Quick answer
Mid-market Canadian operators (25–200 people, across drilling, services, and production) build IT that compounds across oil cycles by deploying six specific levers - operational discipline, cyber posture, integration capacity, vendor consolidation, identity hygiene, and measurement rigor - calibrated to the four growth walls where mid-market companies break. The cycle is gravity, not weather. The IT built at $107 oil determines what survives at $47 oil, and what becomes the acquirer.
Inside this guide.
Credentials, affiliations & memberships.
James's perspective is shaped not only by 25 years of operator experience but by active participation in the global communities setting the agenda for technology leadership, AI policy, and digital sovereignty - from Calgary to the United Nations in Bangkok.
Oil is at $107. Some of you are about to use that.
The week this eBook went to print, WTI crude was trading between $103 and $110 per barrel. The Strait of Hormuz was effectively closed. Goldman Sachs had revised its 2026 forecast for Brent above $100. The EIA was modeling a Q2 peak near $115. Permian operators were scrambling to add rigs. Service companies were quoting work at premiums they hadn't dared ask for since 2014.
Some of you reading this just hired your 50th employee. Some of you just signed your first $10 million contract. Some of you are evaluating an LOI on a competitor whose owner is ready to sell at the top. Some of you are quietly preparing to be that competitor - to exit well, to a buyer who will pay a premium for what you've built. All of you have plans bigger than this cycle.
This book is for you.
It is also a warning. Because in twenty-five years of doing this work - two oil price collapses as an operator-side CIO, a third on the M&A side - I have watched the same pattern destroy ambitious mid-market operators. They mistake an upcycle for permanence. They hire and build like the price will stay. They treat IT as discretionary. Then the cycle turns, and the same ambition that should have made them the acquirer in the next cycle makes them the acquired - at a discount. The cycle is not your enemy. It is your filter. Built into your business correctly, it is also your moat.
What the last two cycles did - and who came out ahead.
Between June 2014 and January 2016, the Brent price of crude fell from $115 to $27 - a 70% drop, the largest sustained decline in modern petroleum history. American companies announced at least 86,000 job cuts directly attributed to oil prices in the first twelve months alone. By the end of 2016, over 200,000 US upstream and oilfield service positions had evaporated. Worldwide, the count exceeded 297,000.
Then 2020 arrived. WTI averaged $39 for the year. On April 20, 2020, the front-month contract printed negative $37.63 for the first time in the history of oil futures. 108 North American oil and gas companies filed Chapter 11 in 2020 alone - combined debt of $102 billion, with average debt per bankrupt company reaching $1.2 billion, almost double the 2016 average. The Petroleum Equipment & Services Association estimated 103,420 oilfield service jobs lost during the pandemic alone. Smaller service companies didn't cut. They closed.
And then prices recovered. By 2022, WTI was over $100. By 2024, US oil and gas M&A had roared back to $206.6 billion - more than triple 2023. Exxon paid $60 billion for Pioneer. SLB announced $7.7 billion for ChampionX. The aggressive consolidators were rewarded. The under-built were absorbed. The mid-market operators who came through 2014 and 2020 with their IT, data, and operational capability intact were the ones doing the acquiring in 2023 and 2024 - at favorable multiples, with leverage to spare. The ones who gutted IT during the downturns spent the recovery rebuilding instead of buying.
Why this book exists.
If you operate a drilling, service, or production company between 25 and 200 people - and you intend to be considerably larger five years from now - you have read a great deal of cheerful material about digital transformation in oil and gas. Most of it was written by consultants whose hourly rates do not survive WTI at $40. Most of it was researched at the supermajor level - Shell, Chevron, Aramco, Equinor - companies with eleven-figure IT budgets and the luxury of treating downcycles as portfolio rebalancing opportunities.
You do not have that luxury. You have a payroll, a covenant, a JV partner, a regulator, and a commodity price you do not control. But you also have what they don't: agility, focus, and a stage of growth where the right IT decisions compound in ways theirs no longer can. Your decisions in the next eighteen months will determine whether you are the operator doing the acquiring in the next cycle turn, or the operator being acquired. Whether your service company wins back the customer it lost - and three more - or loses two more. Whether the specialty becomes the standard, or stays the specialty.
This book is direct. Occasionally uncomfortable. It assumes you have grown up in this industry and do not need the basics explained, but might benefit from a CIO who has lived through both ends of the curve twice telling you which IT decisions actually compound, which ones look smart at $100 oil and bury you at $40, and which ones turn the cycle from a threat into your most reliable competitive advantage.
The cycle is patient. It is also your moat - if you build for it. Let's begin.
Three companies. Three growth arcs.
Before we go further, it helps to be specific about who this book is for. Because the phrase "oil and gas company" hides three very different businesses underneath it, and the IT decisions that fuel growth in one of them will stall another.
Three companies will keep appearing throughout this book as recurring examples. They are not real names - they are archetypes drawn from dozens of clients and engagements over the past two decades. What matters about them is not where they are today. What matters is where they intend to be in five years - and what their IT will have to become to get them there. If you do not recognize yourself in one of these three trajectories, this book is probably not for you. If you recognize yourself in two, you are operating across the seam between segments and this book gets even more relevant.
Why the same playbook does not work for all three.
Look at the three trajectories above. Same commodity exposure. Same Canadian basin geography. Same boom-bust dynamics. But fundamentally different growth problems - and therefore fundamentally different IT problems.
The Operators's path from 80 to 200 people, from 140 to 400 wells, runs almost entirely through M&A. Their IT problem is integration capacity - can their data architecture absorb a 30-person operator without breaking their own operations? Can they run a clean diligence on the next target in 14 days? Can they produce a data room that justifies a premium multiple when they themselves go to market? If their IT is messy at $107 oil, they will buy at full price and sell at a discount. The math compounds against them every cycle they don't fix it.
Directional/Fracking Service's path from 65 to 200 people, from one basin to four, runs through operational discipline - crew scheduling, equipment utilization, customer-system integration, and a back office that can price work faster and more accurately than their competitors. Their margin is measured in single-digit percentages and their utilization in days. Their growth is constrained by how many active jobs they can manage simultaneously without dropping the ball. That's an IT problem dressed up as an operations problem.
Operators' path from 25 to 100 people, from specialty to standard, runs through professionalization. They have the technique. They lack everything else - ERP, HR, project costing, cyber program, compliance, audit trail. Their IT problem is the one they don't know they have - they are about to scale 4× without ever having implemented the systems even a 60-person company needs, and the contract they just signed has audit clauses they have not yet read carefully.
What they have in common.
All three of them share three things, and those three things are the reason this book exists.
First, all three are leveraged to the same commodity curve. When WTI moves, they feel it within 90 days - sometimes within 30. The Operators's revenue moves with the price. Directional/Fracking Service's day rates move with operator capital programs. Operators' customers cancel discretionary work first. Their ambitions do not change with the cycle. Their ability to execute those ambitions does.
Second, none of them can afford to be wrong about IT. A supermajor can absorb a failed $50 million digital initiative. A 65-person directional drilling company cannot absorb a failed $500,000 system implementation that pulls senior operations people off the rigs for six months. The margin for error is small. The cost of being wrong is the company.
Third - and this is the one that gets buried in most strategy conversations - all three of them are at a stage where IT either becomes a growth engine or a growth ceiling. The companies that build IT for the growth arc they're actually on become uniquely positioned to acquire in the next downcycle and consolidate in the next upcycle. The ones that don't, become the targets that get acquired. The cycle is the same for both groups. The IT decisions are different.
How each company will appear through this book.
Because three running examples can get confusing, here is the map. Each archetype operates from a different posture relative to the cycle - and the IT decisions that fit each posture differ accordingly. Where you see yourself in this map will largely determine which chapters land hardest.
If you are reading this and find yourself somewhere between two of these archetypes, that is normal. Most operators do. The map gives you the framework; your judgment supplies the details.
This is the audience. Three companies, three growth arcs, three postures, one cycle. Let's look at why most companies on those arcs get the IT part wrong.
Why do most oil & gas IT projects fail?
In June 2022, McKinsey published the most quoted statistic in oil and gas IT discourse. They had studied digital transformation programs across the energy sector and found that 70% of them never moved beyond the pilot phase. A separate analysis by McKinsey on traditional industries - oil and gas, mining, manufacturing - found success rates between 4% and 11%. Among the lowest of any sector studied.
The standard interpretation is that oil and gas is "behind." That the industry is conservative. That it has too much legacy infrastructure. That its workforce is too old, too field-based, too resistant to change. These are not wrong, exactly. But they are also not the actual reasons.
The actual reasons most oil and gas IT projects fail are mundane. They are leadership decisions, not technology problems. McKinsey, EY, and the analysts at Deloitte who study this industry have converged, over a decade of research, on four structural causes. Each one is something a CFO or CEO of a 25-200 person company can recognize from the boardroom.
The four causes of failure.
Notice what is not on that list. "We bought the wrong vendor." "We didn't have enough data scientists." "Our cloud strategy was wrong." Those are technology variables, and they matter at the margins. But they are not where the failures happen. The failures happen in the soft, unsexy work that gets the least executive attention and the smallest budget line: choosing tools sized to your actual organization, integrating OT and IT under one accountability, treating IT as a capability rather than a cost, and actually training the people who will use it.
Which means the failures are leadership decisions. Which means they can be fixed. Which is what the rest of this book is about.
The commodity curve eats small companies first.
Supermajors are not subject to the same cycle physics as the rest of the industry. They have global diversification, vertically integrated operations from wellhead to refinery to retail, and balance sheets that absorb extended periods of $40 oil without losing investment-grade ratings. They lay people off, yes. They cut capex, yes. But they do not die.
The 25 to 200-person drilling, service, or production company has none of those buffers. You feel the cycle within 90 days. You can be insolvent within 18 months. The math is not symmetric - when oil rises 50%, your revenue might rise 30%. When oil falls 50%, your revenue might fall 70%. Because the activity disappears faster than the prices do.
Why the small companies absorb the shock.
Three structural reasons.
One - concentration risk. A supermajor has thousands of producing wells across multiple basins, multiple countries, multiple commodity types. A 60-person operator has a focused acreage position. A 65-person service company often has one or two anchor customers that account for half its revenue. When those customers cut their capex, that revenue evaporates almost overnight.
Two - financing leverage. Mid-market operators run on reserve-based lending. Service companies run on equipment financing. Both lenders mark to market faster than supermajor bondholders do. When the cycle turns, your borrowing base gets redetermined, your covenants get tested, and the same banker who was your friend at $90 oil is asking for a recovery plan at $40.
Three - talent gravity. Senior engineers, experienced field hands, and seasoned operations leaders all flow to the perceived safest employer in a downturn - which is usually the supermajor or the largest independent. Mid-market companies lose the people whose institutional knowledge keeps the rest of the company running. Six months later, when the survivors are trying to acquire the cheap assets, they have neither the people nor the systems to actually integrate them.
What this means for IT.
The conventional wisdom is that IT is the first thing you cut in a downcycle. It is "discretionary." It can wait.
This is exactly backwards. The IT capabilities you build at $107 oil are the only ones you will have at $47 oil. Downturns are not when you build. Downturns are when you find out what you already built.
The operators that came out of the 2014–2016 collapse in acquiring positions had something in common: they had invested in production accounting and JIB automation when they could afford to, so when the time came to absorb a competitor's assets, the integration took weeks instead of years. The service companies that survived 2020 had something in common: they had invested in crew scheduling, equipment utilization tracking, and remote operations capability before the pandemic forced everyone home. The ones that didn't, didn't survive.
Which leads to the question that defines the rest of this book: what are the IT investments that actually pay off across the curve? What is worth doing now, while oil is at $107 and you can afford it, that will still be paying dividends when oil is at $47 and your competitors are panicking?
The answer is not "all of them." It is six, specifically. Chapter four.
The six IT levers that actually move the needle.
Most IT vendor literature in oil and gas describes hundreds of capabilities. Most consulting reports describe dozens of digital transformation initiatives. Most of them are real, and most of them are not worth your time at the 25 to 200-person scale.
Twenty-five years of doing this work, two cycles in, suggests there are six IT capabilities that consistently pay off for mid-market drilling, service, and production companies - and pay off in both directions of the curve. If you are going to invest in IT this year, these are the six worth investing in. Most of the rest can wait.
Lever 1 - Production data integrity
For operators, this is the foundation everything else depends on. Pumper readings, allocation runs, run tickets, flow meter calibrations, water cuts - all of it has to be accurate before any downstream system has a chance of producing the right answer. One mid-market operator told a Rockwell Automation case study that their staff was spending 50% of their time manually extracting, manipulating, and verifying production data before modernization. Half. Of the time. Of the people who are supposed to be running production.
When production data is wrong, JIB statements are wrong. When JIB statements are wrong, partners dispute. When partners dispute, cash gets held back. When cash gets held back, your CFO is on the phone instead of looking at the next acquisition. McKinsey research found upstream operators using advanced analytics on clean production data captured an additional $5+ per BOE in value. That is not a marginal improvement. At 140 producing wells averaging 100 BOE/day, that is $25 million a year.
Lever 2 - JIB and AFE automation
This is the back-office capability that most operators underinvest in until it becomes a crisis. Manual joint interest billing - vendor invoices coded by hand to working interest decimals, partner statements assembled in spreadsheets, AFEs tracked in email - works fine at 10 wells with two partners. It does not work at 50 wells with four partners. At that scale, manual JIB creates 30 to 60 days of cash flow lag and routinely adds 3 to 5 days to month-end close.
One specific pattern keeps repeating in growing operators: month-end close used to take three days, now it takes nine, and half of that is the production accountant waiting for clean volumes from the field before she can run JIB. The software didn't break. The growth broke the workflow. Specialized platforms - PakEnergy, WolfePak, OGSYS, Enertia, Quorum at the next tier up - exist precisely because QuickBooks does not know what a working interest decimal is.
Lever 3 - Field data capture (services)
For service companies, this is the analog. Pumper readings for operators. Crew time, equipment hours, materials consumed, on-site safety reports, customer signoffs - for service companies. The companies that win on margin at $50 oil are the ones that can price work accurately because they actually know what it costs them. The companies that lose are the ones still pricing from spreadsheets built three crews ago.
The mid-market service operator currently fighting to win back the customer it lost in 2024 - that fight is largely about margin. Whoever can quote the work at a margin the operator will accept while still making money on it wins. Field data capture, properly implemented, typically improves crew-level visibility by 15-30% - meaning fewer hours quoted under cost, fewer materials walked off the job, fewer disputed change orders, faster invoicing.
Lever 4 - M&A-ready data architecture
This is the one nobody invests in until it is too late. The state of your data room directly determines the multiple you receive at exit. Bain & Company's 2026 M&A report found oil and gas deal multiples expanded from 4× EBITDA in 2022 to 6.9× in 2025 - but that average hides enormous variance. The clean data rooms get the high end. The messy ones get the discount.
A "clean" data room is not a magic act. It is the natural output of a company that has been running its IT properly for three to five years before it goes to market. Production volumes tied to wells tied to AFEs tied to partner statements tied to revenue distributions, all reconcilable, all auditable, all in one or two systems instead of forty spreadsheets. The buyers can tell the difference within an hour of opening the data room. They price accordingly.
Lever 5 - OT and cyber baseline
This is the existential one. Ransomware attacks against the oil and gas industry surged 935% between April 2024 and April 2025. In August 2024, Halliburton was hit and forced to take systems offline for several days. Industrial-sector ransomware rose 46% in a single quarter. Credential-stealing malware rose 3,000% in the same period. Nation-state attacks with physical consequences tripled.
The myth - "we are too small to be a target" - is no longer true and arguably never was. Mid-market operators with SCADA systems on the public internet, default credentials still in place, no MFA, no segmentation between IT and OT networks, are the easiest targets in the industry. Insurance markets have noticed. So has CISA. So have the threat actors.
This lever is not optional. It is the floor everything else stands on. Chapter eight goes deeper.
Lever 6 - Regulatory reporting automation
The least exciting lever, the highest reliability of payback. Severance tax filings, royalty reporting, AER/BLM/state regulator submissions, emissions reporting, OSHA logs, methane monitoring compliance - all of it can be automated. The companies that don't automate it spend 40% more staff hours on regulatory work and make far more errors. The errors compound into fines, into audit triggers, into reputational issues with regulators that follow you into your next acquisition.
The Growth Engine - how the cycle becomes your moat.
The conventional advice for mid-market oil and gas companies is straightforward and largely wrong: "Be conservative. Don't over-extend. Survive the downturns. Wait your turn." It is the advice of consultants who have never run a business with a payroll and a covenant. It produces small, careful companies that survive cycles by becoming smaller each time one turns.
The companies that actually compound through cycles do something different. They build IT capability designed to make the cycle work for them, not against them. They acquire in downcycles when assets are cheap and competitors are distressed. They expand in upcycles when capital is available and growth is rewarded. They turn cyclicality from a threat into a structural advantage that compounds every time the curve turns.
That is the Growth Engine. This chapter is about how to build it.
The asymmetric cycle thesis.
Most operators read the cycle as symmetric - prices rise, prices fall, plan accordingly. The cycle is not symmetric. It rewards different behaviors on the up versus the down, and the operators who recognize this earn outsized returns at every turn.
- Build IT capability while cash flow funds it
- Stand up M&A integration playbook before needing it
- Expand into adjacent basins, service lines, or geographies
- Recruit senior talent at premium but defensible cost
- Negotiate long-term contracts at higher margins
- Build the cyber posture insurance underwriters now require
- Lock in vendor contracts before the next consolidation wave
- Acquire distressed competitors at 0.5×-2× EBITDA discounts
- Hire experienced talent fleeing supermajor layoffs
- Renegotiate vendor contracts from a position of solvency
- Take share from undercapitalized competitors
- Win partner trust by being the one not panicking
- Buy equipment, fleet, and acreage at fire-sale pricing
- Position for the next upcycle from a stronger base
Look at that side-by-side. Every row on the right depends on something that had to be built on the left. You cannot acquire a competitor in 90 days if your own data architecture cannot absorb them. You cannot hire fleeing supermajor talent if your internal systems are still being held together by tribal knowledge. You cannot win partner trust at $40 oil if your JIB statements were already in dispute at $80 oil. The downcycle is when the work pays off - but the work happens during the upcycle, when most operators are too busy hiring and over-building to do it.
The 20 → 80 arc - and the IT it requires.
For oil and gas companies in the 10 to 30-person range with bigger plans, the next five years are about scaling roughly 4×. Twenty people to eighty. One basin to two or three. One service line to two or three. Zero acquisitions to maybe one or two small ones. The IT requirements at 80 people are not "more of what works at 20." They are categorically different. Five things change.
Standardization replaces ad-hoc. At 20 people, every system was bought ad-hoc by different people for different reasons. Your CFO uses QuickBooks because she's always used QuickBooks. Your operations lead uses spreadsheets because that's what worked at his last job. Your CEO has a stack of SaaS subscriptions only she has the logins for. At 80 people, this fragmentation compounds quarterly. Data lives in 20 places. Nothing reconciles. Onboarding new employees takes a week per person because nobody can articulate what "our systems" actually means.
Cyber stops being optional. At 20 people, you might be invisible to attackers. At 80 - with field operations, partners, a known reputation in the basin, and a recognizable business name on the regulator's website - you become a real target. Ransomware attacks against oil & gas surged 935% between April 2024 and April 2025. The cyber posture you didn't need at 20 is existential at 80. Multi-factor authentication on every account. Network segmentation between IT and OT. Offline backups that have actually been tested. A documented incident response plan. None of this is optional anymore.
Identity and access becomes a discipline. At 20 people, everyone trusts everyone. Shared passwords. Nobody locks their laptop. Former employees still have email access six months after leaving. At 80 - especially if you have field operations or international staff - this is the single largest cyber risk you carry. Single sign-on. MFA. Documented offboarding. Privileged access controls. Not glamorous. Existential.
Vendor management becomes a function. At 20 people, you have 5 SaaS vendors and your CFO knows them all. By 80 people, you have 40 SaaS subscriptions, three of which nobody can find the admin for, and you are paying for 12 seat licenses on a system that 4 people actually use. The annual SaaS bleed for a 60-person company averages $80-200K in unused or duplicated subscriptions.
The IT leadership gap appears. At 20 people, you don't have a CIO and you don't need one. At 80, you absolutely need one but probably can't afford a full-time hire at $180-280K base plus stock. This is the gap that breaks the most growth-stage companies - they're too big to run IT informally and too small to staff it properly. The fractional or co-managed engagement model exists precisely for this gap.
The 80 → 200 arc - and what changes again.
For operators in the 60 to 100-person range planning to grow to 200+ over five years, the playbook is different again. This is the professionalization stage - the stage where what got you here categorically will not get you there. Five new requirements emerge.
Technical debt becomes a strategic liability. The IT environment has grown organically for five to ten years. There are systems running on hardware that should have been retired. There are integrations duct-taped together. There are critical workflows that depend on one person remembering how something works. At 80 people you can absorb this. At 200 people, the technical debt compounds into operational risk and slows every strategic move.
M&A integration capability becomes a competitive weapon. If you intend to grow from 80 to 200 in five years, M&A is almost certainly part of the path. You will be doing bolt-on acquisitions every 12-18 months. You need a repeatable integration playbook, not a heroic per-deal scramble. That means standardized financial systems your targets can be absorbed into. Production data architecture that can ingest a competitor's well portfolio in two weeks. Cyber and identity systems that can onboard 30 new employees and decommission their old credentials in 48 hours. The operators that win the next M&A wave are the ones who built this capability before they needed it.
Multi-site complexity becomes operational reality. Multiple basins. Multiple JV structures. Multiple regulatory regimes - AER, BLM, Texas RRC, state agencies, possibly international. Data unification across all of it becomes a strategic project, not an IT chore. The data warehouse you didn't need at 80 is the data warehouse that determines whether you can actually manage a 200-person operation.
Cyber moves from posture to program. At 80, "good hygiene" was the bar. At 200, you are a real target with real insider risk, real regulatory exposure, real cyber insurance requirements, and real partner audit demands. Cyber becomes a documented program with a CISO function, a tested incident response, a tabletop exercise discipline, and an executive-level reporting cadence. Most insurance carriers in 2025-2026 require this for any operator above 100 people.
OT/IT convergence at scale becomes a strategic asset. SCADA, historians, control systems, telemetry - at 80 you had OT, at 200 you have OT as a strategic asset that needs proper management. The data your SCADA is generating becomes the foundation for AI-driven optimization, predictive maintenance, and the production data integrity that drives the McKinsey-documented $5+ per BOE uplift. Treat it as IT's annoying cousin and you will leave that value on the table.
Expansion - the four dimensions of growth.
So far we have been talking about growth in headcount and well count. Real growth in oil and gas usually moves on four dimensions simultaneously, and each one has IT consequences most operators discover only after the expansion is underway. Plan for all four.
The summary thesis.
The growth engine for mid-market oil and gas companies in 2026 is not complicated. It is just uncomfortable.
It says: build IT for the cycle, on both ends. Build standardization, identity, and cyber at 20 → 80 because that is what enables you to absorb the next acquisition or win the next contract. Build M&A integration capability, multi-site discipline, and OT/IT convergence at 80 → 200 because that is what makes you the consolidator instead of the consolidated. Plan for the four expansion dimensions even if you only intend to pursue two of them. Acquire in downcycles when assets are cheap. Expand in upcycles when capital is available.
Companies that build this engine arrive at every cycle turn with a wider moat than the previous turn. That is the asymmetric return. It is also the reason a handful of mid-market operators consistently emerge from cycles as the consolidators while the rest get consolidated. The choice is not "do I plan for IT" - every operator plans for IT. The choice is whether IT is a cost line you cut at $40 oil or a moat you compound at $107 oil.
The rest of this book is about how to actually do that work - which growth walls hit at which stages, which engagement model fits which stage, how to think about M&A from both sides of the table, how to measure IT in a cyclical business, and what to do in your first 90 days.
The growth walls - where mid-market O&G companies break.
The previous chapter laid out the strategic arc - what 20 → 80 and 80 → 200 actually require. This chapter is about the operational walls inside those arcs. Because growth in oil and gas is not smooth. It hits walls - predictable inflection points where the systems and disciplines that worked at the prior scale catastrophically stop working at the next.
From the inside, these walls feel like a series of unrelated crises that all happened to land in the same six-month window. From the outside, they are predictable, structural, and almost universal. Knowing which wall you are approaching gives you about six months of preparation time. Not knowing costs you the company.
Wall 1 - When spreadsheets stop working
The first wall hits somewhere between 8 and 15 people, usually when the company crosses from 20 wells to 50 wells, or from one or two service crews to four or five. The CFO - competent, resourceful - starts making errors. Not because they got worse, but because the cognitive load of holding working interest decimals, AFE balances, revenue distributions, and partner statements in spreadsheets has exceeded human capacity.
Operators is at this wall right now - and the contract they just signed will accelerate them through it. They are 25 people. Their CFO is still working from the QuickBooks file she set up when they were six people. The new contract triples their revenue inside twelve months, which means they will cross 25 wells, 40 wells, and 60 wells inside that same window. By Q3 of the new contract, the audit clause will activate and the QuickBooks file will not survive examination. The fix at this stage is not a Quorum implementation. The fix is a purpose-built mid-tier oil and gas accounting platform - PakEnergy, WolfePak, OGSYS, Bolo, Enertia - properly implemented over 3 to 6 months while the CFO can still pause to learn the new system. Doing this before the wall hits is a $200,000 decision. Doing it after costs the audit, the contract, and arguably the company. And because Boutique is on the 20→80 growth arc, they will hit Wall 2 within 18 months of clearing Wall 1 - meaning the platform they choose now must be one that scales through both.
Wall 2 - When systems start colliding (the middle of the 20→80 arc)
The second wall hits somewhere between 25 and 40 people. By now the company has implemented the things it should have implemented at Wall 1, plus a few specialized tools added during the growth - a separate field data capture app, a separate HR system, maybe a separate AFE tracker that was bolted on because the accounting system didn't do it well. The systems are not integrated. Data lives in two or three places. Production volumes in the field system don't match what shows up in revenue distribution.
Directional/Fracking Service is at this wall now. They have a scheduling spreadsheet, an equipment maintenance app, a payroll system, a separate customer billing module, and a CFO who reconciles between them once a month and finds discrepancies every time. The fix is not more systems. The fix is integration - APIs between the systems they already own, plus a discipline about which system is the system of record for which data. This is when companies start needing actual IT governance, not just an IT person. This is the stage where the co-managed or fractional engagement model fits most naturally - the company has someone running IT, but the gap between "running it" and "running it well enough to scale through the next 50 people" is where outside experience earns its cost.
Wall 3 - When complexity exceeds organizational capacity (the bridge to 80→200)
The third wall hits somewhere between 75 and 120 people. The company is now genuinely complex. Multiple jurisdictions, multiple JV structures, multiple service lines or basins, multiple regulators. The CFO and Controller are working 70-hour weeks. An acquisition opportunity comes across the desk and there is genuinely no organizational capacity to evaluate, transact, and integrate it. This is when companies either professionalize their back office or get acquired themselves. Sometimes both.
Operators is approaching this wall. They are 80 people, headed to 200, headed to 400 wells. The fix at this stage is significant - proper ERP, proper data warehouse, dedicated IT leadership, formalized cyber program, structured M&A capability - and it cannot be accomplished while running the day-to-day at the same time. Companies at Wall 3 either invest in a 12 to 18-month transformation, or they bring in a partner who has done it before and lets them stay focused on operations. This is where the bundled IT engagement model becomes the obvious choice - not because internal IT can't theoretically do it, but because the opportunity cost of pulling the senior team off operations to run an IT transformation is usually higher than the cost of partnering with someone who has run the playbook through other 80→200 transitions.
Choosing the right engagement model for your stage.
Most oil and gas companies between 10 and 200 people have three structural options for how they get IT capability into the business. Build it internally. Buy it from a managed services firm. Or run some hybrid of the two. Each has trade-offs. The right answer depends almost entirely on where you are on the growth arc, what stage you're approaching, and what your CEO's actual five-year intent is.
This chapter is the framework. Not a sales pitch. The trade-offs are real on every option, and the wrong choice - at any stage - is expensive.
The three engagement models.
Matching the model to the stage.
The honest mapping looks something like this.
The four questions that determine the right choice.
Headcount is the easiest signal but not the only one. Four questions matter more.
The hidden math - total cost of ownership.
Many CEOs default to "we'll just hire someone internal." On paper it looks cheaper. It usually isn't.
A full internal IT capability for a 100-person O&G operator - one CIO/Director, one operations lead, one security analyst, one help-desk technician, and the tooling/licensing to run a modern stack - typically runs $1.4 to $2.1 million per year fully loaded. Plus 18-24 months of recruiting and ramp time before that team is actually delivering. Plus the opportunity cost of the CEO and CFO time spent managing the function.
A bundled engagement with a firm that already has the team, the tooling, and the playbook typically runs $25-50 per seat per month for the equivalent capability - call it $25,000-50,000 per month for a 100-person operator. That's $300,000-600,000 per year, against $1.4-2.1M internal, with deployment in 90 days instead of 24 months. The math is not subtle. The reason most operators between 80 and 200 people end up partnering rather than building is not ideology. It's TCO.
The exception: very large companies, very stable companies, or companies whose IT is a strategic competitive asset rather than infrastructure. For most mid-market O&G operators, IT is the latter - necessary infrastructure that has to be excellent but does not need to be invented in-house.
The service company twist.
Everything written so far applies most directly to production companies - the operators with producing wells, working interest partners, JIB statements, and AFEs. If you run a drilling, completions, wireline, hydraulic fracturing, or other oilfield service business, you have probably been mentally translating each chapter into your own context. The translation is harder than it looks. A few service-company specific realities are worth being explicit about, because the IT decisions that work for operators will actively hurt you.
Three things that make service company IT different.
The pricing-accuracy problem
Operators get paid for what they produce. Service companies get paid for what they bid. Which means the single most important IT capability in a service company is knowing what the work actually costs you, in real time, across all your active jobs. Crew hours, equipment hours, consumables, fuel, travel, change orders, downtime, redo work - all of it. If you cannot answer the question "what is the margin on the job we just finished?" within 48 hours of finishing it, you are pricing the next bid blind.
Directional/Fracking Service's problem is exactly this. They lost their biggest customer to an acquisition, and now they are re-pricing every contract against competitors who may or may not know their actual costs better than they do. The companies that win the next eighteen months in directional drilling are the ones with the best margin visibility, full stop. Field data capture, properly implemented with crew time and equipment hours flowing automatically into job costing, is the foundation. Without it, every bid is a guess.
The customer-imposed systems problem
Every operator runs a different field reporting platform. Your crews learn each one, your office reconciles between them, and at the end of the month, your billing department assembles invoices using data from systems you do not own and cannot change. This is unavoidable. What you can do is own your shadow copy of the data. Whatever the customer's system collects, capture the same data in your own system, in real time, in a format you control. Two reasons: one, you need it for your own job costing and crew management. Two, when the customer changes systems - and they will - your continuity does not depend on a system you do not own.
The utilization-economics reality
For asset-heavy service companies, the financial model is simple and brutal: your fixed costs do not disappear when your equipment is idle. A directional drilling rig sitting on the yard pad costs roughly the same to own whether it is running or not. The same applies to wireline trucks, frac fleets, workover rigs, coiled tubing units. Your IT priority is therefore everything that improves utilization rate by even a few percentage points - predictive maintenance to reduce unscheduled downtime, scheduling tools to minimize gaps between jobs, equipment telematics to know which units are where and what shape they are in, customer integration to know what work is coming so you can position equipment accordingly.
One percentage point of utilization improvement, on a 65-person directional drilling business with 14 rigs, is meaningful money. Five percentage points is the difference between profitable years and break-even years. And this becomes more true, not less, in the downcycle. When work is scarce, utilization is the metric that separates the survivors from the casualties.
M&A - buying well, then selling well.
If you are between 25 and 200 people in oil and gas with bigger plans, you are in the M&A funnel whether you have thought about it or not. The only real question is which side of the table you are sitting on when the next deal closes. Are you the operator absorbing a competitor at a favorable multiple, or are you the operator being absorbed at a discount? Both are valid outcomes. They produce very different five-year wealth pictures for the owners.
The good news: the IT decisions that prepare you to be the acquirer are roughly the same as the ones that prepare you to be acquired well. The bad news: both require three to five years of investment before the deal happens. You cannot fix this in the 60 days of a diligence window.
2024 was a record year for US oil and gas M&A - $206.6 billion in deal value, more than three times 2023's $47.9 billion. Exxon paid $60 billion for Pioneer in May. SLB announced $7.7 billion for ChampionX. Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Diamondback - the megadeals dominated headlines. But the analysts at EY, Akin Gump, and Deloitte all expect the next wave to be mid-market. The megamergers have closed. Now the consolidators are buying smaller. Now the smaller operators are being absorbed at the pace of one or two per active consolidator per year. That smaller pool is you.
Part 1 - Becoming the buyer.
For the ambitious 60-person operator who intends to be the 200-person platform, the next five years are about deciding to be the acquirer. Not someday. Now. The window opens when oil prices fall and competitor balance sheets get stressed. The window closes about 18 months later when prices recover. To be ready when it opens, you need three capabilities in place - and you need them in place before the cycle turns, not during.
Capability 1 - Integration capacity
The single most common failure mode for ambitious mid-market acquirers: they close the deal, then discover they cannot absorb the acquired company without breaking their own. The acquired company's wells live in a different production accounting system. The JV partners have different reporting requirements. The financial close cycle that used to take 5 days is now taking 15 because the new entity's data does not flow cleanly into the consolidated reporting. Six months in, both companies are running at less than their pre-deal effectiveness. The synergies vanish into the integration cost.
Integration capacity is not a project. It is a permanent organizational capability that has to exist before you sign your first LOI. Master data management. Standardized chart of accounts. Repeatable production data ingestion. Identity migration playbooks. Cyber onboarding procedures. The operators who have done five acquisitions can do the sixth in 90 days. The operators on their first acquisition are usually still wrestling with it a year later.
Capability 2 - Fast, accurate target diligence
The next time the cycle turns, several distressed competitors will become available simultaneously. You will have weeks, not months, to evaluate, decide, and bid. If your own data architecture cannot quickly compute "what would our combined production, LOE per BOE, and JV exposure look like if we owned their wells too?" - you will pass on deals you should have done, or worse, you will do deals you shouldn't have.
Fast diligence requires that your own house is in order first. You cannot evaluate a target's data quality if you don't know what good data looks like in your own systems. The operators who buy well in downcycles are the ones who built their analytical and data-room capabilities during the upcycle, when there was no immediate deal pressure to justify the investment.
Capability 3 - The integrate-or-don't decision framework
When you acquire a target, you face a fundamental decision: do you fully integrate their IT into yours, run them as a holding company with separate systems, or leave them largely alone and just consolidate the financials? Most acquirers get this wrong because they default to "fully integrate" without testing whether they should. Three useful tests:
- Geography test. If the target operates in a basin you don't already operate in, with different regulators and different operating practices, leave their operational systems alone. Integrate the financial reporting. That's it.
- System age test. If your systems are 8 years older than theirs, and theirs are working, do not force their data into your platforms. Consider the reverse direction instead.
- JV complication test. If the target has working interest partners who require specific reporting formats or platforms, integration will trigger partner approvals, change orders, and disputes. Run them parallel until next renegotiation cycle.
The cases where full integration is the right move: identical basins, identical workflows, your systems are demonstrably better, no JV complications, and you have the integration capacity to do it without breaking the acquired company in the meantime. This is rarer than most acquirers assume.
Part 2 - Being acquired well.
Even ambitious operators who intend to consolidate sometimes get sold instead. A founder retires. A health event changes the timeline. A strategic acquirer makes an offer that is too good to refuse at $107 oil. Or the cycle turns the other way and the over-leveraged competitor down the street turns out to be you. For all these outcomes, the second half of the M&A playbook matters: how to be acquired well, not badly.
The variance in deal multiples is enormous. That 6.9× EBITDA average hides a range from roughly 4× to 9× - depending almost entirely on the quality of what the buyer finds when they open the data room. Clean operations command the high end. Messy ones get discounted 0.5× to 2× EBITDA, depending on the severity. On a $50 million EBITDA company, that is $25 to $100 million of value left on the table because the seller didn't invest in IT four years earlier.
What being "M&A-ready" actually looks like.
Cyber - mid-market is now the target.
Every executive in oil and gas remembers Colonial Pipeline. May 7, 2021. A ransomware attack on the largest fuel pipeline in the United States forced a six-day shutdown, triggered fuel shortages along the East Coast, and ended with the company paying a $4.4 million ransom in Bitcoin. The federal government later recovered most of it. The reputation never fully recovered.
Most mid-market operators read about Colonial Pipeline and thought: "That's a supermajor problem. We're too small to be a target." That logic was wrong in 2021 and it is catastrophically wrong now.
In August 2024, Halliburton was hit by ransomware and forced to take systems offline for several days. Costa Rica's state energy company RECOPE was forced to revert to manual operations across cargo handling at land and sea terminals. Industrial-sector ransomware rose 46% in a single quarter (Q4 2024 to Q1 2025), per Claroty. Credential-stealing malware rose 3,000% in the same period. OT physical disruptions in 2024 totaled 1,015 incidents - up from 412 in 2023, a 146% increase. Nation-state attacks with physical consequences tripled.
The mid-market is being targeted specifically because the cyber posture is weaker. SCADA systems on public internet. Default credentials still in place. No multi-factor authentication. No network segmentation between IT and OT. One mid-market E&P operator we know was running pump monitoring on the public internet with a username/password combination that hadn't been changed in seven years. They did not know. The attacker found them in under a day.
The four cyber decisions every operator must make.
What the insurance market is telling you.
If you carry cyber insurance, you have probably noticed your premiums going up and your application getting longer. There is a reason. The insurance market in 2025 and 2026 has become significantly more selective about oil and gas, and particularly about mid-market operators. The questions on the latest applications - MFA on every account, offline backups, EDR on every endpoint, network segmentation, IR plan - are not paperwork. They are the new minimum bar to be insured at all. Companies that cannot answer "yes" to those questions are increasingly being declined, or quoted at premiums that approach the cost of the cyber program itself.
This is not a temporary market dislocation. This is the new floor. Get above it.
Measuring IT in a cyclical business.
Your IT vendor will tell you to measure adoption rates, license utilization, and ticket close times. These are not the metrics that matter. These are the metrics that justify the next renewal.
In a cyclical business, the metrics that matter are different - and they look different for operators versus service companies. They have to answer one question: are we becoming more or less resilient to the next downcycle, and more or less ready for the next M&A wave? Everything else is noise.
The three metrics for operators.
- IT spend per BOE. Total IT spend divided by total BOE produced. A clean number, comparable to peers, and useful in both directions of the cycle. The supermajors run this at 0.25–0.50 per BOE. Mid-market operators range widely - 0.80 to 2.50 - and the high end is usually a sign of vendor overspend, not strategic investment.
- Days to close, with full reconciliation. Not just "did we close the month" but "did we close the month with production data tied to revenue tied to JIB tied to AFE with zero unreconciled variances." Three days is the upper benchmark. Nine days is the warning that you are at Wall 2. Anything more, you are losing partner trust and burning your accounting team out.
- M&A-readiness composite. A binary self-assessment, scored quarterly. Can you produce a clean data room in 30 days? Are your production volumes reconcilable to revenue distributions? Is your cyber posture documented and tested? If the answer to any of those is no, you are not M&A-ready, regardless of how strong your EBITDA looks.
The three metrics for service companies.
- IT spend per dollar of revenue. Total IT spend divided by revenue. For asset-light service companies, this typically runs 1.5–3.5%. For asset-heavy (drilling, frac, completion), often lower because equipment costs dominate. Either way: track it quarterly across the cycle. Spend goes up too fast in upcycles, gets gutted in downcycles. Smooth it.
- Equipment / crew utilization rate. The single most important operating metric in service O&G. What percentage of available equipment-hours and crew-hours produced billable revenue last quarter? The upper benchmark for drilling: 75–85% utilization. Service companies that survive downcycles run this metric weekly and act on it in days, not months.
- Time from job-complete to invoice-issued. Days between work completion and invoice in customer's hands. Service companies with manual processes run 30+ days. Companies with proper field data capture and integrated billing run 5–10 days. That 20-day difference is your working capital cycle. In a downcycle, that is the difference between solvency and a covenant breach.
What not to measure.
Be cautious about measuring "IT cost reduction" as a success metric in isolation. It rewards the wrong behavior - gutting capability instead of building it. The companies that cut IT hardest in 2014–2016 had the worst recoveries in 2017–2019, because the senior knowledge had walked out with the layoffs and could not be rehired.
Be equally cautious about measuring "system uptime" as a primary IT KPI. 99.9% uptime is meaningless if the data inside the system is wrong, the partners are disputing the JIB statements, and the production accountant is still reconciling by hand at month end. Uptime measures the system. The metrics above measure the business. Choose the latter.
The 90-day plan - three postures.
The most useful 90-day IT plan depends on where you are in the cycle and what posture you are operating from. Oil at $107 today is not the same problem as oil at $47 in eighteen months. The plan that works for the operator preparing to acquire is different from the one for the service company preparing to be acquired. Three postures are described below. Pick the one that matches your current reality and execute.
Posture A - Days 1–90 · Building to acquire
- Weeks 1–2: Audit your existing IT for "integration capacity" - can you absorb a 30-person operator into your current systems without breaking your own operations? If no, identify the bottleneck (data warehouse, JIB platform, network capacity).
- Weeks 3–6: Build a standardized "integration playbook" - the 30/60/90 day plan you will execute on the next acquisition. Cover financial systems, production systems, OT/cyber, identity migration, regulatory continuity.
- Weeks 7–10: Strengthen your data architecture so it can absorb new entities cleanly - master data management, well master lists, partner master lists, AFE master register.
- Weeks 11–12: Tabletop a hypothetical acquisition with your CFO, COO, and IT lead. Find the gaps. Plan the fixes for Q2.
Posture B - Days 1–90 · Building to survive
- Weeks 1–2: Conduct an honest IT-and-the-Cycle assessment. What works? What is fragile? What is the single biggest risk if oil drops to $50 in 18 months?
- Weeks 3–6: Identify which of the six levers from Chapter 4 you are weakest on. Pick two. Define them as 90-day projects with measurable outcomes.
- Weeks 7–10: Execute on those two. Resist the temptation to start more. Two completed projects are worth more than six half-finished initiatives.
- Weeks 11–12: Measure outcomes against the metrics in Chapter 9. Plan the next two for Q2.
Posture C - Days 1–90 · Building to be acquired well
- Weeks 1–2: Run a "buyer's diligence" exercise on yourself. Pretend you are the acquirer. Where would you find defects? Where is the data unreconcilable? Where are the cyber gaps?
- Weeks 3–8: Fix the worst three findings. Production data accuracy. JIB statement reconciliation. Cyber documentation. These are the three that move the multiple most.
- Weeks 9–10: Begin assembling the actual data room. Five years of audited financials, complete title work, reserves report, partner statements, AFE register, regulatory compliance documentation, cyber attestation.
- Weeks 11–12: Pressure-test the data room with a trusted M&A advisor. Fix what they find. Now you are ready.
The companies still standing in 2030.
Twenty-five years in this work, two cycles weathered, and the pattern is familiar enough that it borders on tedious. Oil rises. Mid-market operators and service companies hire aggressively, build aggressively, and assume the price will stay. Oil falls. The same companies gut IT first. Senior knowledge walks out with the severance. Eighteen months later, the price recovers and the survivors discover their competitors who did not gut IT just bought their best assets at a discount.
This is not a story about technology. It is a story about discipline. The companies still standing in 2030, and ready to acquire in 2031, will be the ones that built their IT for the cycle - both ends of it - starting in 2026, when they could still afford the choice.
If you take one thing from this book, take this: the cycle is patient. It will collect on every decision you make in the next eighteen months. The IT capabilities you build at $107 oil are the only ones you will have at $47 oil. The data room you create today is the multiple you receive at exit tomorrow. The cyber program you implement now is the difference between an incident and a casualty. The companies that win the next cycle are not building it in the moment of crisis. They are building it now.
Three companies. Three IT realities. One cycle. The choice is yours.
Vencer Group
Vencer Group is Calgary's managed IT, M&A technology, and cybersecurity partner - built for energy, advisory, and regulated businesses with international ambitions. Nineteen years in business. Two oil price collapses survived alongside our clients. Thirty-plus M&A transactions delivered. More than $12 billion in transaction value guided. Zero data breaches across eleven years of managed security operations. Delivery across four continents - with live infrastructure under management right now in Calgary, Bangkok, Jakarta, and Singapore.
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Operator opinion built from field work. Not legal, regulatory, or certified security advice. Every organization carries different variables. Use this as a thinking framework, not a compliance checklist.
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