B2B marketing for IT companies
IT companies — MSPs, managed service providers, IT services — compete in the most margin-pressured B2B services category. The firms gaining share are the ones that stopped selling "IT services" and started selling a specific outcome to a specific buyer.
of IT services firms report increasing pressure on margins — driven primarily by commodity-style bidding and channel partner lock-in.
Source: Canalys Channels Research & 100Signals operator interviews, Q1 2026.
IT companies are services firms delivering managed infrastructure, managed security, IT outsourcing, and technology consulting to businesses that would rather not run those functions in-house. In 2026, the category is bifurcating: commoditised generalists competing on price and renewal friction, and specialists wrapping managed IT in vertical-specific compliance, industry expertise, or productised offerings. Marketing that works maps to the second group; advice designed for generic IT services firms rarely produces pipeline for either.
Three pains that keep showing up
100Signals scan and operator interviews across 1,700+ B2B services firms, Q4 2025–Q1 2026.
“Price commoditisation is eating our renewal margin.”
MSPs watching long-time clients request bids from three competitors at renewal and cutting to the lowest credible quote. The relationship used to compound; now it dilutes. No clear way to exit the commodity spiral without repositioning the firm itself.
“We are invisible outside our existing account base.”
Firms that grew for a decade on channel relationships, partner referrals, and expansions within installed accounts. The logos list is strong; the pipeline outside the list is empty. No brand equity in the open market; no search or AI visibility; every new-logo attempt feels like starting from zero.
“Outbound produces noise, not conversations.”
IT teams running cold email and LinkedIn sequences that copy B2B SaaS playbooks — which do not fit services firms with 30-90 day sales cycles and compliance-sensitive buyers. Reply rates hover at 1%; the team burns a domain; the founder concludes "outbound does not work in our space".
| Software Dev Agencies | IT Companies | Consulting Firms | MSPs | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buying committee shape | CTO, VP Engineering, and Founder. Technical evaluation dominates. | IT Director, Procurement, and Compliance. Risk and SLA focus. | Partner, Practice Lead, and Client Executive. Reputation and Rolodex decide. | SMB owner or operator. Single decision-maker. Referral-weighted trust. |
| Typical deal size | $50k to $500k per engagement, longer contracts | $10k to $200k per project plus recurring MRR | $100k to $2M per engagement, relationship-led renewals | $500 to $5,000 per seat per month MRR, 3 to 5 year average tenure |
| Sales cycle | 45 to 120 days, technical proof gates | 30 to 90 days, compliance and references gate | 60 to 180 days, trust-and-rolodex driven | 14 to 60 days, referral-led, compliance-triggered |
| Hardest marketing problem | Differentiation. Everyone sounds identical. | Margin erosion from commodity positioning | No digital shelf for six-figure retainers | Word-of-mouth ceiling at $3M revenue. No system to replace referrals. |
| Strongest single channel | Niche SEO, AI visibility, and operator LinkedIn | Partner and channel programs, targeted SEO, account-led outbound | Thought leadership, speaking, and named-account ABM | Owner-voice LinkedIn, vertical-specific SEO, vendor co-sell |
Playbooks built for it companies
SEO & Digital Visibility
7 pagesOrganic search, AI answer engines, and the authority signals that feed both.
Lead Generation & Outreach
12 pagesOutbound, paid, and account-based motions that book qualified conversations.
Marketing, Positioning & Brand
5 pagesStrategy, differentiation, and the narrative work that makes every channel convert harder.
- What makes marketing for IT companies different from software development agencies?
- Buyers, budgets, and buying cycles. IT buyers are more risk-focused and procurement-gated; budgets blend project and recurring revenue; cycles are shorter but more compliance-heavy. Marketing that works for a dev agency (case studies + thought leadership) needs to be re-weighted for IT firms toward references, certifications, and vendor-of-record relationships.
- Should IT companies invest in content marketing?
- Selectively. High-intent commercial content (comparison, pricing, migration) performs; generic educational content gets absorbed by vendor and analyst sites. Certifications, compliance content, and case studies with named industry references outperform traditional blog content for this buyer.
- How should IT firms approach positioning?
- Specialise by vertical or by outcome, not by service. "MSP for mid-market manufacturers with multi-site OT environments" is defensible; "MSP for SMB" is a commodity race. Firms that sharpen vertical fit consistently outperform firms that add more services to a generalist stack.
- Do IT firms need SEO and AI visibility?
- Yes — especially for commercial-intent queries like "managed IT for legal firms in {region}" or "HIPAA-compliant MSP for healthcare". These queries are lower volume but extremely high intent, and the firms that rank for them are consistently the ones buyers shortlist.
- What is the right marketing budget for an IT firm?
- Typically 4-8% of revenue — lower than software agencies because margin pressure is higher. The winning mix is usually positioning + referral program + 1-2 targeted channels (SEO + account-led outbound, or LinkedIn + partner marketing). Overspending on brand without margin to support it is the most common self-inflicted wound.
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