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MSP Technical Documentation: What Your Provider Should Document - MSP Guide Australia

Operations 2026-06-11 🕐 5 min 926 words

MSP Technical Documentation: What Your Provider Should Document

Good documentation is the difference between an MSP that delivers consistent, reliable service and one that relies on individual technicians remembering how things work. When your MSP's best engineer resigns and takes their knowledge with them, the only protection is documentation.

Yet documentation is one of the most neglected aspects of MSP service delivery. Here is what your MSP should be documenting and how to hold them accountable.

Why Documentation Matters

Documentation serves three critical functions:

1. Continuity

When staff change — on either side — documentation ensures the environment can be managed without institutional knowledge. The MSP Employee Retention article discusses how turnover affects service quality. Documentation is the antidote.

2. Efficiency

Documented procedures reduce the time to resolve issues. A technician with a documented runbook resolves problems faster than one who has to figure it out from scratch.

3. Accountability

Documentation creates a record of what was done, when, and why. This is critical for compliance, audits, and dispute resolution.

Essential Documentation Your MSP Should Maintain

1. Network Documentation

Document Content Update Frequency
Network topology diagram All network devices, connections, IP addresses, VLANs After any network change
Firewall configuration Rules, NAT, VPN, ACLs, credentials After any firewall change
DNS records All internal and external DNS entries After any domain change
DHCP scopes IP ranges, reservations, exclusions After any IP management change
Wireless configuration SSIDs, passwords, VLAN mappings, access points After any wireless change

2. Asset Inventory

Document Content Update Frequency
Server inventory Make, model, OS, specifications, location, role Quarterly
Workstation inventory Make, model, OS, serial number, user assignment Quarterly
Software licence register Product, licence key, expiry, count, compliance status Quarterly
Hardware warranty register Device, warranty provider, expiry date, coverage type Quarterly
Cloud service inventory Service, subscription, cost, admin contact, renewal date Monthly

3. Configuration Documentation

Document Content Update Frequency
Server configurations OS settings, roles, installed software, scheduled tasks After changes
Application configurations Line-of-business app settings, database connections After changes
M365 tenant configuration Entra ID settings, Conditional Access policies, Teams governance After changes
Backup configuration Backup schedules, retention policies, storage locations After changes
Monitoring configuration Alert thresholds, escalation paths, notification contacts After changes

4. Runbooks and SOPs

Runbooks are step-by-step procedures for common tasks. Every MSP should maintain runbooks for:

  • New user onboarding: Create account, set up M365 licence, configure device, grant access
  • User offboarding: Disable account, revoke access, archive data, reclaim equipment
  • Server reboot procedure: Pre-checks, reboot sequence, post-reboot validation
  • Backup restoration: Restore process, validation steps, communication plan
  • New workstation deployment: Imaging, software installation, user configuration
  • Firewall change request: Approval process, implementation steps, rollback procedure
  • Security incident response: Detection, containment, eradication, recovery steps
  • Disaster recovery activation: Step-by-step DR invocation process

5. Vendor and Contact Documentation

Document Content Update Frequency
Vendor contacts ISP, Microsoft, hardware vendors, software suppliers Quarterly
Escalation procedures Internal and vendor escalation paths Quarterly
Emergency contacts Key client contacts, after-hours contacts Quarterly
MSP team contacts Account manager, technical lead, escalation contacts Quarterly

6. Security Documentation

Document Content Update Frequency
Access control matrix Who has access to what systems and why Monthly
Security policies Acceptable use, password policy, data handling Annually
Incident response plan Detection, containment, eradication, recovery, lessons learned Annually
Essential 8 compliance evidence Maturity assessment, gap analysis, remediation plan Quarterly
Penetration test results Findings, remediation status, residual risk Annually

Documentation Standards

Documentation is only useful if it is accurate, current, and accessible. Your MSP should follow these standards:

Accuracy

  • Document the actual state, not the intended state
  • Verify documentation against the live environment quarterly
  • Note exceptions and workarounds explicitly
  • Include version history and last-reviewed dates

Accessibility

  • Store documentation in a centralised, searchable location
  • Provide client access to key documents (network diagrams, asset inventory)
  • Use consistent formatting and terminology
  • Include a table of contents or index

Maintenance

  • Update documentation whenever changes are made
  • Conduct quarterly documentation audits
  • Assign documentation ownership to specific team members
  • Include documentation quality as a KPI

How to Hold Your MSP Accountable

1. Include Documentation Requirements in Your Contract

Your MSA should specify: - What documentation the MSP must maintain - The format and storage location - Update frequency and review schedule - Your right to access documentation at any time - Documentation handover requirements upon termination

The MSP Contract Checklist includes documentation as a key contract element.

2. Request Documentation During QBRs

At every Quarterly Business Review, ask for: - Updated network diagrams - Current asset inventory - Recent runbooks for critical procedures - Documentation audit results

3. Verify Documentation Against Reality

Periodically cross-check documentation against the actual environment. If the network diagram does not match the live network, the documentation is not being maintained.

4. Ask for Documentation During Incidents

When your MSP resolves an incident, ask them to document the root cause and the fix in the knowledge base. This builds institutional knowledge over time.

The Documentation Handback

If you ever change MSPs, you need your documentation returned. This is why pre-agreed documentation requirements are critical.

Your exit documentation request should include: - Complete network documentation - Asset inventory - All runbooks and SOPs - Configuration exports for all systems - Vendor contacts and support agreements - Security policies and compliance evidence - Backup and DR documentation

See the MSP Contract Termination Process for managing the documentation handover.

Frequently Asked Questions

What documentation should my MSP provide?
Your MSP should maintain: network diagrams, asset inventory, configuration documentation, runbooks for common tasks, escalation procedures, vendor contacts, disaster recovery plans, and security policies. See our [MSP Technical Documentation](/msp-technical-documentation) guide for the complete list.
What is the biggest documentation gap in MSPs?
Most MSPs document server and network configurations but fail to document tribal knowledge — the unwritten procedures that experienced technicians carry in their heads. When those technicians leave, the knowledge walks out the door.
Can I request documentation from my MSP?
Yes, and you should. Your contract should include a documentation clause that requires the MSP to maintain and provide documentation upon request. If it does not, add it at renewal. The [MSP Contract Checklist](/msp-contract-checklist) covers documentation requirements.
How often should MSP documentation be updated?
Documentation should be updated whenever changes are made to the environment. At minimum, a quarterly documentation audit should review all critical documentation for accuracy. Outdated documentation is often worse than no documentation.
What happens to documentation if I leave my MSP?
Your documentation should be returned to you as part of the exit process. This is why pre-agreed documentation requirements in your contract are essential. See our [MSP Contract Termination Process](/msp-contract-termination-process) for exit planning.

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