By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

IT Consulting Intake Forms: What MSPs and IT Consultants Need to Capture at Client Onboarding

An IT consultant who walks into a new client engagement without knowing their server count, backup frequency, or whether they are subject to HIPAA is going to spend the first two weeks discovering things that should have been documented before the contract was signed. Meanwhile, the client is watching the clock and wondering why they are paying hourly rates for their new IT provider to ask basic questions about their own infrastructure.

Most IT consultants and managed service providers collect a company name, a primary contact, and maybe a rough workstation count. That is not onboarding — that is barely a lead form. A real IT consulting intake form captures the full picture of the client's environment, security posture, compliance obligations, and service expectations so you can scope accurately, price correctly, and deliver from day one without the discovery period that erodes client confidence.

Client and business information: context that shapes every decision

The business profile is not just administrative data. It determines your compliance requirements, your staffing model, and your risk exposure. An eight-person marketing agency and a 200-employee medical practice with three locations are fundamentally different engagements, and your intake needs to surface those differences immediately:

Current infrastructure: the full hardware inventory

You cannot manage what you have not documented. The infrastructure section of your intake is the foundation of every recommendation, every quote, and every support ticket that follows. Skip this and you will spend three months discovering devices, services, and configurations that should have been cataloged in the first week.

Cloud and software: what they are running and paying for

The software environment is often more complex than the hardware. Clients accumulate SaaS subscriptions the way people accumulate streaming services — someone signed up for it three years ago, nobody remembers why, and it is still billing $200 a month.

Security posture: what is protecting them and what is not

Security is where IT consulting intake diverges most sharply from IT support intake. An IT support company is primarily reactive — something breaks, they fix it. An IT consultant or MSP is responsible for the security architecture, and that means you need a complete picture of the client's current security posture before you can recommend improvements or accept the liability of managing their environment.

Compliance requirements: what regulations apply

Compliance is not optional, and it is not something you figure out after the contract starts. Your intake needs to identify every regulatory framework that applies to the client's business, because those frameworks dictate your security controls, your documentation requirements, and your audit obligations:

Service needs: defining the engagement scope

The most common source of MSP-client conflict is mismatched expectations about what the engagement covers. Your intake form is where you define the scope explicitly so there is no ambiguity about what is included, what is extra, and what the client is responsible for:

Disaster recovery and business continuity

Every client says their data is important. The intake is where you quantify exactly how important by forcing them to answer the hard questions about downtime and data loss:

Onboarding documentation and knowledge transfer

The final section of a thorough IT consulting intake addresses the operational handoff — getting the information and access you need to actually start managing the environment:

Why thoroughness at intake pays for itself

The IT consulting intake is not paperwork for the sake of paperwork. Every field on a well-designed intake form corresponds to a question that will get asked eventually. The difference is whether it gets asked in a structured onboarding process that takes two hours, or whether it gets asked piecemeal over six months as problems surface and you scramble to understand an environment you should have documented from the start.

A complete intake also protects the business relationship. When the client says "I thought patching was included," you can point to the intake where service scope was defined. When a compliance auditor asks about your documentation process, you can show a structured intake that captures the regulatory landscape before the engagement begins. When a security incident occurs, you can demonstrate that you assessed the client's posture at onboarding and recommended the improvements they chose not to implement.

If you are managing IT for businesses that also need break-fix support documentation, the IT support intake guide covers the residential and small-business support angle — the client-facing troubleshooting and repair side of IT services. For consultants and MSPs operating at the strategic level, the intake documented here is what separates a professional engagement from a handshake and a hope.

If you are building documentation across a full professional services practice, the Professional Services Bundle includes IT consulting alongside 34 other professional service categories, each with industry-specific intake fields.

IT consulting intake forms — $19.99 complete set

Fillable PDF intake form + client questionnaire. Client profile, infrastructure inventory, cloud and software audit, security posture, compliance requirements, disaster recovery, service scope, and onboarding documentation. Built for IT consultants and managed service providers.

View IT Consulting Forms