BSOD Technologies is a locally owned IT services firm that handles managed IT support, break-fix repairs, and network security for small and mid-market businesses across the Oklahoma City area. Unlike national chains focused on consumer device repair, BSOD structures its work around business continuity, meaning faster response times for companies that cannot afford extended downtime.
BSOD Technologies operates as a managed service provider (MSP) with a break-fix component. That means clients can contract for ongoing monitoring and maintenance of their entire IT infrastructure, or call in for specific repairs and consulting projects. The company serves Windows and Mac environments, handles server setup and maintenance, manages cloud migrations, and provides cybersecurity assessments and implementation. On-site work happens in their Oklahoma City location and throughout the metro area; remote support is available for clients who need faster turnaround on non-hardware issues.
BSOD offers managed IT on a per-user, per-month basis. Pricing typically ranges from $80 to $150 per user monthly, depending on the scope of monitoring, the number of devices covered, and the level of proactive maintenance included. Clients with 10 to 50 users commonly fall into the $100–$120 range. For break-fix work without a managed contract, the company charges an hourly rate of $90–$120 for on-site service and $60–$80 for remote sessions. Minimum charges apply. Custom quotes are available for larger projects such as network overhauls or security audits. Pricing varies with scope; verify current rates directly before committing.
Oklahoma City has two main tiers of IT support: national franchises like Best Buy's Geek Squad and local independent shops. Geek Squad charges higher per-incident fees (typically $150–$200 for a shop visit) and excels at consumer repairs but lacks the business-focused infrastructure planning that BSOD provides. Local competitors such as smaller one-person shops often undercut BSOD's hourly rate but offer no managed service layer, meaning a business must call them each time something breaks rather than having proactive monitoring. BSOD sits in the middle: lower cost than national chains, faster and more business-oriented than solo repair shops, and structured for companies that want predictable monthly costs and someone on watch 24/7. Choose BSOD if your business runs on Windows servers or hybrid cloud setups and you want a single contact for both routine maintenance and emergencies. Choose a solo shop if you have a tiny office with minimal tech and only need occasional repairs. Avoid big-box retailers for anything beyond consumer-grade device fixes.
BSOD works best for offices with 5 to 150 employees, established networks, and a budget for preventive IT management. Manufacturing plants, medical offices, nonprofits, and service companies in the Oklahoma City metro are typical clients. It is less suited to single-person freelance operations or home offices where the cost of managed service cannot be justified. BSOD also focuses on Windows and Mac; if your business runs exclusively on Chromebooks or Linux workstations, fit will be looser.
An initial consultation is free. BSOD will assess your current hardware, software licenses, backups, and security posture, then propose a managed plan or project scope and cost. If you engage for managed service, a technician will spend time setting up monitoring agents, testing backups, and documenting your infrastructure. For a break-fix call, turnaround typically happens within 24 hours for non-critical issues and same-day for critical problems such as server outages.
BSOD operates Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., with after-hours support available to managed clients for emergency calls. The office is in central Oklahoma City with street parking and a small lot. Most work is conducted on-site at your location or remotely; you do not need to bring equipment to their office.
BSOD Technologies fills a gap for Oklahoma City small businesses that need IT reliability without the cost of hiring a full-time IT director. It earns its place by committing to response times and preventive care that keep networks running rather than just fixing what breaks.
