The question “in-house IT department or outsourcing?” returns in almost every growing company. There's no single right answer — but there is an informed decision based on costs, risk and the organisation's stage of growth.
Three models
In-house IT department
Full control and knowledge of the company's specifics, but also high fixed costs, the risk of a “single point of knowledge” (when a key administrator leaves) and the difficulty of providing genuine 24/7 support.
Hybrid model
An in-house team handles day-to-day operations and process knowledge, while an external partner covers specialist areas: security, monitoring, audits, after-hours duty. This is most often the best compromise.
Full outsourcing
Predictable cost, access to broad competence and a guaranteed SLA without building a team from scratch. In return, you need a good contract and clear rules of cooperation.
What does an in-house department really cost?
It's not just about salaries. The cost should include recruitment, training, leave and cover, tools, licences and the risk of downtime when competence is missing at a critical moment. Once you add all these up, the picture is often surprising.
The risk people forget
- Continuity — who takes over when the only administrator falls ill?
- Security — does the team keep up with threats and updates?
- Scalability — will IT withstand the company's rapid growth?
Decision sheet — ask yourself these questions
- Do I need after-hours (24/7) support?
- Do I have cover for key competences?
- Do I know the real, full cost of maintaining IT?
- Is security at the level my industry requires?
The more “no” answers, the stronger the case for outsourcing or a hybrid model. At R-SEC we most often recommend the hybrid — it combines control with flexibility and access to specialists.

