The Service Level Agreement (SLA) is an integral part of the contract between an IT service provider and its client. It defines the expected level of service and the associated guarantees (performance, availability, recovery times, etc.). It is therefore a key element to consider when choosing a managed service or IT maintenance offer.
In a context where companies are increasingly outsourcing their IT systems and relying on cloud or hybrid solutions, the SLA constitutes a true assurance of quality. Offering high service levels is one of the main value-adds expected during outsourcing. Wifirst, a professional WiFi network operator, naturally includes SLAs in its contracts and implements significant resources (proactive monitoring, 24/7 support, management tools) to meet its commitments.
The SLA was born in the world of network service providers to measure the quality and performance of a service. It has gradually become standard across the entire IT sector, from SaaS software to data center hosting, and today serves as a pillar of managed service offerings.
In practice, the SLA formalizes client expectations and provider commitments. This contractualization helps establish a relationship of trust, as service levels are clearly defined along two main axes:
This precisely defines which services are covered by the contractual commitments. This boundary is essential to avoid any ambiguity.
Example: Wifirst provides SLAs for the network infrastructure but cannot be held responsible for an outage related to a building's general power supply.
This specifies the time slots during which the service is guaranteed and monitored. For critical services, the current standard tends toward 24/7 to meet continuous digital usage demands.
Example: Wifirst's service window is generally 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
The availability rate is expressed as an annual percentage and reflects the reliability of the service. For example, a 99.9% SLA (often called "three nines") corresponds to approximately 8 hours and 45 minutes of maximum downtime per year. The higher the percentage, the greater the requirements for monitoring and technical redundancy.
Example: Wifirst guarantees a 99.5% availability rate on its managed network infrastructures.
The Response Time specifies the maximum delay within which a technical team commits to intervene after an incident is reported. It does not guarantee complete restoration but reflects a commitment to responsiveness. Today, it is often coupled with proactive monitoring solutions that detect and address incidents before the client even notices.
Example: Wifirst prioritizes a Restoration Time Guarantee (RTG) over a simple Response Time, ensuring more transparency for its clients.
The Restoration Time defines the maximum delay for returning the service to operation after an incident. It is generally differentiated based on the criticality of the incident (minor, major, critical). Leading providers also adapt their restoration times to multi-site or multi-cloud environments.
Example: Wifirst commits to a restoration time of 4h or 8h for critical incidents on its managed WiFi infrastructures.
It is essential to remain realistic when choosing SLAs. Overly ambitious commitments can lead to high costs and may sometimes be impossible to maintain. The key is to ensure consistency between:
It is also advisable to ensure that the provider uses tracking indicators (KPIs such as MTTR – Mean Time To Repair – or MTBF – Mean Time Between Failures) and offers regular reporting to guarantee total transparency.
With the rise of cloud computing, AI, and remote work, SLAs are evolving. We are seeing a shift toward:
The SLA is no longer just a contractual tool: it has become a strategic lever to guarantee service quality, resilience, and digital trust.