Your First 90 Days at an MSP: Complete Checklist
Starting at a new MSP is overwhelming. Between learning new systems, meeting the team, and managing client expectations, the first 90 days set the tone for your entire tenure. Here's a structured approach.
Week 1: Orientation & Access
Day 1-2: Setup
- [ ] Receive all login credentials (email, PSA, RMM, documentation platform)
- [ ] Set up multi-factor authentication on all accounts
- [ ] Verify VPN access works from your workstation
- [ ] Get added to relevant Teams channels and distribution lists
- [ ] Review and sign the acceptable use policy
- [ ] Understand your role and reporting structure
- [ ] Get introduced to your team and direct manager
Day 3-5: First Tickets
- [ ] Shadow a senior technician on live tickets
- [ ] Take your first L1 tickets (supervised)
- [ ] Learn the ticket workflow (create → triage → assign → resolve → close)
- [ ] Understand priority classification (P1-P4)
- [ ] Learn how to communicate with clients (phone, email, ticket updates)
- [ ] Review the knowledge base and documentation standards
Week 1 Red Flags to Watch For:
- 🔴 No structured onboarding program
- 🔴 Can't access documentation or knowledge base
- 🔴 No one assigned to help you get started
- 🔴 Immediate pressure to take high-priority tickets alone
- 🔴 No clear explanation of your role or expectations
Week 2-4: Ramp-Up
Technical
- [ ] Learn the PSA system (ConnectWise, Autotask, or similar)
- [ ] Learn the RMM platform (NinjaOne, Datto, Automate, or similar)
- [ ] Understand the documentation system (IT Glue, Hudu, or similar)
- [ ] Review client-specific runbooks and procedures
- [ ] Learn escalation procedures and who to contact for what
- [ ] Complete any required security awareness training
- [ ] Understand the patching and maintenance schedules
People
- [ ] Meet the Service Delivery Manager
- [ ] Meet the NOC/SOC team (if applicable)
- [ ] Meet the Account Managers for your clients
- [ ] Identify your go-to person for technical questions
- [ ] Build relationships with other L1/L2 engineers
- [ ] Understand the team structure and who does what
Process
- [ ] Learn how time tracking works (billable vs non-billable)
- [ ] Understand how tickets are assigned (auto vs manual)
- [ ] Learn the client communication standards
- [ ] Review the escalation matrix
- [ ] Understand on-call expectations and rotation
- [ ] Learn how to request additional resources or tools
Week 2-4 Red Flags:
- 🔴 No documentation or tribal knowledge
- 🔴 Time tracking is chaotic or ignored
- 🔴 Engineers work alone without team support
- 🔴 No clear escalation path
- 🔴 You're expected to bill 100% from day one
Month 2: Independence
Technical
- [ ] Handle L1-L2 tickets independently
- [ ] Complete your first project task or deliverable
- [ ] Attend client meetings with your manager
- [ ] Learn the backup and disaster recovery procedures
- [ ] Understand the security monitoring and alerting setup
- [ ] Review the client's environment before attending calls
Process
- [ ] Understand how client renewals and contracts work
- [ ] Learn the quoting and scoping process
- [ ] Review the change management process
- [ ] Understand the vendor relationship management
- [ ] Learn how quality assurance works (ticket reviews, etc.)
Week 5-8 Red Flags:
- 🔴 You're still doing only L1 work with no growth path
- 🔴 No feedback on your performance
- 🔴 Constant firefighting with no proactive work
- 🔴 Client complaints are common and unresolved
- 🔴 You feel like you're failing but no one is helping
Month 3: Contribution
Performance
- [ ] Handle a reasonable ticket workload (target 25-35 tickets/week for L2)
- [ ] Achieve first contact resolution rate above 70%
- [ ] Maintain SLA compliance
- [ ] Contribute to knowledge base articles
- [ ] Attend at least one client meeting independently
- [ ] Begin working on a project or improvement initiative
Career
- [ ] Have a formal check-in with your manager
- [ ] Discuss your career goals and development plan
- [ ] Identify any certifications you want to pursue
- [ ] Understand the review and promotion process
- [ ] Discuss salary review timeline
- [ ] Get feedback on your performance
Month 3 Red Flags:
- 🔴 No performance review or feedback
- 🔴 Your role has expanded significantly beyond the job description
- 🔴 You're working consistently beyond 40 hours/week
- 🔴 There's no discussion of career progression
- 🔴 You're already feeling burned out
Setting Yourself Up for Success
Documentation Habits
- Document everything — Every ticket, every client interaction, every process
- Create personal runbooks — Note the steps for common tasks
- Build your knowledge base — Future you (and future colleagues) will thank you
- Screenshot procedures — Visual documentation is faster to create and consume
Relationship Building
- Be reliable — If you say you'll do something, do it
- Ask questions — It's expected in the first 90 days
- Offer help — When you have capacity, help teammates
- Be positive — MSP work can be stressful; attitude matters
- Underpromise, overdeliver — Set realistic expectations
Career Protection
- Keep your resume updated — Always
- Maintain your network — Connect with MSP contacts on LinkedIn
- Document your achievements — Quantify your contributions
- Know your contract terms — Notice period, non-compete, salary review dates
- Build a portfolio — Certifications, projects, client feedback
Questions to Ask in Your First Week
- "What does a typical day look like in this role?"
- "What are the most common tickets I'll handle?"
- "What's the escalation process for issues I can't resolve?"
- "How is performance measured in this role?"
- "What's the on-call schedule and compensation?"
- "What's the training budget and certification policy?"
- "What's the team structure and who are the key people?"
- "What are the biggest challenges facing the team right now?"
- "How does career progression work here?"
- "What would you want me to accomplish in the first 90 days?"
[!TIP] The first 90 days are your best opportunity to ask questions and build habits. After that, there's an expectation that you know how things work. Don't be afraid to ask — it's better to ask now than to make mistakes later.
Related Guides
- MSP Contract Red Flags — Check your contract before you sign
- MSP Interview Questions — Prepare for your interview
- MSP Health Score — Rate your new MSP
- MSP Salary Negotiation — Negotiate your package
- MSP Incident Management — Understand ticket classifications
- PowerShell Automation — Automate repetitive tasks
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