MSP Employee Training Programs: Building Skills That Matter
The MSP industry runs on people. Your engineer's skill level directly determines the quality of service your clients receive. Yet many Australian MSPs under-invest in training, creating a cycle of skill gaps, turnover, and declining service quality.
Here is why MSP employee training matters and what both MSPs and their employees should know.
The Training Gap in Australian MSPs
The MSP industry has a training problem. A 2025 survey of Australian MSP employees found:
- 42% received no formal training in the past 12 months
- 35% paid for their own certifications
- 28% said lack of development was their primary reason for considering leaving
- Only 22% had a documented career development plan
This under-investment creates a vicious cycle: untrained engineers deliver lower quality service, clients become dissatisfied, revenue stagnates, and the MSP cannot afford to invest in training.
Why Training Matters for MSPs
Service Quality
Trained engineers resolve issues faster, make fewer mistakes, and provide better strategic advice. The difference between an engineer with current Microsoft certifications and one without is measurable in ticket resolution times and first-contact resolution rates.
Employee Retention
Training and career development are among the top three factors in MSP employee retention. Engineers who feel they are growing are far less likely to leave. Given the cost of replacing an MSP engineer (typically 1.5-2x salary), training investment pays for itself through reduced turnover.
Competitive Advantage
MSPs with certified, well-trained teams can market their expertise to win higher-value clients. Certification badges on the website are not just marketing — they signal capability.
Compliance
Many compliance frameworks (Essential 8, ISO 27001, SOC 2) require evidence of staff competence. Training records demonstrate that your team has the skills to implement and maintain required controls.
Essential Certification Paths for MSP Roles
Help Desk / Level 1 Support
| Certification | Focus | Value |
|---|---|---|
| CompTIA A+ | Hardware, software, troubleshooting | Foundation |
| CompTIA Network+ | Networking fundamentals | Foundation |
| Microsoft 365 Certified: Fundamentals (MS-900) | M365 ecosystem | Entry point |
| ITIL 4 Foundation | IT service management | Process understanding |
Systems Engineer / Level 2-3 Support
| Certification | Focus | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Microsoft 365 Certified: Administrator Expert (MS-102) | M365 administration | Core |
| Azure Administrator (AZ-104) | Azure infrastructure | Core |
| Azure Solutions Architect (AZ-305) | Azure architecture | Advanced |
| VMware VCP | Virtualisation | Infrastructure |
Security Specialist
| Certification | Focus | Value |
|---|---|---|
| CompTIA Security+ | Security fundamentals | Foundation |
| Microsoft Certified: Security Administrator (SC-200) | Microsoft security | Core |
| Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP) | Comprehensive security | Advanced |
| Certified Information Security Manager (CISM) | Security management | Leadership |
Management / Business
| Certification | Focus | Value |
|---|---|---|
| ITIL 4 Managing Professional | Service management | Operations |
| PMP or PRINCE2 | Project management | Delivery |
| CompTIA Security Analytics Professional | Data-driven security | Strategy |
Building an MSP Training Program
For MSP Owners
Budget Allocation: - Allocate $3,000-$5,000 per engineer per year for training - Include exam fees, training materials, and conference attendance - Factor in productivity loss during training (typically 1-2 weeks per year)
Structure: - Define certification requirements by role - Create a training calendar with milestones - Tie training completion to performance reviews and progression - Celebrate certification achievements publicly
Retention Link: - Include training in employment contracts - Offer certification bonuses ($500-$2,000 per certification) - Provide study leave (paid time off for exam preparation) - Create career progression paths that require certifications
Our MSP Employee Retention Strategies guide covers the broader retention picture.
For MSP Engineers
Self-Development: - Take advantage of free Microsoft Learn paths - Use vendor trial environments for hands-on practice - Join community groups and user groups - Attend industry events (even virtual ones)
Negotiate for Support: - Ask for certification reimbursement as part of your package - Request study leave for exam preparation - Propose a training plan as part of your performance review - Use our MSP Salary Negotiation guide to structure the conversation
Career Planning: - Identify which certifications align with your career goals - Map certifications to specific roles you want to move into - Build a portfolio of skills, not just certifications
The ROI of MSP Training
For the MSP
| Investment | Return |
|---|---|
| $5,000 per engineer/year | Reduced turnover (saves $50,000+ per engineer retained) |
| Certification programs | Higher win rates on enterprise clients |
| Structured training | Fewer escalations, faster resolution |
| Career paths | Better employee engagement and productivity |
For the Employee
| Investment | Return |
|---|---|
| Certification | $5,000-$15,000 salary increase potential |
| Specialised skills | Access to higher-value roles |
| Career progression | Path from help desk to architecture/management |
| Industry recognition | Credibility and market value |
Red Flags in MSP Training
"We Expect You to Train Yourself"
If the MSP expects engineers to upskill on their own time and at their own expense, they are not investing in their team. This typically correlates with high turnover and poor service quality.
No Certification Requirements
An MSP that does not require certifications for technical roles is unlikely to deliver consistent quality. Certifications provide a baseline of competence.
Certifications Without Application
Requiring certifications without providing opportunities to apply new skills is wasteful. Training should connect to real work.
Training Only for New Hires
If only new hires receive training while tenured staff are neglected, skill gaps will widen over time.
Training and Compliance
Certain compliance frameworks have specific training requirements:
- Essential 8 — requires staff awareness training on cyber security
- ISO 27001 — includes competence and awareness requirements
- SOC 2 — trust service criteria include training documentation
- Privacy Act — staff must understand their obligations under the APPs
Our Essential 8 Implementation Checklist includes staff training requirements.
The Bottom Line
Training is not a cost — it is an investment in the people who deliver your IT services. MSPs that invest in structured training programs retain better staff, deliver higher quality service, and win more business. Employees who invest in their own development command higher salaries and have more career options.
The MSP industry's training gap is an opportunity for those willing to close it.
Use our MSP Health Score to evaluate your MSP's operational maturity, or our MSP Salary Calculator to benchmark compensation including training benefits.
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