Across industries, IT support is undergoing a quiet revolution. While it once meant a reactive help desk resolving tickets on a first-come, first-served basis, today’s model is more proactive, data-driven, and increasingly powered by AI. At the centre of this shift are small and mid-sized enterprises (SMEs), which face a unique set of challenges: tighter budgets, leaner IT teams, and increasing user expectations.
In the UK, these pressures are intensifying. JumpCloud’s recent UK SME IT Trends Report revealed 68% of IT admins say their teams are stretched thinner than ever. At the same time, 75% report they are now responsible for both security and support, an overlap that adds complexity while creating an opportunity for AI and automation to bring meaningful relief.
This isn’t about replacing people. It’s about helping overburdened IT teams work smarter, not harder, while also improving security, user satisfaction, and business resilience.
From manual chaos to strategic support
Too often, IT support within SMEs is held back by time-consuming, manual tasks: resetting passwords, provisioning accounts, managing access across multiple SaaS platforms. These repetitive issues don’t just consume valuable time, they chip away at job satisfaction and prevent teams from focusing on more strategic or preventative work.
Intelligent automation changes the equation. By offloading predictable and repetitive workflows to AI systems, teams gain time to address higher-value tasks like policy enforcement, risk mitigation, and architecture planning. As a result, IT teams become more strategic and less reactive, something 61% of UK business leaders report say they’re actively striving towards in 2025.
AI is redefining the help desk, not replacing it
The narrative that AI is set to replace human workers doesn’t hold true in the IT support domain. Instead, we’re seeing the rise of a collaborative model where machines and humans work in tandem. AI handles routine queries, flags anomalies, and even suggests fixes, while human technicians handle edge cases, critical incidents, and emotionally sensitive user interactions.
For SMEs, this hybrid model is especially valuable. Many have just one or two IT professionals managing hundreds of users. Having AI-powered systems act as a first line of defence doesn’t just speed up resolution, it reduces burnout, error rates, and creates a safety net for when humans aren’t available. Gartner predicts that 60% of large enterprises will use automation to deliver IT support services by 2026, but SMEs have a head start: they’re more agile and can implement new systems faster, provided the integration is seamless and the ROI is clear.
Smarter metrics for smarter systems
If IT support is changing, then the way we measure its effectiveness must evolve too. Instead of focusing solely on volume-tickets closed, calls taken, we need to look at time-to-resolution, first-contact resolution rates, and the accuracy of AI responses.
The JumpCloud report highlights a shift in mindset with 58% of UK SMEs now prioritising user satisfaction as a core IT metric – a welcome change. Support systems aren’t just internal plumbing; they’re often the frontline experience employees have with IT. When those experiences are positive, it builds trust and adoption across other IT-led initiatives, like zero-trust security or multi-factor authentication.
Bridging the skills gap with automation
UK SMEs face a significant skills gap in cybersecurity, cloud management, and automation, with over 4 in 5 businesses facing shortages of IT and tech skills. AI helps fill that gap by embedding institutional knowledge into tools that guide users and surface best practices. When implemented correctly, automation acts like an extension of the team, not a black box, but a smart assistant that understands workflows and enforces standards.
It’s also an on-ramp to upskilling. Rather than removing jobs, AI-enabled systems allow IT staff to focus on higher-order functions like toolchain integration, threat analysis, and automation design. In fact, a McKinsey report found that organisations using AI for IT operations (AIOps) saw a 40% increase in productivity and a reduction in Level 1 support queries by over 30%.
Building a foundation of trust and transparency
For AI adoption to be successful in IT support, especially in smaller businesses, transparency is core. End users need to trust the system, and IT teams need to understand how decisions are being made. That means choosing automation platforms that are explainable, auditable, and integrate with your existing identity, access, and security frameworks.
At JumpCloud, we support automation tied to identity and access management, ensuring that support actions, like resetting passwords or provisioning accounts, are always governed by policy. This intersection of support and security is becoming increasingly important as attackers grow more sophisticated. Every misconfigured account or delayed ticket can become a vulnerability.
The way forward for UK SMEs
So, how can smaller organisations begin to modernise their support function? The key is to start small and focus on quick wins. Automate low-risk, high-frequency tasks, like password resets, onboarding, or group policy management. From there, introduce AI-powered triaging to prioritise tickets and suggest resolutions based on historical data.
It’s also critical to invest in training, not just for the IT team, but for end users too. When employees understand how and when to interact with automated systems, they’re more likely to use them effectively. Clear communication, user feedback loops, and phased rollouts are key ingredients to long-term success.
SMEs are under increasing pressure to do more with less, and IT support is often the canary in the coal mine. But with the right mix of automation, AI, and human oversight, support can become a strategic asset rather than a cost centre.
The shift is already underway. The question isn’t whether AI will transform IT support; it’s how quickly organisations will adapt. By focusing on trust, transparency, and collaboration, SMEs can build a support function that not only keeps pace with modern business demands but also helps drive them forward.
Robert Phan is an accomplished security leader with more than 20 years of experience across the industry. Phan joined JumpCloud in 2022 as Deputy CISO and was named the company's CISO in early 2023. Prior to JumpCloud, Phan was Director of Engineering - Cloud Security at Splunk and spent over 10 years as an engineering leader at Yahoo!
The opinions expressed in this post belong to the individual contributors and do not necessarily reflect the views of Information Security Buzz.


