Most dental practices encounter IT support in one of two ways. Either they call someone when something breaks and pay by the hour, or they pay a fixed monthly fee to a managed service provider who handles everything proactively. The second model is called a managed service plan, or MSP agreement.
For dental practices, a managed service plan is usually the better model. Dental software is too specialized and the compliance requirements are too specific for a break-fix approach to work well. Here is what a managed service plan actually includes and what to look for before signing one.

A managed service plan includes continuous monitoring of your server, workstations, network devices, and backup systems. Your IT provider watches for hardware degradation, low storage, security events, and backup failures before they cause downtime. This is the core difference between managed services and break-fix support. Issues are caught and resolved before you ever notice them.
When staff have IT problems during patient hours, a managed service plan gives them a direct line to support with defined response times. The provider already knows your software, your network, and your environment. There is no time wasted explaining what systems you use or how your office is configured.
Windows updates, security patches, and antivirus updates need to be applied consistently across all workstations and the server. A managed service plan includes managing this update cycle, typically scheduled during off-hours so it does not interfere with patient care.
A managed service plan includes verifying that your backups are running successfully and periodically testing that they are actually restorable. This is one of the most important distinctions between managed and unmanaged IT. A backup that is running but has never been tested is a backup that might work.
A dental-specific managed service plan includes the technical safeguards that HIPAA requires: workstation encryption, access controls, audit logging, and Multi-Factor Authentication. It also includes a signed Business Associate Agreement. These are requirements, not add-ons.

Most managed service plans cover labor for maintenance, monitoring, and support. They typically do not cover hardware replacement costs, major software licensing fees, or one-time project costs like server migrations or office moves. Before signing, confirm what happens when hardware fails. Does the plan cover the labor for replacement? Who pays for the new hardware?
Understanding exclusions before you sign prevents disputes when something major happens. A good managed service provider explains these boundaries clearly during the sales process.
Managed service plans are typically priced per device per month or as a flat monthly fee for the entire practice. Per-device pricing can feel more transparent but becomes difficult to predict as the practice grows or changes. Flat monthly pricing for a defined scope of coverage is easier to budget around.
For dental practices, confirm whether the plan covers all workstations, the server, network equipment, and imaging workstations under one fee. Some plans charge separately for server coverage or network device management.
Not required, but a managed service plan from a dental-specific provider is one of the most reliable ways to maintain the technical safeguards HIPAA demands. The consistent monitoring, update management, and compliance documentation that comes with a managed plan is difficult to replicate with break-fix support.
Break-fix IT charges you each time something goes wrong. Managed IT charges a fixed fee to keep things from going wrong in the first place. Break-fix has no financial incentive to prevent problems. Managed IT does. For a dental practice where downtime during patient hours is costly, the proactive model is almost always more appropriate.
Ask for the last 90 days of monitoring alerts, backup reports, and support tickets. A provider delivering managed services has this documentation ready. If they cannot produce it, they are billing for managed services but delivering break-fix support.
Yes. Ekim IT Solutions provides dental-specific managed service plans for practices across all 50 states. We serve New England and New York with on-site support and all other practices remotely. Every plan includes a signed BAA, monitoring, backup verification, and HIPAA compliance support as standard.
Ekim IT Solutions works exclusively with dental practices. We serve New England and New York with on-site support and dental practices nationwide with remote support. Security, compliance, and everything in between so you can focus on patients.
Schedule a Fit Call: Find out in 15 minutes if we are the right fit for your practice.