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The Return of the Office Is Creating a New IT Challenge: Who’s Going to Support It?


By: Jashua Richardson

it field services

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For several years, organizations focused their IT investments on supporting a distributed workforce. Laptops replaced desktops. Cloud applications replaced on-premises infrastructure. Video conferencing became the conference room. The service desk became the front line of employee support.

Now the pendulum is swinging again.

While fully remote work remains part of the business landscape, the reality is that many organizations are increasing in-office requirements and embracing structured hybrid work models. Employees are returning to headquarters, branch offices, manufacturing facilities, healthcare locations, and regional sites at levels not seen since before the pandemic. According to Owl Labs’ 2025 State of Hybrid Work report, 63% of employees are now fully in-office, while hybrid workers are spending more days onsite than in previous years. Meanwhile, more than two-thirds of organizations worldwide now require employees to be in the office at least part of the week.

This shift is creating a problem many IT leaders didn’t anticipate.

As employees return to physical offices, so do the technology issues that require hands-on support. Conference room technology fails. Printers stop working. New employees need equipment deployed. Network closets need maintenance. Office moves require device setup. Security systems need troubleshooting. And someone must be physically present to solve these problems.  The challenge is finding qualified onsite IT talent has become increasingly difficult and expensive.

For many organizations, the answer isn’t hiring more internal staff. It’s partnering with a managed services provider (MSP) that can deliver scalable field services wherever and whenever they are needed.

The Great Hybrid Reality Check

For years, business leaders debated whether remote work would become permanent. The answer appears to be neither fully remote nor fully onsite. Hybrid work has become the dominant model. Gallup data shows that hybrid work remains the preferred arrangement for many knowledge workers, while companies continue increasing office attendance requirements. Employees now spend nearly half of their workweek onsite, and office occupancy continues to rise across major markets.

Even organizations that continue to support flexibility are requiring employees to return to offices more frequently. According to workplace research, office visits increased by 10% year-over-year, and structured hybrid schedules have become the standard operating model for many companies. This means physical workplaces matter again.

When employees were fully remote, many technology issues could be resolved through remote support tools. Today, a growing percentage of IT incidents require a physical presence.

Consider a typical hybrid workplace:

  • Conference rooms filled with collaboration technology
  • Shared workstations and hoteling environments
  • Wireless networks supporting hundreds of devices
  • Printers and multifunction devices
  • Security cameras and access control systems
  • Employee onboarding and equipment deployment
  • Local network infrastructure

These assets cannot be rebooted, repaired, installed, or replaced through a remote session. Someone has to show up.

The Hidden Cost of Returning to the Office

Many companies are discovering an unexpected consequence of return-to-office initiatives. As employees return, technology expectations rise. Workers who commute into an office expect everything to work immediately. They expect conference room systems to connect seamlessly. They expect wireless connectivity to be flawless. They expect their devices to be configured and operational. A malfunctioning webcam in a home office may be frustrating. A failed conference room before an executive meeting can be a business disruption.

As a result, IT departments are facing a surge in requests requiring onsite intervention. Yet many organizations reduced or eliminated field services teams during the height of remote work. Now they need them back. Unfortunately, rebuilding those teams isn’t easy.

The IT Talent Pool Is Shrinking

Technology leaders are facing one of the most challenging hiring environments in years. The demand for skilled IT professionals continues to exceed supply, particularly in infrastructure, cloud, cybersecurity, and support roles. Industry organizations consistently report severe shortages of qualified IT personnel across the United States. Competition for talent has driven up salaries, increased turnover, and lengthened hiring cycles.

The challenge becomes even greater when hiring onsite technicians. Remote positions often attract candidates from across the country. Field service roles require technicians who live near specific offices and can travel to customer locations. The available talent pool becomes dramatically smaller. Organizations frequently encounter several obstacles:

Geographic Limitations

Finding a qualified technician in a major city is difficult enough. Finding one near a regional office, manufacturing facility, or satellite location can be nearly impossible.

Rising Compensation Costs

As competition intensifies, organizations are paying more for experienced technicians. Salaries, benefits, recruiting fees, and training expenses can quickly exceed budget expectations.

High Turnover

Many skilled technicians view field service roles as stepping stones toward engineering, cybersecurity, or cloud positions. Organizations invest heavily in hiring and training only to restart the recruiting process months later.

Coverage Gaps

A single technician can only be in one place at a time. Vacations, sick days, turnover, and competing priorities create service gaps that impact employee productivity. The result is a growing mismatch between increasing onsite support requirements and the available workforce to deliver that support.

Why Traditional Hiring No Longer Scales

Let’s imagine a company with 1,500 employees spread across six offices. Five years ago, they may have staffed each location with dedicated IT personnel. Today, that model often no longer makes financial sense. Maintaining full-time technical staff at every location requires:

  • Salaries
  • Benefits
  • Recruiting expenses
  • Training costs
  • Equipment
  • Management overhead
  • Backup coverage

And that’s before considering turnover. For many organizations, the economics simply don’t work. The reality is that onsite support demand fluctuates. Some days require extensive field service activity. Other days require very little. Hiring full-time employees to address variable workloads creates inefficiency and unnecessary expense. This is why many organizations are shifting toward a more flexible model.

The MSP Advantage: Field Services Without the Staffing Burden

Managed service providers have evolved far beyond remote help desk support. Leading MSPs now provide nationwide field services capabilities that give organizations access to onsite technical expertise without the challenges of recruiting, hiring, and managing dedicated staff. Instead of building an internal team for every office, organizations can leverage an MSP’s network of trained technicians. The benefits are substantial.

Faster Response Times

Rather than waiting weeks to fill an open position, organizations gain immediate access to available technicians.

Geographic Coverage

Whether an office is located in New York, Dallas, Baltimore, Atlanta, or a smaller regional market, MSPs can often provide consistent support across locations.

Flexible Scalability

Need support for a new office opening? A technology refresh? A large employee onboarding initiative? An MSP can scale resources up or down based on demand.

Predictable Costs

Organizations avoid the uncertainty associated with hiring, turnover, overtime, and recruiting expenses.

Specialized Expertise

Field service technicians supported by MSPs often have experience across multiple environments, technologies, and industries, providing broader expertise than many internal teams can maintain.

Why Field Services Matter More Than Ever

The workplace of 2026 looks very different than the workplace of 2020. Employees move between home and office environments. Collaboration technology has become mission-critical. Security requirements are more complex. Devices are more numerous. User expectations are higher. At the same time, many companies are supporting multiple offices with leaner IT teams. That combination creates a perfect storm.

Remote support remains essential, but it is no longer sufficient by itself.

Organizations need a model that combines:

  • Service desk support
  • Remote monitoring and management
  • Endpoint management
  • Cybersecurity services
  • Cloud expertise
  • Onsite technical resources

The most successful IT organizations are recognizing that field services are becoming a critical component of employee experience and business productivity.

Why Dataprise Is Built for This Moment

The return to office isn’t simply a workplace trend. It’s a technology support challenge. As employees spend more time onsite, organizations need reliable access to technicians who can solve problems where they occur in offices, branch locations, and facilities across the country. Dataprise helps organizations bridge the growing gap between onsite support needs and the shrinking pool of available IT talent.

Rather than struggling to recruit, hire, train, and retain field technicians, organizations can leverage Dataprise’s nationwide service delivery capabilities to provide consistent onsite support whenever and wherever it’s needed.

Whether it’s deploying new devices, supporting office moves, troubleshooting network issues, maintaining collaboration technologies, or responding to critical incidents, Dataprise delivers the local expertise organizations need without the overhead of expanding internal teams.

The future of work isn’t fully remote or fully onsite. It’s hybrid. And the future of IT support requires the same approach: a blend of remote expertise, automation, AI-powered service delivery, and skilled onsite professionals ready to step in when technology problems require a human touch. As the office returns, so does the need for field services. The organizations that recognize this shift early will be best positioned to support employees, maintain productivity, and control costs in the years ahead.

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