In the MSP world, we used to treat our PSA like a marriage: “until death do us part” (or until the legacy code finally collapsed). You picked a platform, spent six months configuring it, and then stayed for a decade because the thought of moving all that data and retraining your team was enough to keep you up at night.
But things have changed. In 2026, the PSA market is more of a revolving door than a vault.
Whether you're moving to HaloPSA for the automation, SuperOps for the unified experience, or ConnectWise for the enterprise scale, one thing is clear: PSAs aren't as sticky as they used to be. People are switching tools more often to keep up with AI and better margins, but that "switch" usually comes with a massive side effect: Total Workflow Chaos.
Every time you swap your PSA, you pay a hidden tax. It’s not just the licensing fee—it’s the three months your team spends "learning the new way" while your response times tank and your documentation falls into a black hole.
We’ve seen this cycle over and over:
The problem is that we’ve been building our workflows inside the PSA. When the PSA leaves, the workflow goes with it.
If you want to stay agile, you need to decouple your technician's experience from the underlying database. This is where Thread changes the game.
Thread acts as a "conversational operating system" that sits on top of your PSA. Instead of your techs living inside the clunky UI of whatever PSA you're currently trying out, they live in Slack or Microsoft Teams.
The "sticky" PSA era is over. You should have the freedom to move to the best tool for your business without feeling like you’re burning your SOPs to the ground.
By moving your service desk layer into a tool like Thread, you’re not just adopting AI; you’re building a future-proof workflow. You get to keep your speed, your data quality, and your sanity—no matter which PSA logo is on your monthly invoice.