New engineer. The client doesn’t know yet.

Your best engineer is moving to a different account. Their replacement starts next week. 

The client doesn’t know yet. How you introduce the new engineer determines whether the client sees this as a disruption or a non-event. Most MSPs send a one-line email. The good ones transfer trust deliberately. 

The scenario:

You need to introduce a new primary engineer to a client in a way that maintains confidence. 

The prompt:

You’re writing a client communication for an engineer transition.

Context: [paste the client relationship details, outgoing engineer’s tenure, and incoming engineer’s background]

Create a 3-part communication plan:

  • Email 1 (1 week before): Introduce the change, highlight the new engineer’s relevant experience, explain the transition plan

  • Email 2 (day of): Confirm the handoff is complete, provide the new engineer’s direct contact, list what’s been briefed

  • Follow-up call: New engineer reaches out within 48 hours to introduce themselves personally

Tone: Confident and planned, not reactive. The client should feel this is an upgrade, not a disruption.