What a managed infrastructure partner actually does.
Not a hosting provider. Not a consultancy. Not a staffing agency. A managed infrastructure partner owns the operational outcome of your platform — design, day-to-day running, incident response and continuous optimisation — while you own the product.
The short definition
A managed infrastructure partner is an external engineering organisation that takes accountability for the servers, networking, data stores, security posture and operational runbook of a business-critical platform. The engagement is not transactional — you do not raise tickets and wait — and it is not consulting — you do not get a deck and a handoff. It is ongoing, with the same engineers who designed the environment running it day-to-day.
In practice this means one team owns five things that are usually split across four or five vendors plus an in-house DevOps function:
- Architecture design — choosing the compute, storage, networking, cache, queue, CDN and security layers for your specific workload.
- Provisioning & migration — building the environment and moving you to it with zero downtime.
- Operations — running the environment: monitoring, patching, capacity, backups, deployments, scaling events.
- Incident response — being on-call for your platform, diagnosing issues, implementing fixes, writing post-incident reviews.
- Continuous optimisation — quarterly architecture reviews, monthly performance reviews, ongoing cost-vs-performance tuning.
Where a partner fits — and where it does not
This table summarises the four common models for running production infrastructure and where a managed infrastructure partner sits against them.
| Model | Who owns the outcome | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Web hosting provider | You | Static sites, small apps, non-critical workloads |
| In-house DevOps | Your team | Orgs with 3+ SREs and the budget to keep them |
| Consultancy / agency | You, after handover | One-off projects, platform rebuilds |
| Managed infrastructure partner | The partner | Mid-market platforms where uptime directly affects revenue |
When a partner is the right fit
A managed infrastructure partner is not the right model for every business. It fits best when at least three of the following are true:
- Your platform generates direct revenue and downtime costs more than the monthly infrastructure spend.
- You do not have — or do not want to hire and retain — a dedicated SRE or platform-engineering team of three or more.
- You have compliance obligations (GDPR, PCI, sector-specific) that require documented change management, audit trails and EU data residency.
- You have experienced a production incident in the last 18 months that cost either revenue or engineering time on a scale you want to prevent from repeating.
- Your growth curve puts pressure on the infrastructure faster than an on-demand freelancer or consultancy can respond.
How to evaluate a candidate partner
When you are shortlisting providers, the distinguishing questions are not the ones about technology — every serious provider will tell you the same answer. The questions that filter real partners from rebranded hosting providers are:
- Do the engineers who design the environment run it, or is there a handoff to a separate operations team?
- What is the escalation path for a production incident at 03:00 — how long until a senior engineer is actively working the incident?
- What is included in the monthly fee and what is billable separately? Ask for a written scope document.
- How does the partner handle post-incident reviews — is the review internal or is it shared with you?
- What is the exit plan? Can the environment be handed over to your team or a different provider if the relationship ends?
Engagement model at Binadit
We work in four phases that mirror the structure you will find on how we work:
- Analyze — written audit of your current environment with a capacity model and a risk register, typically 1–2 weeks.
- Design — architecture document with cost forecast and failure-mode analysis, signed off before any change happens.
- Migrate — parallel-environment build, continuous data sync, verified cutover with zero downtime as the default.
- Operate & optimize — ongoing monitoring, monthly performance reviews, quarterly architecture reviews, direct engineer escalation.
We stay small by choice — we would rather manage 50 environments exceptionally well than 500 superficially. Most of our current clients have been with us for 5 years or more.
Related reading
Dig deeper into specific aspects of the partner model:
Häufig gestellte Fragen
How is a managed infrastructure partner different from managed hosting?
Managed hosting is a product: a hosting provider runs the server and installs security patches, but does not architect your environment or own the operational outcome. A managed infrastructure partner is an engineering relationship: we design the environment for your specific workload, run it day-to-day, take on-call rotation for your platform, and continuously optimise. The hosting product can be part of what we deliver; it is not the deliverable itself.
Do we lose control of our infrastructure if we work with a managed partner?
No. You retain full ownership and administrative access throughout the engagement. We operate the environment on your behalf, but every credential, every cloud account, every domain is in your name. The written architecture and runbook mean you can hand the environment to a different partner — or to your own team — at any point with no loss of institutional knowledge.
What is the minimum engagement size that makes this model economical?
Below a certain scale, unmanaged cloud hosting plus an on-demand freelancer is cheaper. The managed partner model becomes the better economic choice when a downtime hour costs more than the monthly engagement fee — typically from mid-market SaaS (€500k+ ARR) onwards, earlier for e-commerce where every traffic peak is revenue.
How do you integrate with our existing engineering team?
Your developers keep shipping product. We run a shared incident channel, publish our change calendar in advance, and participate in your post-incident reviews when the issue touches infrastructure. For teams with existing DevOps or SRE staff, we augment rather than replace — typical split: your team owns CI/CD and application observability, we own underlying infrastructure, data stores and incident response.
What happens if we want to end the engagement?
Documented handover. Every environment we run is described in a written architecture document plus a runbook that a reasonably skilled engineer can follow. Credentials transfer back to you, access logs are provided, and we support a 30- to 60-day handover to your successor team. We do not lock environments into proprietary tooling.
Evaluating a managed partner?
Tell us about your current setup and what you are trying to solve. We will respond within one business day.
Talk to an engineer