Sourcepass Blog

Why IT Is a Bad DIY Project (and What to Do Instead)

Written by Alex Davis | Jun 23, 2025

When your toilet leaks, you might be tempted to grab a wrench and give it a shot. Maybe you’ve watched a video or two. How hard can it be? 

Until suddenly, you’ve got water damage, a plumber on speed dial, and a repair bill bigger than the original problem. 

This is exactly what happens when businesses try to DIY their IT. 

From setting up networks and managing cybersecurity to onboarding new employees and handling compliance, IT has become one of the most complex and business-critical functions today. Yet too many organizations still treat it like a weekend project. 

Let’s break down why doing your own IT is riskier than it looks—and what smarter, scalable options exist instead. 

 

The DIY Trap: False Savings, Real Consequences 

DIY IT often starts with good intentions: 

  • “We’ll just set up our email in-house.” 
  • “My cousin is good with computers.” 
  • “We don’t need an IT firm—we’re small.” 

But here's the problem: IT touches every part of your business, and getting it wrong can lead to serious consequences: 

  • Data breaches 
  • Productivity loss 
  • Compliance violations 
  • Costly downtime 
  • Missed growth opportunities 

And like plumbing or accounting, IT gets more complicated the longer you wait to do it right. 

 

Common DIY IT Mistakes (That Cost More Than You Think) 

1. Using Personal Tools for Business Operations 

Free file-sharing apps or personal email accounts might seem convenient—but they often lack the security, compliance, and management controls businesses need. 

2. Skipping Backups and Recovery Planning 

Without a tested disaster recovery plan, a single hard drive crash or ransomware attack could wipe out years of critical data. 

3. Ignoring Cybersecurity Best Practices 

Unpatched systems, weak passwords, and unsecured devices are red carpets for attackers. Most small businesses don’t realize they’ve been compromised until it’s too late. 

4. Assuming One IT Person Can Do It All 

Even a great internal IT resource can't be a network engineer, cybersecurity expert, cloud architect, and help desk at the same time. It’s unrealistic—and unsustainable. 

5. Underestimating Compliance Requirements 

Industries like healthcare, finance, legal, and education all have strict IT compliance rules. DIY solutions rarely meet these standards, which can result in penalties or client loss. 

 

What to Do Instead: Professional IT, Scaled to Fit 

You don’t need a massive IT department—but you do need access to professional tools, strategy, and support. That’s where an outsourced IT partner (like a Managed Services Provider or MSP) makes a difference. 

Here’s what you get: 

  • 24/7 monitoring and help desk support 
  • Cybersecurity tools and regular threat assessments 
  • Backups and disaster recovery planning 
  • Compliance expertise (HIPAA, SOC 2, NIST, etc.) 
  • Strategic IT planning aligned with your business goals 

Instead of reacting to problems, you get proactive support that prevents them. 

 

Think of IT Like Electricity 

You wouldn’t wire your office yourself. You wouldn’t build your own accounting software. So why gamble with the systems that store your sensitive data, connect your employees, and drive your daily operations? 

Technology should enable your business—not distract from it. 

 

Final Thoughts 

DIY IT might feel like a smart way to save money, but in reality, it costs more—in time, risk, and missed opportunities. 

If your IT setup feels like a patchwork of fixes, it's time for an upgrade. 

Work with a partner who knows how to build technology that works for you, not against you. 

 

Ready to stop troubleshooting and start scaling? 

Let’s talk about what a purpose-built IT solution looks like for your business.