soften the message.
Communication Framework for MSPs
1. Establish Communication Cadence
Set expectations for regular communication and stick to them:
- Weekly. Brief status updates for active projects or ongoing issues.
- Monthly. Service reports, security updates, and proactive recommendations.
- Quarterly. Business reviews covering performance, strategy, and upcoming needs.
- Annually. Strategic planning discussions, contract reviews, and technology roadmaps.
Consistency builds trust. If you promise a monthly report, deliver it every month without exception.
2. Proactive Over Reactive
The most effective MSP communication is proactive — reaching out before the client has to ask:
- Security advisories. When a relevant vulnerability is discovered, tell clients what it means for them and what you are doing about it.
- Planned maintenance. Inform clients before maintenance windows, not after.
- Technology recommendations. Suggest improvements before clients experience problems.
- Contract and licensing updates. Give clients advance notice of changes, renewals, or cost adjustments.
Our MSP Client Retention Strategy covers proactive relationship management.
3. Communicate in Plain Language
Technical jargon creates distance between you and your clients. Translate technical concepts into business language:
- Instead of: "We patched the Exchange server to address CVE-2024-21413"
-
Say: "We applied a security update to your email system to protect against a recently discovered vulnerability"
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Instead of: "The RMM agent reported a high CPU utilisation event on the primary domain controller"
- Say: "We noticed your main server was working harder than usual. We investigated and resolved the issue — no impact on your team"
4. Be Honest About Problems
When things go wrong — and they will — honesty is the only viable strategy:
- Acknowledge quickly. "We are aware of the issue and working on it."
- Explain the impact. "This is affecting email access for your team."
- Provide updates. Even if there is no new information, update clients regularly so they know you have not forgotten.
- Explain the resolution. "The issue was caused by X. We have fixed it and implemented Y to prevent recurrence."
- Follow up. After resolution, check that everything is working and the client is satisfied.
Hiding problems always makes them worse. Clients respect honesty, even when the news is bad.
5. Use the Right Channel for the Message
Different communications require different channels:
| Channel | Best For |
|---|---|
| Ticketing system | Support requests, incident tracking |
| Reports, formal updates, recommendations | |
| Phone | Sensitive discussions, urgent issues |
| Video call | Business reviews, strategic discussions |
| Client portal | Self-service, knowledge access, status checks |
| SMS | Critical alerts requiring immediate attention |
6. Make Communication Everyone's Responsibility
Client communication should not be the responsibility of one person. Build a culture where every team member communicates effectively:
- Include communication skills in hiring criteria
- Provide communication training for technical staff
- Create templates for common communication scenarios
- Review communication quality as part of quality assurance
Measuring Communication Effectiveness
Track these metrics:
- Client satisfaction scores. Regular surveys measuring communication satisfaction.
- Response time. How quickly do you respond to client inquiries?
- Proactive communication volume. How often do you reach out proactively?
- Client NPS. Net Promoter Score measures overall client sentiment, which is heavily influenced by communication.
- Churn reasons. When clients leave, what communication issues contributed?
Common Communication Mistakes
- Going silent. No updates during an outage is worse than the outage itself.
- Over-communicating. Daily emails about routine matters train clients to ignore you.
- Using jargon. If the client needs a dictionary to understand your message, rewrite it.
- Blaming others. "The vendor caused this" is true but unhelpful. Take ownership.
- Forgetting to follow up. A resolved issue without a follow-up confirmation feels incomplete.
Building a Communication Culture
Creating a communication-first culture requires leadership commitment:
- Lead by example. If the founder communicates well, the team follows.
- Reward good communicators. Recognise team members who receive positive client feedback.
- Address poor communication. When communication fails, treat it as a performance issue.
- Share client feedback. When clients praise communication, share it with the team. When they criticise it, use it as a learning opportunity.
Communication is a skill that can be learned and improved. Invest in it, and your clients will reward you with loyalty.
Related Guides
- MSP Client Management Tips — Relationship management
- MSP Client Satisfaction Metrics — Measuring satisfaction
- MSP Client Retention Strategy — Retention through communication
- MSP Service Level Agreement Guide — Setting communication expectations
- MSP Incident Response Plan — Incident communication procedures
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