Selling managed services is different from selling projects. You are not asking a customer to approve a one time scope. You are asking them to commit to an ongoing relationship, a monthly investment, and long term accountability. That decision does not start with technology or price. It starts with trust.
Industry research consistently shows that managed services buyers are not purchasing features. They are committing to an ongoing partnership where outcomes, risk reduction, and reliability matter more than the tools themselves. As ConnectWise explains in its overview of managed IT services, the value of managed services is rooted in proactive support and long term operational stability, not one off fixes or transactions. That distinction changes how selling must happen.
Most resistance to managed services shows up late in the sales process, but it is created much earlier. When customers do not trust the seller, do not feel understood, or do not see consistent value, recurring revenue conversations stall. This is why customer centric selling is not a soft skill add on. It is the foundation for selling managed services.
Managed services buyers are looking for a dependable partner, not just a service provider. TSIA research on the state of managed services highlights that buyers increasingly expect providers to understand their business context and guide outcomes over time, not simply deliver services. Before customers agree to monthly payments, they need confidence in how you listen, how you communicate, and how you show up consistently.
A customer focused selling approach builds that confidence long before an RMR proposal is presented.
Below are six practical tactics that create the conditions needed to sell managed services successfully.
1. Listen more than you talk
Salespeople are trained to explain, present, and persuade. Managed services require a different starting point. Customers want to feel heard before they want to hear about solutions.
Go into conversations curious. Ask open ended questions and give the customer space to explain how their business operates, what is working, and what is not. When buyers feel listened to, they share context you will never get from a checklist. That context becomes the foundation for future recommendations.
Listening is not passive. It is how trust begins.
2. Use structured discovery to go deeper
Good conversations feel natural, but they are rarely accidental. A customer centric selling approach relies on structured discovery to uncover what actually matters to the buyer.
revenueify uses a simple interviewing structure that focuses on four areas: facts, important issues, needs, and dreams. This helps sales professionals move beyond surface level requirements and understand business impact and personal motivation.
Just as important, capture what you learn. When customers see that you remember what they told you last time, trust compounds.
3. Communicate clearly and transparently
Managed services are often intangible. If conversations are unclear, customers default to hesitation.
Strong sellers communicate in a way that matches how the customer prefers to receive information. Some buyers want optimism and vision. Others want direct answers and time to process. Adapting your communication style helps customers leave conversations feeling informed instead of confused.
Clear communication reduces friction and prevents misunderstandings later in the relationship.
4. Do what you say you will do
Follow through is one of the fastest ways to differentiate yourself in managed services sales.
If you commit to sending information, send it. If you say a call will be brief, respect that boundary. Consistency matters more than big promises. Customers learn very quickly who they can depend on.
Managed services require long term trust. Reliability is not optional.
5. Provide value before asking for commitment
Customers decide who to trust based on who helps them think better.
Share relevant articles. Walk through simple math that explains cost and return. Offer perspective on risks they may not be considering. When customers ask for your opinion, give it and explain why.
Over time, you move from vendor to advisor. That shift makes recurring revenue conversations easier and more natural.
6. Make the outcome personal
Every managed services conversation affects a business, but it also affects a person.
Ask what success looks like for them personally. What would improve their day to day workload. What they are worried about if nothing changes. When customers see that you care about the human side of the decision, relationships deepen.
This is often the difference between interest and commitment.
Selling Managed Services Starts Before the Proposal
You cannot improve managed services sales without the right processes, behaviors, and structure. Customer centric selling creates the trust that makes RMR possible, but it must be coached and reinforced consistently.
Sales managers play a critical role by modeling these behaviors and holding teams accountable to how their teams sell, not just what they sell.
If you want to build a repeatable, customer focused selling approach for managed services, explore our sales training services to see how structure and coaching support long term revenue growth.