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7 min read

The Provider Playbook 1: Your Customers’ File Problem is Your Next Service Line

The Provider Playbook 1: Your Customers’ File Problem is Your Next Service Line

Table of Contents

The Provider Playbook 1: Your Customers’ File Problem is Your Next Service Line
11:17

The Fastest-Growing Managed Service of the Next Five Years Is Already Sitting Inside Your Customer Environments

Key Takeaways:

  • Unstructured file data is the workload almost every provider touches but almost none has productized, and it has quietly become expensive, fragmented, insecure, and unsafe to expose to AI, which means customers can no longer fix it on their own.
  • That broken file estate is a ready-made managed service line: ongoing modernization, governance, security, and AI-readiness work that customers would rather hand to a trusted provider, sitting inside a managed services market analysts size in the hundreds of billions and growing toward a trillion.
  • The conversation starts not with a product but with the problem standing between customers and AI, and Panzura CloudFS is the global file platform that service providers can operate on their customers’ behalf as the foundation everything else attaches to.

The Provider Playbook is a 3-part series that explores how the data underneath every organization today has become a lot more complicated and valuable, why many organizations find it difficult to fix without help, and how Panzura CloudFS can be offered as a durable revenue-generating business by service providers. Read Part 2 and Part 3.

Every provider we talk to is asking where their next durable, recurring, high-margin service line will come from. They’re not simply looking for another resold license with a thin point of margin. They’re interested in a service customers can’t easily walk away from, that grows as their needs grow, and that they can run profitably at scale.

The fact is, it’s already in their accounts. It’s their file data.

Unstructured file data is the workload almost every provider touches and almost none has productized. It’s been treated as plumbing. It’s something the customer owns, you occasionally help with, and nobody builds a business around. That’s no longer a defensible position, because the data underneath your customers has quietly become a lot more complicated and valuable. They cannot fix it on their own.

Consider the scale of it. IDC has projected that roughly 80% of the world’s data is unstructured. That includes the files, documents, images, and project data that live on your customers’ shares rather than in tidy databases. And it’s not sitting still. Gartner has found unstructured data growing at roughly three times the rate of structured data, at annual rates in the 55–65% range. That’s the workload sitting in your accounts right now, compounding every year, and almost none of it is being managed as a service.

In the meantime, a few critical things have gone wrong at once.

  • It’s expensive. The costs are spread across aging NAS, sprawling storage, and duplicated copies in every office and site. Customers are paying to store the same data many times over and paying again to protect and refresh hardware that should have been retired years ago.

The real cost goes beyond the storage line on the invoice. It’s about the people, the maintenance windows, and the second and third copies of everything that exist because no one trusts the first one. That spend is invisible until someone adds it up, and when they do, it’s a figure that makes a modernization conversation easy to start.

  • It’s fragmented. Project data is scattered across offices, job sites, locations, and clouds, with no single source of truth. Teams email versions back and forth because they can’t trust the one on the share. Every one of those copies is a cost and a risk.
  • It may be insecure. High-value project data sits in environments with no behavioral visibility, exposed to ransomware and insider risk, with recovery plans that have never actually been tested under fire.

Perhaps most importantly, their data is not ready for what comes next. Which brings us to the part that has turned a slow-burning problem into a critical one. Simply put, artificial intelligence (AI) has brought the urgency to a crescendo.

Table 1. The file estate problem and the service it creates for providers. What’s broken in the customer environment, why it happens, and the managed service it opens for you.

Customer Problem
Why It Happens
Provider Service It Creates
Expensive
Aging NAS, duplicated copies, and hardware refresh cycles spread across every site
Managed file platform that consolidates storage and removes redundant copies
Fragmented
Project data scattered across offices, job sites, and clouds with no single source of truth
Global namespace delivered and operated as a service
Insecure
High-value data with no behavioral visibility, exposed to ransomware and insider risk
Managed threat detection, immutable recovery, and tested runbooks
Not AI-ready
Poorly governed, under-permissioned data that is unsafe to expose to Copilot
Data governance and a permission-faithful AI data layer

← Swipe to see more →

AI moved the deadline up

Your customers are being told by their CEO to put AI to work. For most of them that means Microsoft 365 Copilot, but Copilot is only as useful as the file content it can reach. That content that has to be governed, accurate, and permission-safe before it’s worth pointing an AI at.

Right now, most of your customers’ file estates are none of those things. The same fragmentation and weak governance that made the data expensive and risky also makes it unsafe to expose to AI. That means the AI mandate lands on a foundation that can’t support it, while the customer is told to move fast as they sit on data that isn’t ready.

The provider who understands this and shows them how to get there is leading a conversation the customer is desperate to have. You’re selling the path from where they are to where they've been told they need to be.

This is a services problem, not a product problem.

You already have relationships, trust, and access to the right people. You also have the operational muscle to run something on the customer’s behalf. Modernizing a file estate, governing it, protecting it, and making it AI-ready is precisely the kind of multi-stage, expertise-laden work customers would rather hand to a partner they trust than attempt themselves. It rewards the things providers are good at.

It also happens to be the kind of work that doesn’t end. A file estate isn’t modernized once and forgotten. It must be operated, monitored, protected, expanded, and continually made ready for the next thing the customer wants to do. That’s a relationship, not a transaction, and it’s what a book of business is made of.

Moreover, timing favors you. Customers who would once have tried to handle storage in-house are short on the exact skills this work demands. The people who knew the old NAS are retiring or moving on, and storage and data-governance experts are difficult to find and expensive. The AI mandate has landed on teams that are already underwater. A provider who can absorb that whole problem — modernize the platform, govern the data, secure it, make it AI-ready, and keep it that way — is offering relief, not just a product. As they see it, you're selling the customer their own time and attention back.

The market arithmetic demonstrates this. Independent analysts size the global managed services market in the range of $330 to $440 billion, growing at a double-digit CAGR toward roughly $1 trillion or more within a decade. The underlying hybrid cloud storage category that file modernization sits inside is on a similar trajectory. Whichever forecast you anchor to, the direction is that customers are moving more of their infrastructure to providers who will run it for them, and they’re doing it fastest in exactly the data-and-AI work described here.

Table 2. The managed services opportunity, by independent analyst forecast. Why the market backs a file-and-data managed service line. Figures are global managed services market estimates.

Source
2025 Market Size
Forecast Horizon
CAGR
Fortune Business Insights
$330.4 billion
$1,118.2 billion by 2034
14.8%
Precedence Research
$441.2 billion
$1,272.9 billion by 2035
11.18%
Research Nester
$380.3 billion
$1,270 billion by 2035
12.8%

← Swipe to see more →

Sources: Fortune Business Insights (2025); Precedence Research (2025); Research Nester (2025).

Where it starts

At the center of all of this is Panzura CloudFS, a global file system you can operate as a managed service on your customers’ behalf. One platform that gives every site local-feeling performance with global consistency, runs on a true full-mesh architecture with no single point of failure, and scales from a single project share to multi-site, petabyte-scale environments. CloudFS is the foundation a customer never outgrows, and it’s the core that everything else, including governance, security, AI-readiness, and recovery, attaches to.

But the platform is the second conversation. The first one is simpler, and you can have it right now with accounts you already know. It starts with a discussion about how file estates have become a problem your customers can’t solve alone, and that problem is standing between them and AI. That’s about competitive advantage. We can fix that.

For you as a service provider, that’s a service line, and it’s been quietly sitting with your customers.

Get started with Panzura CloudFS as a service you manage on behalf of your customers.

Ready to see how providers are turning the file data conversation into a business? Learn more and let’s talk.

 


 

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

  • Why is unstructured file data growing so fast?

    Most business data now lives in files rather than databases. IDC puts unstructured data at roughly 80 percent of the world’s total, and Gartner has measured it growing about three times faster than structured data, at yearly rates in the 55 to 65 percent range. Every new office or project site keeps adding more of it.

  • What makes a company's file estate not ready for AI?

    Tools like Microsoft 365 Copilot are only as useful as the file content they can reach, and that content has to be governed and permission-safe before it has any value. Most file estates are fragmented and weakly governed, so pointing AI at them risks surfacing data the wrong people were never meant to see.

  • Why is managing file data a services opportunity rather than a product purchase?

    Modernizing a file estate is not a one-time install. The data has to be operated and continually made ready for whatever the customer wants to do next. That ongoing work suits a provider relationship far better than a license sale, and it builds recurring revenue customers cannot easily walk away from.

  • What are the hidden costs of an aging file storage environment?

    The storage line on the invoice is only part of it. Real cost hides in the duplicated copies kept in every location and the staff time spent maintaining old NAS hardware that should have been retired years ago. It stays invisible until someone adds it all up, and the number usually makes a modernization conversation easy to start.

  • How can Panzura CloudFS be offered as a managed service?

    Panzura CloudFS is a global file system that gives every site local-feeling performance with one consistent view of the data. It runs on a full-mesh architecture with no single point of failure and scales from a single project share up to multi-site, petabyte environments. It is the foundation that everything else attaches to, from governance to recovery.

  • Can a service provider run Panzura CloudFS as a managed service?

    Yes. Panzura CloudFS is built to be operated on a customer's behalf, which lets a provider consolidate scattered storage and run the platform as a recurring service line. It turns file data from something a provider occasionally helps with into a durable book of business.

  • How does Panzura CloudFS solve file data fragmentation across multiple sites?

    Panzura CloudFS delivers a single global namespace, so every office and job site works from one authoritative copy of the data instead of emailing versions back and forth. That removes the duplicate copies that drive cost and risk, and it gives distributed teams a source of truth they can actually trust.


Kerry Telling
Written by Kerry Telling

Kerry Telling serves as the Vice President of International Sales. As an experienced and highly motivated sales leader, he has a proven track record of achieving sales targets and driving success in both enterprise and start-up business ...

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