In the world of managed IT services, most of us have started to feel it: the rising cost of talent. Engineers, network specialists, security analysts — the salaries they command today, plus the overhead we don’t always account for, are putting real pressure on our P&Ls. And yet, many are still looking at the same old playbook: hire, train, retain. But what if there’s a smarter, more flexible way? One that doesn’t just shift costs but fundamentally rethinks how we staff IT — especially for operations like our NOC (Network Operations Center)?
First, let’s acknowledge the obvious. The talent war is real. The fact is that the world has a shortage of competent IT professionals, which especially includes individuals experienced in cloud, security, automation and 24/7 operations (LTS Group, 2024). Companies are shelling out more to recruit and keep them. And that’s not accounting for benefits, training and life-long certification.
And there is the matter of margins. And when you operate an in-house NOC, it’s not just base salaries that you pay. Based on industry data, one NOC engineer can cost you in the ballpark of $80,000 in direct pay — and when you factor in overhead for insurance, benefits, taxes the fully loaded cost could be 30–40% higher. For a team of 10 to 12 on call around the clock, that adds up fast. Indeed, some estimates suggest that annual staffing costs alone are in excess of $1 million for a modest-sized enterprise. (INOC, n.d.)
Recruitment is another pain point. Hiring a NOC engineer is not just putting an ad. You need to run recruiting campaigns, interview it cycle’s worth of interviews, then onboard and finally train. Certain organizations estimate a recruitment cost of approximately $10,000 per new hire, not including retention incentives (INOC, n.d.).
And don’t forget continuous training. With certifications, conferences and continued learning most companies invest between $5,000–$10,000 per engineer each year to keep their team sharp (INOC, n.d.).
All this pressure eventually falls to clients. In markets such as India, leading players have already initiated price increases to reflect high growing talent cost. as Economic Times, escalating salaries and attrition (Economic Times 2022) have led some to raise their time-and-material (T&M) rates by 4–7%.
So, yes, the increasing expense of IT talent is not all theory. It is a genuinely vexing business problem — and one that threatens to squeeze margins, particularly for companies that do the bulk of their work in-house.

The conventional response tends to be more hiring. You add headcount. You build bigger NOCs. You try to lock in staff with retention bonuses or long-term incentives.
But that approach has downsides.
Simply hiring more people is not a long-term play. What many firms don’t talk about enough is a model that sidesteps some of these issues entirely: pay-as-you-go staffing via NOC outsourcing.
Here’s the thing: outsourcing doesn’t have to mean long-term contracts with rigid SLAs or offshoring entire teams. A more modern, flexible approach is to outsource portions of your NOC or staff augmentation needs in a pay-as-you-go fashion — only bringing in external specialists when and where you need them.
It’s not just a theory. The IT outsourcing market is forecast to keep growing, fueled by precisely these drivers: scalability, talent access, and cost control (Global Growth Insights, 2025). Meanwhile, many organizations report that outsourcing success — defined as achieving same-or-lower cost than in-house — is very real, especially for help desk, infrastructure, and NOC-related functions (Q Rumc, 2025).
Of course, this isn’t a silver bullet. There are common objections, and experienced leaders will rightly raise them.
If you’re a CTO or CEO who’s been running your NOC or managed services in a traditional way, here’s a simple roadmap to test and potentially adopt this alternative staffing model.
Part of the reason this pay-as-you-go NOC outsourcing model isn’t more widespread is that many leadership teams are stuck in legacy thinking: “in-house = control, outsourcing = risk.” But that’s changing — the economics just make sense, especially when talent costs keep climbing.
Also, established managed service providers themselves are often hesitant: they worry about losing control, ceding client relationships, or diluting their IP. But the truth is, outsourcing doesn’t have to be all or nothing. It can be a complementary lever — not a replacement — for your core business.
The higher cost of IT talent is not a short-term headache — it’s structural change. Salaries, hiring costs, training and retention all squeeze margins. For too long, the answer has been to double down on hiring. But there’s one that a lot of us in the managed IT community have been missing: Allowing network technician work teams to be outsourced using pay-as-you-go NOC staffing.
Together, combining in-house capabilities with flexible external talent will help you recover financial flexibility, mitigate risk and scale in a smarter manner. For CEOs and CTOs that have been around for a bit — you know what fixed headcount can be, you know how demand can swing. It’s time to reconsider how we staff, and give this alternative the attention it deserves.