IT Supplier Advisory

Your IT supplier has let
you down. You deserve
better than this.

A failing MSP relationship is one of the most frustrating and commercially damaging situations an SME can face. You depend on them. You are locked into a contract. And the people who should be helping you feel like the people you need protection from. Northstar provides the independent assessment, commercial leverage and managed transition support to help you take back control.

How IT supplier relationships go wrong

Most MSP relationships start well. The supplier is attentive during the sales process. Issues are resolved promptly in the early months. The MD feels confident. Then, gradually, things change.

Response times lengthen. Promised projects are deprioritised. Issues raised informally are absorbed without meaningful change. The account manager you trusted moves on and their replacement has no relationship with your business. Renewal arrives and the supplier presents an increased rate, knowing the switching costs make it easier to accept than to challenge.

This pattern is not unusual. It reflects a structural dynamic in most MSP relationships. The supplier has more leverage than the client, more technical knowledge than the client, and no particular commercial incentive to flag that service quality has declined. Without an independent voice in the client organisation, this dynamic almost always favours the supplier.

"Your MSP works to a contract. Northstar works for you. That distinction matters most when the relationship is not working."

Signs your IT supplier relationship needs attention

The following situations are consistent indicators that the MSP relationship has deteriorated to a point where independent intervention is warranted.

Your options when an MSP relationship is failing

Businesses in this situation typically have three realistic options, and the right one depends on the specific circumstances of the relationship and the contract.

Reset and hold accountable

Where the supplier has the capability to deliver but the relationship has drifted, a formal reset with clear performance expectations and independent oversight can restore service quality without the disruption and cost of switching. This requires an informed, senior voice in the client organisation that the supplier takes seriously.

Renegotiate at renewal

Where the contract is approaching renewal, this is the highest-leverage moment to renegotiate terms, reset service expectations, benchmark pricing against market rates, and if necessary, use the credible threat of switching as commercial leverage. Done properly, most businesses achieve significantly better terms than the supplier's opening offer.

Managed transition to a new supplier

Where the relationship is irreparably damaged or the supplier is fundamentally unsuited to the business's needs, a structured transition to a better-fit provider is the right outcome. The key is managing this in a way that protects operational continuity and ensures the new relationship starts from a position of clarity.

How Northstar supports you through this

Northstar's role is to provide the independent, senior expertise that changes the dynamic in your favour. Whether that means holding the existing supplier to account, managing a renegotiation, or overseeing a transition, the approach is the same: representing your interests, not the supplier's.

Why independent oversight makes the difference

The reason MSP relationships deteriorate is almost always structural rather than malicious. Without an informed, senior client-side presence, suppliers face no meaningful accountability. When Northstar sits above the MSP relationship, representing the client's interests independently, the dynamic changes.

Good suppliers welcome independent oversight. It gives them a clearer brief, a more informed client, and a senior point of contact who understands what they are doing. Suppliers who resist independent oversight are almost always the ones who have been benefiting from its absence.

Start the conversation