In this episode of From the Trenches on the BMK Vision Podcast, Josh Peterson sits down with Brian Welch of Welch Technology Services for an executive-level conversation on a topic most MSP owners wrestle with quietly: how to grow a durable business without sacrificing family, clarity, and control.
This is not a “scale at all costs” episode. Brian describes a deliberate, lifestyle-first operating model—one built around strong client fit, clear boundaries, and steady, intentional expansion. The discussion explores how MSPs can create long-term optionality through disciplined choices today: measured hiring, thoughtful marketing, and a realistic exit horizon.
What makes the episode especially relevant right now is the practical lens on cybersecurity: cyber insurance is becoming the forcing function that compels small businesses to adopt modern security behaviors. For MSPs, that shift changes how you position value, how you justify preventative maintenance, and how you elevate client maturity—without needing to rely on fear-based selling.
Short answer: you grow by design, not by momentum.
Brian’s approach reflects a leadership decision many owners eventually face: the goal is not to “get bigger” at any cost—it is to build a business that produces a stable life, protects time, and compounds value over years. That requires discipline in three areas that are easy to compromise under pressure:
The takeaway for MSP owners is clear: sustainable growth is less about intensity and more about consistency—strong fundamentals executed repeatedly.
Many owner-led MSPs reach a stage where the business is “successful,” but the owner feels trapped. Revenue exists, but control is limited. Clients are paying, but the work is relentless. The business becomes a job with better branding.
This episode addresses three common tension points:
Brian’s model reframes the “growth question” into an “operating intent” question: build a company you can run for years, not one you have to survive month to month.
One of the strongest themes in the conversation is how cyber insurance requirements are forcing small businesses to confront reality. The underwriting process is effectively creating a new standard: if a company wants coverage, it must demonstrate maturity.
For MSPs, this creates a strategic advantage when positioned correctly:
The executive insight: when insurance becomes the gatekeeper, MSPs can move from reactive “computer support” to proactive “risk management and operational resilience.” That is a stronger value proposition—and a more defensible one.
Brian’s operating model points to a set of decisions that many MSP owners know they should make, but rarely execute with consistency. If your goal is durable growth (not burnout growth), these are the non-negotiables:
In other words: build a business that can grow while you remain a parent, a leader, and a human being.
Brian Welch is the founder of Welch Technology Services, a New Jersey-based MSP focused on providing full-service outsourced IT for small businesses. With more than a decade of independent ownership, Brian emphasizes preventative maintenance, security, and long-term client relationships—while building a business designed for sustainability, flexibility, and exit optionality.
Connect with Brian Welch on LinkedIn →
What does “lifestyle-first growth” mean for an MSP?
It means designing growth around sustainability: client fit, boundaries, measured onboarding, and disciplined hiring—so the business supports your life instead of consuming it.
Why is cyber insurance a “forcing function” for small businesses?
Because carriers require baseline controls (like MFA and documented practices) before issuing or renewing coverage, pushing businesses to adopt security behaviors they previously delayed.
How should MSPs use cyber insurance requirements in sales conversations?
By positioning your services as a path to measurable risk reduction and insurability—turning questionnaires into a shared roadmap rather than a fear-based pitch.
What is a realistic approach to MSP hiring when revenue is uneven?
Anchor hiring decisions to recurring “outsourced IT department” revenue, not project spikes, and build enough margin buffer to support training, retention, and raises.
How do MSP owners think about exit timelines without losing focus today?
By choosing a practical horizon (like 10–15 years), then aligning annual milestones—client mix, margin health, documentation, and leadership leverage—toward that endpoint.
If you’re an MSP owner building toward sustainable growth—and want help creating clarity, discipline, and execution—explore Vision or apply to be a guest on the podcast.