The Desktop Support contractor role centres on the ability to provide first and second line technical support to end users within an organisation, resolving hardware and software issues, managing device provisioning and deployment, and maintaining the desktop computing environment. The work involves diagnosing and resolving technical issues with laptops, desktops, printers, mobile devices, and peripherals, managing user accounts and access permissions within Active Directory and Microsoft 365, supporting software installation and updates, handling escalations from the service desk, and assisting with IT projects such as device refresh programmes, office moves, and system rollouts. Desktop Support contractors are brought in most commonly to cover staff absences, manage a project workload spike, or provide additional capacity during a period of significant IT change.
What sets strong Desktop Support contractors apart is are broad and generalist. Strong working knowledge of Windows operating systems is a baseline requirement across virtually all roles, alongside proficiency in Microsoft 365 administration including Outlook, Teams, OneDrive, and SharePoint. Experience with Active Directory for user and device management, familiarity with ITSM ticketing tools such as ServiceNow or Jira Service Management, and the ability to diagnose and resolve a wide range of hardware and software issues without escalation are widely expected. Strong communication skills, patience, and a customer-oriented approach are as important as technical ability in Desktop Support roles, as the primary measure of performance is end user satisfaction and the speed of issue resolution.