Documenting IT operations—so vendor conversations start with clarity, not compromise.
Key points covered in this article:
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- Documenting IT operations ensures clarity and consistency, reducing risks during managed services transitions.
- Process mapping helps teams articulate expectations, avoid service gaps, and ensure smooth vendor onboarding.
- Without proper documentation, organizations face costly misunderstandings, downtime, and potential service failures.
CASE STUDY – When the IT team prepared for a managed services transition, they realized their operational processes were in place and working, but many were undocumented or out of date. Some details weren’t always clear or consistent across the team.
To get ready for vendor discussions and future growth, IT subject matter experts teamed up for a series of focused workshops. The primary focus was to document the current state and capture the systems used at each step. The result was a set of practical, up-to-date process maps—giving everyone a shared understanding and a solid foundation for managed services.
With these maps, vendor conversations shifted from generalities to specifics: “Here’s how we operate—can you support this?” The team was able to clearly articulate expectations, reduce ambiguity, and ensure a smooth, scalable transition to managed services.
But if you skip documentation, you risk costly misunderstandings, service gaps, and finger-pointing when things go wrong. Without a clear map, vendors may overpromise, underdeliver, or leave you exposed to downtime and extra costs. Waiting only increases the risk of a messy transition and expensive fixes later.
If your processes aren’t documented, you’re exposed to service gaps and finger-pointing when things go wrong. How confident are you in your team’s ability to onboard a new vendor without surprises?
Discover how business process improvements can transform your business. Visit our Business Process Improvement page or contact Partner, Bronach Branan.
