It's an evolution in what your technology partner is responsible for. Break-fix fixes things after they break — reactive, transactional, and blind to everything until it fails. A managed services provider (MSP) keeps your technology running proactively — monitoring, patching, security, and support for a flat fee. A Technology Success Partner (TSP) does all of that and takes responsibility for whether your technology is actually moving the business forward — planning ahead, managing risk and compliance, and bringing new tools like AI to bear on your goals. Break-fix asks "what's broken?" An MSP asks "is everything running?" A TSP asks "where is this business going, and how should technology get you there faster?"
A virtual CIO sits down with you, learns where the business is headed, and builds a multi-year technology plan with a budget attached — so technology decisions are planned, not panicked.
Security and compliance built into how your environment runs from day one — not bolted on after an incident or an audit notice.
Recommendations measured against business results — fewer hours lost, faster onboarding, better client experience — not just "newer is better."
A partner who helps you separate genuinely useful AI and automation from hype, then put the useful parts to work safely in your business.
IT, security, phones, cabling, internet, cameras, and AV under one contract and one number — so the strategy actually connects to the execution.
The throughline is responsibility for whether technology is helping the business reach its goals — the job an ordinary IT provider never signed up for.
Why does LRG lead with "Technology Success Partner" instead of "MSP"? Because "MSP" describes the floor — keeping the lights on — and that's not the job LRG signed up for. Most local providers will manage your IT and stop there. LRG's promise is that your technology should be a reason the business runs better, not just a cost that doesn't blow up. That means planning ahead with a vCIO, building compliance and security in, and being one accountable partner for everything that runs on your network. "Technology Success Partner" is simply the honest name for that broader responsibility — and it's why the relationship starts with an assessment and a roadmap, not a contract.
Every business is somewhere on this ladder. Break-fix asks "what's broken?" — reactive, paid per emergency, no monitoring, no strategy. An MSP asks "is everything running?" — proactive, flat monthly fee, 24/7 monitoring, managed security, and sometimes a bit of planning. A Technology Success Partner asks "where is the business going?" — strategic, a flat fee plus a planned roadmap budget, monitoring with forward planning, compliance built in and planned ahead, an always-on vCIO, active AI guidance, and one contract covering everything on your network. The question isn't whether your provider is "good" — it's which column they're operating in, and which one your business needs.
A Technology Success Partner is an IT provider that takes responsibility not just for keeping your technology running, but for whether it's actively helping the business reach its goals. Beyond the monitoring, security, and support a managed services provider offers, a TSP adds strategic planning (a vCIO and a technology roadmap), proactive risk and compliance, and guidance on emerging tools like AI and automation. The difference is responsibility for outcomes, not just uptime.
An MSP (managed services provider) proactively keeps your technology running — monitoring, patching, security, and helpdesk for a flat fee. A TSP (Technology Success Partner) does all of that and adds the strategic layer: a vCIO, a forward-looking roadmap, built-in compliance, and guidance on new technology like AI. Put simply, an MSP makes sure everything works; a TSP makes sure your technology is actively moving the business forward.
A vCIO (virtual chief information officer) is a senior technology advisor who plans your IT strategy without the cost of a full-time executive. They learn where your business is headed, build a multi-year technology roadmap with a budget, and review it with you regularly — so technology decisions are planned and aligned to your goals instead of made in a panic when something breaks. It's the strategic difference between an ordinary IT provider and a true success partner.
Yes — one of a TSP's jobs is helping you separate genuinely useful AI and automation from the hype, then put the useful parts to work safely. That means identifying where automation could save your team hours, advising on which tools fit your business and your compliance obligations, and making sure anything new is rolled out securely.
Not necessarily — and often it's the opposite over time. A TSP works on the same predictable monthly model as a managed services provider; the added strategy and planning are designed to prevent expensive problems and avoid wasted technology spending. When a roadmap stops you from buying the wrong thing, or compliance is built in before an audit, the planning pays for itself. The best way to see the value is a free IT Health Check.