Skip to main content
Tech Radar Tech Radar Pro Tech Radar Gaming
TechRadar TechRadar the business technology experts
SG EditionSingapore
DK EditionDanmark FI EditionSuomi NO EditionNorge SE EditionSverige UK EditionUK IT EditionItalia NL EditionNederland BE (NL) EditionBelgië (Nederlands) FR EditionFrance DE EditionDeutschland ES EditionEspaña
US EditionUS (English) CA EditionCanada MX EditionMéxico
AU EditionAustralia NZ EditionNew Zealand
RSS
Sign in
  • View Profile
  • Sign out
Don't miss these
Trending
  • Best office chairs
  • Best 3D printers
  • Best antivirus
  • Best web hosting
  • Best website builder
  • Expert Insights
  1. Pro

Hiring an IT Manager: 6 things your small business should consider

News
By Jacob Grana published 12 November 2015

You get what you pay for

When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.

Introduction

Introduction

Many small businesses muddle through with minimal IT support. They furiously consult Google whenever Excel crashes. They bring in a tech-savvy son or daughter to network a new printer or configure a new employee's computer. They cross their fingers, say a prayer, and rub the lucky rabbit's foot whenever the tower servers get a little hot.

This low-level IT only works (and barely) when a business is very small. Once the headcount gets to twenty, the security, networking, system administration, even the daily desktop support becomes too complex to rely on muddling. An IT Manager is needed.

But for many small business owners, hiring an IT Manager is as daunting as choosing a car mechanic – maybe even harder. One hundred years of operation have at least made the automobile familiar to the layperson. But the computer? It's a relative few who know what the high-pitched whirring coming from a computer's chassis means.

A small business can't afford any missteps, especially when it comes to IT. Here are 6 things a small business needs to consider when hiring an IT Manager.

Page 1 of 7
Page 1 of 7
1. Make present IT needs a priority

1. Make present IT needs a priority

Before any resumes are reviewed, a small business should list its priority IT needs. Start simple: what are the IT issues the business routinely addresses? No doubt desktop support is number one, and it should be. Crashed computers, and the resultant hit to productivity, are a huge bugaboo.

Beyond crash fixing and prevention, what else? Small businesses should think of IT projects that are particular to them. Does a website need to be re-launched (or even launched); does the website need to be mobile-friendly? Is the phone system unreliable? Is the CRM a cluttered disaster? Any IT Manager under consideration should have experience solving these particular challenges.

Small businesses must also note the dominant operating system and hardware used in the office.

If PC's with Windows and Microsoft Office are being used, Microsoft Certified Professional (MCP) is the key certification a small business should look for in an IT Manager, even more so than a bachelor's or master's degree. In the IT world, education is often secondary to experience.

Future IT projects are important to consider too. If these projects are beyond the scope of the new IT Manager, the business will be forced into another round of potentially costly hiring.

Page 2 of 7
Page 2 of 7
2. When in doubt, hire a generalist

2. When in doubt, hire a generalist

Small businesses having trouble pinning down their exact needs should consider hiring a generalist.

A generalist will not only have desktop support experience, but networking and system administration as well. This includes firewall, router, server, switches and virtualization experience, as well as familiarity with programming languages like Perl, MySQL, and XML.

An IT Manager with such experience will help source new hardware, network the office securely, create a rudimentary database, advise on third party database software, configure servers for email, web hosting and remote access, and of course troubleshoot slow-downs and crashes.

Page 3 of 7
Page 3 of 7
3. Size may be limiting

3. Size may be limiting

IT Managers with only "big" experience may be a challenge for small businesses to keep. After all, if an IT Manager has spent the last five years vetting vendors for a thousand user company, they might not be too thrilled by a small business's re-cabling project.

The last thing small businesses want is an employee who quits after a few months because they feel their career is "going backwards."

That being said, an IT Manager with large business experience should not be ruled out – as long as they've previously undergone the large to small transition. Such a background will ensure they have clear expectations of their role and its challenges.

Page 4 of 7
Page 4 of 7
4. Experienced IT isn't cheap

4. Experienced IT isn't cheap

Via PayScale, IT Manager salaries range from $48,000 to $121,000 a year, with a median of $80,000 (about £52,500). That type of salary may be cost prohibitive for smaller businesses with lower annual revenues.

Even businesses with large budgets may feel they are "overpaying" for a Manager if their head count is low, or their technology needs are relatively small.

Those businesses are not out luck, but they will have to adjust their expectations.

An IT Assistant (PayScale median salary $38,000) or a Computer Support Specialist (PayScale median salary $60,000) could fit into a business with limited resources or low-level IT needs.

But small businesses should be aware that, like with any investment, you get what you pay for. Advanced IT projects are probably beyond the scope of an IT Assistant's expertise. This is why considering future needs is critical. Today's overpaying is tomorrow's saving if higher ticket IT helps the business quickly roll out revenue generating – and revenue saving - initiatives.

Page 5 of 7
Page 5 of 7
5. And experienced IT is hard to find

5. And experienced IT is hard to find

Internet job boards are certainly useful for finding active candidates in a cost-effective way, and businesses employing such a strategy should post on technology specific sites like Dice for their IT Manager.

But small businesses should keep in mind that IT is a growing, in demand field. Average IT Managers get offers as soon as they post their resume to a job board, and great IT Managers may not even have to post at all. They are recruited right out of their current roles.

Small businesses may never get to pitch great candidates unless they use their referral network or hire a recruiter.

The referral network should be the first avenue of attack. Small businesses can use referral bonuses to incentivize current staff into getting involved in the hiring process. A bonus is often much cheaper than job postings (on reputable sites anyway) or a recruiter's fee.

In the end though, a recruiter may be a small business's only hope, albeit an expensive one. Considering an IT Manager's median salary, and a recruiter's fifteen to thirty percent fee, it's not unreasonable for a small business to expect a $12,000 to $24,000 outlay for hiring.

Once again, small businesses will get what they pay for. Job posting strategies are cheap, but they often yield unqualified candidates, leading to churn. The sizable network and expertise of a recruiter may help businesses get the hiring right the first time – which is usually worth more than any fee.

Page 6 of 7
Page 6 of 7
6. IT must speak the company's language

6. IT must speak the company's language

The IT Manager's communication skills are just as, if not more, important than any technical knowledge they may possess. All the computer wizardry in the world will not help if he or she cannot communicate solutions to staff in need.

Cultural fit should not be overlooked either. If the IT Manager feels like the company isn't welcoming, it won't be hard for them to find another home.

Owners have to make sure IT isn't treated like the mop – left in a closet and fetched when there's something to clean up. In today's tech-reliant world, businesses can't survive without good IT. Hiring the right IT Manager, and keeping them, should be a priority.

Page 7 of 7
Page 7 of 7
Jacob Grana
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Whatsapp
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • Flipboard
  • Threads
  • Email
Share this article
Join the conversation
Follow us
Add us as a preferred source on Google
Tech Radar
Get the TechRadar Newsletter

Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.


By submitting your information you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy and are aged 16 or over.

You are now subscribed

Your newsletter sign-up was successful


An account already exists for this email address, please log in.
Subscribe to our newsletter
Latest in Pro
Lenovo Legion laptops on a blue background next to a TechRadar badge that reads 'Big Savings'
I've found 3 high-performance video editing laptops with massive price-cuts in Lenovo Presidents' Day sales - unmissable deals for content creators
 
 
Mini PC NUC Box
This mini PC with 8GB RAM is small enough to fit in the palm of your hand and at under $100 I can definitely recommend it
 
 
A Herman Miller Embody, Aeron, Vantum, and Sayl on a purple background next to a TechRadar badge that reads 'Big Savings'
Presidents' Day sales see big cuts in Herman Miller office chairs
 
 
Holographic silhouette of a human. Conceptual image of AI (artificial intelligence), VR (virtual reality), Deep Learning and Face recognition systems. Cyberpunk style vector illustration.
Why LLMs are plateauing – and what that means for software security
 
 
Open AI CEO Sam Altman speaks during a talk session with SoftBank Group CEO Masayoshi Son at an event titled "Transforming Business through AI" in Tokyo, Japan, on February 03, 2025. SoftBank and OpenAI announced that they have agreed a partnership to set up a joint venture for artificial intelligence services in Japan today.
'He is a genius with a lot of amazing ideas about the future': Sam Altman says OpenClaw founder Peter Steinberger is joining OpenAI
 
 
Hacker silhouette working on a laptop with North Korean flag on the background
North Korean job scammers target JavaScript and Python developers with fake interview tasks spreading malware
 
 
Latest in News
MSI RTX 5090 Lightning GPU graphics card shown against a black background
MSI RTX 5090 Lightning costs up to $15K on eBay — so here's an alternative
 
 
Xdown on mobile
X was down – here's what happened in the latest major outage
 
 
Spider-Man posing on top of a tank in Spider-Man: Brand New Day
New Spider-Man 4 leak reveals first official look at the MCU movie's villains
 
 
iOS 26 features shown on two iPhone 16 Pro models.
iOS 27 could fix your iPhone's battery life – but here are 7 tips to try now
 
 
A woman in bed on an iPad and listening to music over headphones, next to a shelf with a coffee drip and TN-400BT-X/TB turntable.
A turquoise turntable designed for Bluetooth? If anyone can do it, TEAC can
 
 
iPhone 11 Pro
A YouTuber just tripled his old iPhone 11 Pro’s battery capacity –here's how
 
 
LATEST ARTICLES
  1. 1
    Fresh Spider-Man: Brand New Day leak reveals first official look at its villains — and Marvel fans aren't happy about the design for one of them
  2. 2
    Tyra Banks takes no accountability for America’s Next Top Model’s endless mistakes and danger — but we didn’t need a new Netflix documentary for that
  3. 3
    I've found 3 high-performance video editing laptops with massive price-cuts in Lenovo Presidents' Day sales - unmissable deals for content creators
  4. 4
    Skip Amazon and Walmart — Best Buy's Presidents' Day sale has the best prices on TVs, appliances, AirPods, laptops, and more
  5. 5
    Beat the RAM crisis with these laptop Presidents Day Sales for less than $400

TechRadar is part of Future US Inc, an international media group and leading digital publisher. Visit our corporate site.

Add as a preferred source on Google
  • About Us
  • Contact Future's experts
  • Contact Us
  • Terms and conditions
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies policy
  • Advertise with us
  • Web notifications
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Careers

© Future US, Inc. Full 7th Floor, 130 West 42nd Street, New York, NY 10036.

Please login or signup to comment

Please wait...