Managed hosting is a service in which a provider hosts and manages servers, infrastructure, and the applications running on them on behalf of a client organization. Unlike shared or self-managed hosting — where the client is responsible for configuration, maintenance, and security — managed hosting transfers those operational responsibilities to the provider.
The term covers a range of arrangements: dedicated physical servers, virtual private servers, cloud instances, and hybrid environments can all be delivered under a managed hosting model. What makes it “managed” is not the infrastructure type but the operational responsibility transfer — the provider handles maintenance, monitoring, patching, security, and support.
For organizations evaluating their infrastructure strategy, managed hosting fits within a broader managed IT services picture as a specific layer of that management.
Overview
Managed hosting provides the benefits of dedicated or cloud infrastructure without requiring internal expertise to operate it. The provider manages the environment; the client uses it. The arrangement is governed by a service level agreement defining availability, performance, and support commitments.
- Managed hosting covers infrastructure that runs your applications, websites, databases, and services
- The provider handles monitoring, patching, backup, security, and support
- SLAs define uptime commitments and support response times
- Managed hosting can be cloud-based, on-premises, or hybrid
- It fits within a broader IT strategy that may also include managed workplace IT and security services
What Managed Hosting Includes
Server Monitoring and Management
The provider monitors server health, performance, and availability continuously. Issues are identified and addressed proactively — hardware failures, performance degradation, capacity constraints — before they affect application availability.
Patch Management and Updates
Operating system and software patching is handled by the provider on a defined schedule. Security patches are applied promptly; application updates are tested and deployed according to agreed procedures.
Backup and Disaster Recovery
Managed hosting typically includes backup services — regular snapshots of your data and configurations that enable recovery from hardware failures, data corruption, or ransomware. Recovery time and recovery point objectives should be defined in the service agreement. This connects directly to your organization’s broader business continuity posture.
Security Management
Server-level security — firewall configuration, intrusion detection, malware scanning, access management — is part of managed hosting. This security layer complements but does not replace endpoint and network security for the devices connecting to the hosted environment.
Technical Support
Managed hosting includes technical support for the hosted environment — configuration assistance, troubleshooting, and issue resolution delivered according to SLA commitments.
How Managed Hosting Fits Your IT Strategy
Managed hosting is not a standalone service; it is one layer of a broader IT infrastructure strategy. Its place in that strategy depends on where your applications and data live:
For organizations with on-premises servers: managed hosting can replace aging on-premises infrastructure with hosted alternatives that are more reliable, more secure, and less operationally demanding.
For organizations moving to the cloud: managed hosting on cloud infrastructure (AWS, Azure, or similar) provides the cloud’s scalability and resilience without requiring internal cloud operations expertise. Cloud migration services often lead to managed hosting engagements for the resulting cloud environment.
For organizations with hybrid environments: managed hosting covers the hosted portion while coordinating with on-premises management for a consistent operational experience across both environments.
Managed Hosting vs. Unmanaged Hosting
The distinction is operational responsibility. Unmanaged hosting provides the infrastructure; the client handles everything that runs on it. This requires internal expertise, ongoing management attention, and accountability for security and availability.
Managed hosting transfers those responsibilities. For organizations without dedicated server management expertise — or whose IT staff should not be spending time on infrastructure maintenance when other priorities exist — the transfer of operational responsibility is the product.
Final Takeaway
Managed hosting removes the operational burden of running server infrastructure from the client organization and places it with a provider whose job is to run it reliably. It fits within a broader IT strategy as the infrastructure layer, complementing managed workplace IT, security services, and strategic planning.
Cloud and Managed Infrastructure Services From Mindcore
Mindcore’s cloud services cover hosted infrastructure management alongside workplace IT, security, and strategic planning. We help organizations evaluate the right hosting model for their workloads and manage the resulting environment.
Talk to Mindcore About Managed Hosting and Cloud Infrastructure