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Who really manages your IT when ‘nobody’ manages it?

In Belgium, barely one in five SMEs has an in-house IT specialist — and that is being generous. For micro-enterprises, the figure drops to fewer than one in ten. Translation: the vast majority of Belgian business leaders run their digital infrastructure without a safety net… until the day it becomes very expensive. An overview and possible solutions.

This gap is not negligence; it is a structural reality, driven by limited budgets and compounded by a very real talent shortage: in 2024, 62.5% of Belgian companies that attempted to recruit an IT profile failed for lack of qualified candidates. Moreover, in many businesses, IT simply remains invisible as long as everything is working. The result: most business leaders rely at best on a versatile employee who “knows a bit about IT”, or on an IT provider called in as an emergency, or on nobody at all.

The cost of IT ambiguity

Yet computers, the network, data and software are the beating heart of every business. Without IT — or simply in the event of an outage — everything stops. An infrastructure without monitoring or maintenance quietly accumulates vulnerabilities: unpatched updates, untested backups, unrevoked access rights, and so on. Obviously, it holds together until one day it doesn’t. An outage, a data breach or a cyberattack: the incident comes without warning. An ERP inaccessible for half a day means dozens of orders not entered, invoicing blocked, teams improvising. A cyberattack on an unmonitored network typically means several days of downtime, with costs ranging from a few hundred to several thousand euros depending on the size and nature of the business — not counting the impact on clients, reputation and legal exposure.

Three models for taking back control

The absence of IT management can therefore be a ticking time bomb. Fortunately, solutions exist to defuse it, without having to hire a full-time CIO. Three models are available, each with a very different logic:

An MSP (Managed Service Provider)

This external IT service provider takes care of all your IT, proactively and continuously. It monitors, maintains, secures and intervenes — often before you even notice a problem.

The hybrid model

In this configuration, an internal point of contact handles day-to-day matters and first-level requests, while an external partner steps in for complex issues, security or development projects. The two roles complement each other without overlapping.

Targeted outsourcing

You bring in a provider for specific missions or defined areas. No subscription, no ongoing monitoring. Useful for specific needs, less suited to managing day-to-day risks.

ModelAdvantagesDisadvantagesIdeal for
MSPProactive monitoring Full expertise Predictable costLess initial knowledge of your business contextSMEs with no in-house IT skills
Strong dependence on digital tools
Hybrid modelInternal responsiveness Outsourced expertise for complex mattersDifficulty finding the right internal point of contactSMEs with a partial IT contact
Need for complementary expertise
Targeted outsourcingFlexibility
On-demand intervention
Reactive, not preventive Unpredictable costsSMEs with occasional needs or a low-complexity IT environment

No model is universally better — it all depends on the size of your business, your risk tolerance and your budget. The right model is not necessarily the most comprehensive one. It is the one that matches your business reality today, with the capacity to evolve tomorrow.

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