
Choosing the right IT provider for a manufacturing company with 20–100 employees comes down to evaluating 5 critical factors: industry experience, cybersecurity capability, ERP/system support, response times, and compliance readiness. In Los Angeles, most qualified providers range from $125–$175 per user/month, but the real difference is not price. It’s whether they can prevent downtime, support production systems, and meet regulatory requirements.
Most manufacturers switch providers after 1–3 major failures, such as ransomware incidents, ERP downtime, or failed audits, making the selection process a critical business decision, not just an IT choice.
The 5 Criteria for Choosing the Right Manufacturing IT Provider
- Proven Experience in Manufacturing Environments
Look for providers who understand:
- ERP systems and production workflows
- CAD file management and engineering environments
- Downtime impact on operations
Ask: “What manufacturing clients do you currently support?”
- Cybersecurity Capability (Not Just Antivirus)
Your provider should offer:
- Endpoint Detection & Response (EDR)
- Ransomware protection strategies
- Network security and monitoring
- Email and phishing protection
If they only mention antivirus, that’s a red flag.
- Ability to Support ERP, CAD, and Production Systems
Many MSPs avoid this; this is your edge.
They should:
- Monitor ERP performance
- Support integrations (ERP + IoT + QMS)
- Understand production dependencies
Ask: “What happens if our ERP goes down at 2 AM?”
- Compliance Awareness (FDA, ISO, GxP)
For regulated manufacturers, this is non-negotiable.
They should:
- Understand audit requirements
- Support documentation and validation
- Implement audit trails and access controls
Ask: “Have you helped a company pass an audit?”
- Response Time & Proactive Approach
Evaluate:
- Average response time (should be <15–30 minutes)
- Monitoring vs reactive support
- After-hours support availability
Downtime in manufacturing isn’t a “next-day” issue.
Red Flags When Evaluating IT Providers
These are common warning signs:
- “We support all industries” (lack of specialization)
- No clear answer on cybersecurity stack
- No experience with ERP or production systems
- Backups are set up but never tested
- Vague SLAs or slow response times
These issues usually surface after something breaks.
Questions Manufacturing Companies Should Ask Before Hiring
Evaluation Checklist
- Do you support ERP and production systems?
- How do you prevent ransomware attacks?
- How often are backups tested (not just run)?
- What’s your average response time?
- Do you support compliance (FDA/ISO)?
- Can you provide examples of manufacturing clients?
If a provider struggles to answer these clearly, they’re not the right fit.
What Happens If You Choose the Wrong IT Provider
This is where you drive urgency.
Common Outcomes
- Frequent ERP downtime disrupting production
- Slow response times during critical failures
- Increased cybersecurity risk (ransomware exposure)
- Failed compliance audits
- Unpredictable IT costs
Business Impact
- Lost production hours (often thousands per hour)
- Missed delivery deadlines
- Customer dissatisfaction
- Increased operational stress for leadership
Most companies don’t switch providers until these issues become too expensive to ignore.
Step-by-Step Process to Evaluate and Select the Right Provider
Step 1: Define Your Critical Systems
- ERP, CAD, production networks, backups
Step 2: Identify Your Biggest Risks
- Downtime, ransomware, compliance gaps
Step 3: Shortlist 2–3 Providers
- Focus on manufacturing experience
Step 4: Ask Detailed Technical Questions
- Use the checklist above
Step 5: Compare Value (Not Just Price)
- Evaluate coverage, not just monthly cost
Timeline: Most companies complete this process in 2–4 weeks.
Illustrative Scenario: Replacing a Reactive IT Provider
A 55-employee manufacturing company in Los Angeles relied on a general IT provider with slow response times and no ERP expertise. After experiencing repeated production disruptions and a near-miss ransomware incident, leadership decided to switch providers.
After selecting a manufacturing-focused IT partner:
- ERP systems were proactively monitored and stabilized
- Backup systems were tested and validated
- Cybersecurity controls were upgraded
- Response times improved significantly
Result:
Downtime incidents dropped, and the company gained predictable IT support aligned with production needs.
Why Manufacturing Companies Choose Specialized IT Providers
Manufacturers benefit from providers who understand:
- Production-critical systems and uptime requirements
- ERP and engineering environments
- Cybersecurity risks specific to manufacturing
- Compliance frameworks and audit readiness
A specialized provider aligns IT with operations, compliance, and growth—not just support tickets.
Trust Signals
Fothion supports manufacturing companies that require:
- Stable ERP and production environments
- Strong cybersecurity protection
- Reliable backup and recovery systems
- Long-term IT strategy aligned with operations
With over 20 years of experience, Fothion helps manufacturers reduce downtime and improve system reliability.
Choose the Right IT Partner for Your Manufacturing Business (30 Minutes)
If you’re evaluating IT providers or questioning your current one, the fastest next step is a structured comparison.
Book a 30-minute call with Fothion and we’ll:
- evaluate your current IT setup against manufacturing requirements
- identify the top risks (downtime, security, compliance)
- outline what a properly structured IT plan should include
Book here: https://www.fothion.com/schedule-a-phone-call/
FAQs (with answers):
1. What should manufacturing companies look for in an IT provider?
Manufacturing companies should look for providers with experience in ERP systems, cybersecurity, and production environments. Key factors include response time, proactive monitoring, compliance knowledge (FDA/ISO), and the ability to support both IT and operational systems.
2. Why is manufacturing IT different from other industries?
Manufacturing IT environments are more complex due to ERP systems, CAD files, production networks, and higher downtime costs. This requires stronger cybersecurity, better monitoring, and faster response times compared to standard office IT environments.
3. How do I know if an IT provider understands manufacturing?
Ask for examples of manufacturing clients, experience with ERP systems, and how they handle production downtime. If they cannot clearly explain how they support manufacturing-specific systems, they may not be the right fit.
4. What are red flags when choosing an IT provider?
Common red flags include lack of industry specialization, vague cybersecurity answers, no ERP support, slow response times, and backups that are not tested regularly. These issues often lead to downtime and increased risk.
5. How long does it take to switch IT providers?
Most manufacturing companies can transition to a new IT provider within 2–6 weeks, depending on system complexity, documentation, and coordination between providers.
6. How much should a manufacturing company expect to pay for IT support?
Most companies with 20–100 employees pay between $125–$175 per user/month, depending on cybersecurity requirements, ERP complexity, and support coverage.