MSP Renewal MSA Selling — 60-Min Training
Direct Answer
MSP Renewal MSA Selling is a 60-minute training for MSP and MSSP account managers running annual Master Services Agreement renewals on $5K-$50K MRR clients, where the renewal meeting is not a price negotiation but a business-review-as-renewal-arena. Built on the CompTIA MSP Annual Report, ConnectWise Service Leadership benchmarks, Datto's State of the MSP, and the IT Nation Connect community playbooks, this session drills usage and ticket data prep, the QBR-as-close, AI-services upsell (Microsoft 365 Copilot deployment, agentic IT support, MDR overlay), the price-increase conversation (CPI + scope creep), the multi-year-discount lock, and ethical scope-protection.
The single rule: the renewal is won in the 30 days before the QBR, not in the QBR itself.
Section 1 — Why MSP Renewals Are Different (5 min)
Open with the data. The CompTIA MSP Annual Report 2025 shows 67% of MSPs now offer managed cloud services (up from 43% in 2022), and 58% specialize in a vertical (up from 39% in 2021). ConnectWise Service Leadership's 2025 Annual IT Solution Provider Compensation Report shows top-quartile MSPs grow at 22% net new MRR annually — with 70% of that growth coming from existing-client expansion at renewal, not net-new logos.
Datto's State of the MSP 2025 flags that 42% of MSP churn happens within 30 days of the renewal date when the AM didn't run a structured pre-renewal motion.
Set the frame on the whiteboard:
- The old MSP renewal: AM emails a renewal quote 14 days out, client haggles, AM discounts 8%, MSA signs auto-renew for 12 months.
- The new MSP renewal: Usage and ticket data pulled 60 days out, QBR scheduled 30 days out, expansion conversation in the QBR, multi-year lock with price-increase smoothing signed 14 days out.
- The MRR math: A $15K MRR client at 7% net price increase + $4K MRR Copilot expansion + $3K MRR MDR overlay becomes a $23K MRR client — a 53% account growth at renewal, zero new logos.
End the segment with the Service Leadership rule: *"Renewals are not transactions. They are the next 36 months of the relationship being repriced under stress. Show up prepared or get shopped."*
Section 2 — The Pre-Renewal Data Pack (15 min)
The data pack is what you bring into the QBR. Pull it 60 days before the MSA renewal date. No data pack, no QBR. Walk the room through the verbatim template — have each AM build one for a real upcoming renewal right now using ConnectWise PSA, Datto Autotask, HaloPSA, or Kaseya BMS data.
Verbatim Pre-Renewal Data Pack Template (AM builds, sends internally to CSM + leadership 30 days before QBR):
- Client: [Account] — [Current MRR] — [Original MSA date] — [Renewal date] — [Tenure in months]
- Ticket volume trend: [Last 12 months by month, tagged P1/P2/P3, with MTTR and SLA attainment]
- Scope creep tally: [Endpoints added since signing, users added, sites added, new SaaS apps onboarded outside MSA scope — dollarize each at our published unit rate]
- Project work delivered: [Migrations, hardware refreshes, M365 tenant work — separate from MRR, shows partnership value]
- Risk findings: [Open vulnerabilities, EOL hardware, unpatched workstations, missing MFA, dark backup tests last 90 days]
- Expansion targets: THREE named upsells — typically (a) Microsoft 365 Copilot deployment, (b) MDR overlay (Huntress, Blackpoint, Arctic Wolf, SentinelOne Vigilance), (c) vCISO or compliance-as-a-service for SOC 2 / HIPAA / CMMC clients
Coach the AMs on the "dollarize the scope creep" rule — IT Nation Connect community polling consistently shows AMs who present scope creep in dollars (not endpoint counts) close price increases at 3x the rate of those who present in units. *"You've grown from 85 endpoints to 142 endpoints over 18 months — that's $3,420/month of unbilled service at our standard unit rate.
We've absorbed it. The renewal corrects it."*
Show the bad example: *"We'll send you a renewal quote two weeks before the date."* That's not a renewal — that's an invitation to shop you.
Section 3 — The QBR-as-Renewal-Arena (10 min)
The QBR *is* the renewal meeting. Stop pretending they're separate. Drill the agenda.
- Decision maker in the room. Not the IT manager — the CFO, COO, or business owner who signs the check. No decision maker, reschedule.
- 45 minutes, not 90. Tight agenda forces decisions. Long meetings get punted.
- Wins first, risks second, expansion third, renewal fourth. Never lead with the renewal — lead with what we delivered this year.
- One slide per ticket category. Show the MTTR trend. Show the SLA attainment. Show the dark-backup test results.
- Bring the contract redline to the meeting. Not "we'll send the paperwork after." The redline goes on the table at minute 35.
- Get the verbal commitment in the room. Email confirmation within 2 hours. DocuSign out within 24.
What to NEVER say in a QBR (read these aloud, slowly):
- "We're going to need to raise prices this year" (passive, victim framing — instant pushback)
- "Our costs have gone up" (no client cares about your costs)
- "Microsoft is raising prices on us" (deflects to vendor, abdicates the relationship)
- "What's your budget for next year?" (you set the price, not them)
- "We can probably work something out" (signals you'll discount before they ask)
- Anything about competitors' pricing — never name All Covered, Ntiva, ProArch, or Thrive in a QBR. Compete on outcomes, not on price-per-seat.
Datto's State of the MSP is blunt: the QBR is the renewal meeting. AMs who treat them as separate lose 2x more renewals than AMs who fuse them.
Section 4 — The Price-Increase + Multi-Year Lock Script (10 min)
This is the script that turns a $15K MRR renewal into a $23K MRR three-year lock. Run it in pairs.
Verbatim Price-Increase + Multi-Year Script (AM delivers at QBR minute 35, after wins + risks + expansion plays):
AM: "Based on what we've covered — the 142 endpoints we now support (up from 85), the 23% reduction in P1 tickets through our proactive patching, and the 3 expansion plays we just walked through — let's talk about what the next term looks like."
[AM slides the one-page renewal summary across the table. Stays silent. Five-count.]
AM: "Two pieces. First, we're applying a 7% scope-and-CPI adjustment to your base MRR — this reflects the growth you've had and brings your unit rates back to current. Second, we have two term options."
AM: "One-year renewal at the new rate, standard 7% annual escalator built in. Three-year renewal at the new rate, escalator capped at 4% annually — and we include the Microsoft 365 Copilot deployment as a fixed-fee project rather than time and materials. The three-year option saves you roughly $42K over the term and locks our team to your account."
[AM stops. Lets the CFO do the math. Long silence is the move.]
AM: "Which one fits your business better?"
[Client picks. If they push back on price, AM has the scope-creep tally ready.]
AM: "Let's get this signed before the auto-renew triggers. I'll send the redline DocuSign tonight — countersigned by EOD Friday?"
ConnectWise Service Leadership data shows MSPs who lead with the multi-year option close 48% of renewals at the three-year term, vs. 12% for MSPs who only offer one-year. The math is decisive.
Do NOT:
- Lead with the price increase. Lead with the value delivered, then frame the price increase as scope correction.
- Apologize for the increase. *"This reflects the work we've added"* — not *"I'm sorry but..."*
- Drop to one-year if the client hesitates on three-year. Hold the line. Offer a two-year compromise with a 5% cap instead.
- Skip the auto-renew language. Every MSA should have 90-day notice and auto-renew — that's the renewal AM's job security.
- Discount more than 4%. Below 4% is fine; below that you train the client to shop you next cycle. MSP Geek Community consensus: discount on term length, not on base rate.
Section 5 — The Expansion Math: Copilot, MDR, and the AI Upsell (15 min)
Build the expansion math on the whiteboard. This is where the next 36 months of growth comes from.
The math (for a 142-endpoint client at $15K MRR baseline):
- Microsoft 365 Copilot: Licensing is $30/user/month retail, MSP buys at CSP margin (~12-15%), plus $15-$25/user/month for deployment, training, and prompt-library buildout = $45-$55/user/month total. A 100-user client = $4,500-$5,500 MRR addition.
- MDR overlay (Managed Detection and Response): Huntress at $5-$8/endpoint/month, Blackpoint Cyber at $7-$10/endpoint/month, SentinelOne Vigilance at $12-$18/endpoint/month. 142 endpoints at $10 blended = ~$1,420 MRR at cost, sold at 2-3x markup = $3K-$4K MRR. Gartner Managed Detection and Response Magic Quadrant flags MDR as the #1 MSSP growth category for 2025-2026.
- Agentic IT support pilot: Tools like Moveworks, Aisera, and Microsoft Copilot Studio agents handle L1 triage, password resets, software requests. Sold as $15-$25/user/month managed service. Even a small 100-user pilot = $1,500-$2,500 MRR.
- vCISO / compliance: $3K-$8K/month retainer for SOC 2 / HIPAA / CMMC clients. CompTIA flags 58% of MSPs now have vertical specialization — vCISO is the natural cross-sell into regulated verticals.
Common client objections (rehearse the comebacks):
- *"We're already paying you a lot."* — Walk them through the scope creep tally in dollars. *"You're paying us for 85 endpoints. We're supporting 142. We've absorbed $3,420/month of unbilled service. The renewal corrects that — it isn't a price hike."*
- *"Copilot is just Microsoft — we'll buy it direct."* — Microsoft sells the license. They don't deploy it, train your team, build the prompt library, govern data exposure, or run change management. EPC Group's 2026 Copilot Enterprise Guide flags deployment failure rates above 40% for direct-purchase Copilot rollouts. That's where the managed-service margin lives.
- *"MDR feels like upselling fear."* — IBM's Cost of a Data Breach 2025 puts the average mid-market breach at $4.44M. MDR at $36K/year is 0.8% of one breach. Not fear — math.
- *"Can we just do a one-year renewal at the current rate?"* — Hold the line. *"The current rate doesn't reflect the work we've added. The one-year option at the new rate is on the table. The three-year locks pricing and saves you $42K. Which works?"* MSP Geek Community polling: AMs who hold the line close renewals at the same rate as AMs who fold, but at 18% higher MRR.
- *"We're getting quoted lower by [competitor]."* — *"Show me their scope of services side-by-side. If they're truly cheaper at the same scope, we'll match the SOW. Most price quotes we see exclude after-hours, exclude vCISO, exclude MDR — they're not the same product."* Never match on top-line; always match on scope-normalized rate.
Ethical scope-protection note: If the client truly is over-served — say they've shrunk from 85 to 60 endpoints — *say so first.* IT Nation Connect community values transparency. A 6% downward adjustment offered unprompted earns you the next three-year lock. Sandbagging it gets you fired in 18 months.
Section 6 — Commitments and Close (5 min)
Each AM leaves with three written commitments, taped to their monitor:
- My next 5 renewals have a data pack built 60 days out and a QBR scheduled 30 days out — calendared by EOD Friday.
- Every renewal QBR ends with a signed redline DocuSign within 7 days — no exceptions, no "we'll circle back."
- My average renewal MRR uplift target is +15% through scope correction + at least one named expansion (Copilot, MDR, or vCISO).
Close by reading ConnectWise Service Leadership's finding aloud: *"The most profitable MSPs in North America are not the ones with the lowest cost to serve. They are the ones who run the most disciplined renewal motion — every QBR, every quarter, every client."*
Then send the room out with the data-pack template pinned in the team Slack and the next 90 days of renewal QBRs blocked on the calendar.
FAQ
Q1: What if the client is small and a full QBR feels heavy? A: Scale the format, not the discipline. A $5K MRR client gets a 30-minute QBR with a one-page data pack. A $50K MRR client gets a 90-minute QBR with the CFO present. Never skip it.
Q2: How do I handle a client who insists on a price freeze? A: Offer a 24-month freeze in exchange for a 3-year term with a 6% increase in year 3. MSP Geek Community consensus: a freeze trade for a longer term is the cleanest concession an AM can make.
Q3: What if Microsoft raises Copilot or M365 pricing mid-term? A: Your MSA should have a vendor pass-through clause for licensing — separate from your managed-services rate. ConnectWise's 2025 Microsoft Renewal Update brief lays out the standard language. Without that clause, you eat the increase.
Q4: How do I sell MDR to a client who already has antivirus? A: Antivirus is detection-only. MDR adds 24/7 SOC monitoring, threat hunting, and incident response activation. Gartner MDR Magic Quadrant frames it as: *"AV finds known bad. MDR finds the unknown bad and the human attacker."*
Q5: What's the right cadence between QBRs and renewals for multi-year clients? A: Quarterly QBRs for the entire term — even on a 3-year deal. The renewal QBR is just the fourth-quarter QBR of year three with a redline on the table. IT Nation Connect speakers consistently flag this as the single highest-retention practice in the industry.
Q6: When should I walk away from a renewal? A: When the client wants scope expansion at flat price, treats your team like a vendor, or has had 3+ payment-late incidents in the term. Datto's State of the MSP data: the bottom 10% of clients consume 40% of support hours at the lowest margins.
Fire them at renewal with a 90-day off-boarding plan.
Sources
- CompTIA, *MSP Annual Report 2025* and *State of the Channel*, comptia.org, 2025.
- ConnectWise Service Leadership, *2025 Annual IT Solution Provider Compensation Report*, connectwise.com, 2025.
- Datto (Kaseya), *State of the MSP Report 2025*, datto.com, 2025.
- Gartner, *Magic Quadrant for Managed Detection and Response Services 2025*, gartner.com, 2025.
- MSP Geek Community, community polling and renewal-motion playbooks, mspgeek.com, 2024-2025.
- IT Nation Connect (ConnectWise), conference sessions on QBR and renewal motion, itnation.connectwise.com, 2024-2025.
- EPC Group, *Microsoft Copilot Agents: Complete Enterprise Guide 2026*, epcgroup.net, 2026.
- IBM Security, *Cost of a Data Breach Report 2025*, ibm.com/reports/data-breach, 2025.