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The mid-market IT squeeze: too complex to manage casually, too lean to build everything in-house

5th June 2026

     

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In many South African mid-market businesses, the IT team is now expected to operate with the discipline of an enterprise technology function, but without the depth of resources that larger organisations can bring to bear.

That leaves a small team moving between Microsoft 365 licensing, cloud workloads, user support, backup checks, endpoint protection, email security, connectivity issues, vendor escalations, procurement, compliance requests, and the first questions around AI governance. None of these areas is siloed. A cloud decision affects cybersecurity, while a licensing decision affects cost and productivity. Any weaknesses in the backup environment become a business continuity risk. Even support delays can turn into an operational problem.

This is the mid-market IT squeeze. These companies are too complex to manage technology casually, but often too lean to build every capability internally.

Why the pressure has changed

Most mid-market businesses are not behind. Many have modernised quickly. Cloud adoption has changed from migration to optimisation across Africa, with organisations seeking to improve performance, resilience, security, and AI readiness while navigating economic pressures, skills shortages, cyber risks, and compliance demands. That is a much harder operating environment than the one many IT teams were built for.

Cybersecurity makes the pressure more visible. IBM’s 2025 Cost of a Data Breach Report put the global average cost of a breach at $4.4 million, while local reporting based on IBM’s South African data placed the average cost for South African organisations at about R44 million. Those numbers do not mean every business should build a full internal security operation. But they do mean that security, recovery, monitoring, and response can no longer be occasional technical tasks.

Skills add another constraint. Recent South African ICT skills reporting continues to indicate shortages of practical, work-ready capabilities across areas such as AI, cybersecurity, cloud computing, DevOps, and big data analytics. That is an important consideration because most mid-market IT teams are not short of tools. Instead, they are short of time, specialist depth, and people who can turn those tools into reliable outcomes.

More suppliers can create more uncertainty

It would be tempting for an organisation to add another supplier for every new problem. One provider for cloud, another for cybersecurity, and others for support, connectivity, backup, and licensing. While this may make sense on paper, it often leaves the business without a single view of accountability.

When something breaks, the business does not care which platform, provider, or contract is responsible. It wants to know who is fixing it, how quickly it will be resolved, and what must change to prevent it from happening again. That is where fragmented support models become expensive, even when the individual services look affordable.

I do not believe the answer is to outsource responsibility. Internal IT teams understand the business context, user behaviour, priorities, politics, operational risks, and commercial trade-offs better than any external provider can. That knowledge must stay inside the organisation. But internal ownership does not mean internal teams must carry every specialised capability alone.

Building the right support model

The better answer is not to add suppliers at random, but to be deliberate about external capability. Some responsibilities must stay close to the organisation. Others need specialist depth. The important part is that external support should extend the internal team without creating another layer of confusion. For some businesses, that means co-managed support, cloud optimisation, Microsoft 365 management, backup and recovery planning, security monitoring, licensing reviews, or project delivery support.

External support should make the internal team’s week easier to manage, not harder. If it adds another inbox, escalation path, or unclear handover point, it has simply moved the problem. The value lies in giving the team clearer visibility, faster access to specialist help, and fewer grey areas when something needs fixing.

Mid-market technology leaders should not start by asking whether to outsource IT. They should ask which capabilities are now too important, too specialised, or too operationally sensitive to manage informally.

In a mid-market environment, the real risk is not that the IT team cannot do the work. It is that too much critical work depends on too few people, with too little specialist cover when pressure arrives. The next step is to decide which responsibilities must remain close to the business, which require external depth, and where accountability must be clear before the next renewal, outage, audit, or security event forces the issue.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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