The IT support you don't notice because it works
The best managed service is the one the user doesn't feel. If employees are happy with IT, if the laptop boots quickly, if Teams doesn't drop during the important meeting, if the ERP responds the way it should and if email arrives when it has to — then the support team is doing its job well. The paradox of professional IT support is that the better you do it, the less visible you are. And the less visible you are, the easier it is for a client to think you're not doing anything and start looking at price instead of value.
At Impulso Tecnológico we've spent 26 years running managed services with a simple idea: we want to be the outsourced IT team for mid-sized companies that don't need or don't want to keep a full internal IT department, but do need their technology to work every day. We don't sell hours. We don't bill per incident. We sell a clear service agreement: continuous monitoring, preventive maintenance, user helpdesk, vendor management, and a senior person who knows your business and gives a quarterly account of progress.

Helpdesk: the visible face of the service
The helpdesk is where the user relationship is built or broken. Mid-sized companies don't have or need a thousand-ticket-a-day service — but they do need that when a user has a problem, someone solves it fast, with a professional tone, and without making them feel stupid for asking. Our helpdesk runs on these principles:
- 9×5 attention by phone, email and ticket portal — extendable to 24×7 with on-call for critical environments.
- Sub-1-hour first response guaranteed in writing in the SLA (not as a sales promise). In practice, 80% of calls are picked up in under 5 minutes.
- Remote resolution of 80–90% of incidents through secure remote-control tools (with explicit user consent on every session).
- On-site visit when needed: Madrid in hours, the rest of Spain and Portugal depending on urgency and contract.
- Languages: Spanish, English and Portuguese — relevant for our clients with international operations.
- Named assignment: each customer has a primary technician and a backup who know their environment, their people and their quirks (because every company has them).

24/7 monitoring: catch it before the user calls
An incident detected by proactive monitoring takes a fraction of the time to fix compared to an incident the user discovers when they try to use the system. Our standard includes 24/7 monitoring of critical infrastructure components:
- Physical and virtual servers (Windows, Linux, VMware, Hyper-V): CPU, memory, disk, key processes, critical system events.
- Network and connectivity: switches, firewalls, WiFi access points, WAN links — latency, jitter, packet loss, per-application bandwidth.
- Cloud services: Microsoft 365 tenant health, Azure status, Defender alerts, cloud backup integrity.
- Endpoints: antivirus/EDR state, disk encryption, pending critical updates, suspicious devices.
- Critical customer applications: ERP, CRM, sector-specific software — we monitor whatever the customer says hurts when it breaks.
Alerts don't land in an inbox. They reach a technician who's actually on shift, escalate automatically if no acknowledgement comes within X minutes, and get documented in the customer portal with root cause and corrective action. That's the difference between alerting and attending.
Preventive maintenance: what stops 80% of the problems
Most IT incidents are the consequence of something that could have been prevented: an update pending for months, a disk at 95% that nobody cleaned up, a backup that's been failing silently for two weeks, an expired SSL certificate, a critical firmware nobody applied. Planned preventive maintenance is probably the highest-return part of a managed-services contract:
- Documented quarterly review of servers, storage, network, backups, antivirus and security policies.
- Planned patch application for critical updates in overnight or weekend windows, with a rollback plan if anything fails.
- Log, temp-file and database cleanup as needed.
- Restore tests for backups (because an untested backup is just an assumption).
- Certificate, domain and licence renewal before they expire — not after.

Vendor management and IT procurement
A less visible but enormously useful part of the managed service is acting as single point of contact with all the customer's technology vendors: telco operator, cloud provider, firewall manufacturer, ERP support, cabling installer, phone-system maintainer. When something fails, the customer calls us — and we coordinate the responsible vendor, escalate when needed, and log how the incident closed.
We also manage the workstation lifecycle: new-equipment procurement, deployment with a standard corporate image, joining the domain and M365, day-one user training, and end-of-life retirement with secure wipe. Without management having to think about any of those steps.
Managed backup and business continuity
Backup is the last line of defence against ransomware, human error and hardware failure — and, paradoxically, the first thing that fails in companies without professional management. Our managed backup standard includes:
- Fast local copy + immutable cloud copy (Azure Blob or S3 Object Lock).
- Configurable retention: one year as standard, longer where the sector demands it.
- Daily automatic check of backup health, with technician alert if anything fails.
- Monthly granular restore test (an email, a file, a database).
- Annual full-recovery drill, documented.
This is not a separate service — it's included in the managed-services contract as a baseline, not as an upsell.

Monthly executive review: accountability, not a PDF dump
A managed-services contract with no periodic meetings with management becomes a black box within six months. Nobody knows exactly what we do, leadership has no visibility, and trust erodes. Our monthly service review runs 30–60 minutes and covers:
- KPIs of the month: incident count, average resolution time, SLA compliance, top root causes.
- Preventive actions completed: patches applied, backups verified, vulnerabilities closed.
- Open pending tickets and closure plan.
- Detected risks and improvement proposals for the next 30–90 days.
- Financial status: extra hours used (if any), one-off projects in flight, forecast for the quarter.
What to do with that information is the customer's call. We bring transparency and judgment — the decision is theirs.

How we work
Every customer enters through a free initial assessment (1–2 hours, on-site or remote) → technical audit of the current state (1–2 weeks) → service proposal with SLA, scope and closed budget → documented onboarding (CMDB, access, contacts, maintenance calendar) → continuous operations with helpdesk, monitoring and maintenance → monthly review with management.
If your company has a critical incident right now, call +34 91 505 7575. We pick up the call in minutes, not hours.