NASDAQ:HCP HashiCorp Q3 2024 Earnings Report $34.78 0.00 (0.00%) As of 02/27/2025 ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast HashiCorp EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.03Consensus EPS -$0.04Beat/MissBeat by +$0.07One Year Ago EPS-$0.38HashiCorp Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$146.10 millionExpected Revenue$143.21 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$2.89 millionYoY Revenue Growth+16.60%HashiCorp Announcement DetailsQuarterQ3 2024Date12/7/2023TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, December 7, 2023Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsHashiCorp's Q1 2026 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, June 25, 2025Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by HashiCorp Q3 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrDecember 7, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 16 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to HashiCorp's Fiscal 20 24 Third Quarter Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your first speaker today, Alex Kurtz, Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Operator00:00:24Thank you. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:28Good afternoon, and welcome to HashiCorp's fiscal 2024 Third Quarter Earnings Call. This afternoon, we will be discussing our Q3 fiscal 2024 financial results announced in our press release issued after the market close today. With me are HashiCorp's CEO, Dave McJanet CFO, Navam Walienda and CTO and Co Founder, Armand Dagar. In conjunction with our earnings press release, we have published an earnings presentation that provides additional financial information We encourage you to review that presentation in advance of our call. You can access it on our investor website at ir.hashiCorp.com. Speaker 100:01:07Today's call will contain forward looking statements, which are made under the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward looking statements include statements concerning financial and business trends, our expected future business and financial performance and financial condition, and our guidance for the Q4 and full 2024 fiscal year. These statements may be identified by words such as expect, anticipate, intend, plan, believe, seek or will or similar statements. These statements reflect our views as of today only and should not be relied upon as representing our views at any subsequent date and we do not undertake any duty to update these statements. Forward looking statements by their nature address matters that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. Speaker 100:01:59During the call, we will also discuss certain non GAAP financial measures, which are not prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The financial measures presented on this call are prepared in accordance with GAAP unless otherwise noted. A reconciliation of these non GAAP Financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures as well as how we define these and other metrics is included in our earnings press release, which has been furnished to the SEC and is also available on our website at ir.hashiCorp.com. With that, let me turn the call over to Dave. Dave? Speaker 200:02:34Thank you, Alex, and welcome everyone to our Q3 earnings call for fiscal 2024. We reported solid 3rd quarter results that exceeded our top and bottom line guidance with revenue of $146,000,000 representing year over year growth of 17%. Current non GAAP remaining performance obligations reached $421,000,000 representing 23% year over year growth And we added 26 customers with greater than or equal to $100,000 in annual recurring revenue to reach a total of 877. Our HashiCorp cloud platform offerings reached $19,900,000 in revenue, representing 14% of subscription revenue in the quarter. The team performed well under difficult circumstances with continued new large customer wins despite sustained deal scrutiny that's a result of the broader macro Coming out of our Annual User Conference in October this quarter, we remain convinced about the long term opportunity ahead of us as the world's largest enterprises move to the cloud. Speaker 200:03:35With that as backdrop, I want to talk today about what we're doing both short term and long term to fully realize this opportunity. HashiCorp's position as an enabler for the cloud makes us unique. At HashiCorp in October, we had more than 1200 in person and 12,000 virtual attendees and hosted keynotes with customers such as Home Depot and Unity Games. The size of our community and the variety of customer use cases on display At HashiCorp underscore that we have a large long term opportunity that touches multiple facets of cloud infrastructure. At HashiCorp, we unveiled multiple new product advancements aimed at enabling both developers and platform teams with workflow automation capabilities and lifecycle management. Speaker 200:04:18We announced HCP Vault secrets, a good example of how our continued investment in cloud capabilities is expanding our portfolio. And also you have a preview of HCP Vault Radar, which is based on the secret scanning startup we acquired earlier this year. We also made several announcements related to TerraForm, the industry standard for infrastructure as code. I think attendees and users were most excited about TerraForm stacks, a major investment and enhancement to the TerraForm execution engine. We also announced our first generative AI feature within TerraForm, which uses LLMs to generate module tests for users. Speaker 200:04:54Additionally, we announced the private beta of HashiCorp developer AI, And AI powered companion for finding reference materials, architectural guidance and product examples from the HashiCorp developer portal. You'll also continue to see us being targeted about incorporating AI capabilities into our products over time. We're being thoughtful about what AI use cases are valuable Our customers and are proceeding deliberately. However, you will continue to see investments across our portfolio with the focus on lifecycle management capabilities across infrastructure and security. As I mentioned earlier, it's no secret that market conditions remain difficult. Speaker 200:05:31While there are many things we cannot control, there are many others we can. So we've taken steps to help us with both near term performance and meeting the long term opportunity ahead of us. First, we are focused on simplifying our go to market messaging and strategy. At our Financial Analyst Day, we introduced new messaging centered on lifecycle management, which we apply to both our infrastructure and security offerings. This helps our sales teams more easily position key parts of the HashiCorp product portfolio as comprehensive solutions to common problems and package them together. Speaker 200:06:02Susan St. Leger, our President of Worldwide Field Operations is Key to this go to market approach and she's already having an impact with new leadership hires and enablement efforts to our field teams. With our help, our field teams will be better positioned to execute on this new strategy, while also putting additional focus on our cloud offerings. This investment in our go to market is aligned with the investments in our products I mentioned earlier and together they will help us to continue to win and expand within the Global 4000. 2nd, it's worth noting that these go to market efforts are also crucial to our ongoing focus on building a wholly integrated offering around the HashiCorp cloud platform. Speaker 200:06:40These cloud managed products are a fast growing part of our business as you can see in our results. Through HCP, these products can be sold and consumed more easily We simplified opportunities for product expansions and extensions and we can better respond to changing customer needs. We are already seeing positive responses to the new cloud pricing frameworks introduced earlier this year. Finally, we remain focused on increasing efficiency and are committed to creating further operating leverage in our business. Those efforts are already underway and we are making good progress on our path to profitability. Speaker 200:07:13Navam will discuss those in more detail. These efforts do not alter our ability to build new products as you can see from the broad set of announcements we made at HashiCorp. Now I'll turn it over to Navam to walk through the details of our Q3 performance and then I'm happy to take any questions. Speaker 300:07:29Thank you, Dave, and thanks everyone for joining us today. Echoing Dave, I also wanted to reflect on how great it was to host everyone at our user conference, HashiCorp, last quarter. It was amazing to see the energy our community, customers and employees created at this event. I also wanted to extend a big thank you to those who joined us in person or virtually and to all employees who worked hard to make this event a success. During HashiCorp's, we also hosted a Financial Analyst Where we talked about 2 key fundamental focus areas for us financially. Speaker 300:08:021st was the focus on customer count momentum and second was the focus on cost efficiency. On the customer count focus, our team continues to simplify our go to market approach, resulting in continued momentum on our net new customers at or over 100 ks in ARR. We added 79 net new customers at or above 100 ks in ARR year to date. Given this progress, we remain well on track against our goal of adding 80 to 100 customers over 100 ks in ARR per year. As you may know, our 100 ks ARR customers are foundational to our model, and they have a high growth potential as a group and provide a significant portion of our current revenue as well as our future revenue potential. Speaker 300:08:47Customer bookings in the 3rd quarter played out largely as we expected. It was a seasonal quarter with unchanged macro buying behavior from most customers, very similar to what we experienced during the first half of FY twenty twenty four. The buying behavior led to smaller land contracts and smaller expansion and extension Despite the contracts being smaller, we saw growth in the number of contracts we engaged in with our customers. On the efficiency focus, I want to announce a significant corporate milestone for the company. We reached both a positive non GAAP earnings per share this quarter and a positive free cash flow this quarter. Speaker 300:09:27The milestone is an important step towards our goal of non GAAP operating profit by the back half of next year. We expect free cash flow to be positive from this point forward other than in Q2, which is a seasonal low free cash flow period for us due to booking seasonality. Before moving on to guidance, I wanted to briefly revisit our approach to the financial outlook. We are confident in the company's long term positioning, especially after the positive customer conversations we had with many of our larger customers during and after Hashi About the new innovation we're bringing to the market. In the shorter term, we remain judicious in our guidance approach given the demand environment and how that impacts our sales cycles and contract size with our larger customers. Speaker 300:10:13We will continue our assessment of the demand environment and provide guidance for next year as we customarily do in the next earnings call. Our full guidance numbers can be found in our earnings presentation available on our ir.hashiCorp.com website under Financials Quarterly Results. I encourage you to read through the doc for full financial metric disclosures, share count disclosures and GAAP to non GAAP reconciliations. To summarize our guidance, for the Q4 of fiscal 2024, we expect total revenue in the range of 148,000,000 to $150,000,000 and a non GAAP operating loss in the range of $16,000,000 to 13,000,000 For the full fiscal year 'twenty four, we expect total revenue in the range of $576,000,000 578,000,000 and expect FY 'twenty four non GAAP operating loss in the range of $89,000,000 $86,000,000 Thanks for your attention. Dave, Arman and I are available to take any of your questions. Speaker 300:11:19Alex? Speaker 100:11:21Thanks, Navam. With that, operator, let's go to our first question. Operator00:11:25Thank you. And wait for your name to be announced. One moment for our first question. Our first question will come from the line of Sanjit Singh from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Speaker 400:11:49Thank you for taking the questions and congrats on the positive free cash flow and the positive non GAAP EPS. When I look at the results, though, I don't think you guys have been pretty clear about this that I haven't really seen any improvement yet in sort of buying behavior in the broader macro backdrop. And as you guys sort of look to simplify the sales motion, which you guys are very clear about at the investor session. I was wondering to get a sense of how you feel or how long do you think it will take to see Returns on these go to market investments and some of the changes you're making to go to market, is this something that's going have to play out through the balance of next year or is next year a period where we could see growth start to bottom and potentially accelerate? Speaker 200:12:39Hey, Sanjay, thanks. This is Dave. I'll answer that one. I think the way that we think about it is we're clearly coming out of a period of aggressive investment in software In the Global 2,000 for the last couple of years. And what's clear is that cohort of companies is digesting the entitlement that they have Purchased and you see that in the net dollar retention numbers of us and others in our peer group. Speaker 200:13:03And I think that's A significant aspect of the demand environment that we're speaking about. On the positive side, the consumption vendors and the cloud vendors who obviously have consumption based models are Getting stabilization and that's positive for the entire ecosystem and you would expect that to flow through to the entitlement vendors over the course of the next several quarters. I think what we do see, certainly we're excited about the simplification we're bringing to bear and we already see, as Navam highlighted, demand for our products remains Consistent deal volumes that Navam indicated are as high as ever. Our win rates are as consistent as ever and we're not seeing any change The discounting behavior in our field, we're just seeing smaller land and expand activity from our customers. So super optimistic about the longer arc and do I think that simplification we're bringing to bear will help. Speaker 400:13:55I appreciate the thoughts, Dave. And then Arman, just love to get an update on Boundary and how you The demand funnel building for that offer? Speaker 500:14:06Yes. Thanks, Sung Ji. Yes. So over summer, I think there was 2 fairly significant announcements. 1 was our introduction of session recording and the second was the introduction of the Foundry self managed enterprise product. Speaker 500:14:18And I think what we've seen since then is a pretty healthy construction of pipeline. We have Major enterprises that we're engaged with, a few of which talked at HashiCorp, folks like ManTech, major FSI partner as well as EQ Bank talking about how they've adopted Boundary in their environment and continue to be excited about the pipeline that we're seeing building and the opportunity around Boundary. Speaker 400:14:42Awesome. I'll leave it there. Thank you very much. Speaker 600:14:44All right, Sanjit. Thank you. Next question please. Operator00:14:47Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Jason Ader from William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 700:14:59Okay. Thank you. Good afternoon, guys. I just wanted to ask sort of high level, what in the last 90 days has occurred That gives you the most optimism for 2024? Speaker 500:15:17Sure. Yes, Jason. Happy to. This is Armand. I think a few things. Speaker 500:15:21I think one was we were pleasantly surprised that as of this Last quarter, we officially have more cloud contracts than we have self managed. And I think for us, that's a really exciting sign in terms of just where we're seeing the demand shift towards the cloud platform versus self managed. And obviously, that's sort of weighted towards the commercial customers today. I think equally we're starting to see that shift now happen where the larger enterprise customers are signaling their willingness to move. And Particularly for management products like TerraForm, I think we're seeing increased demand to move those to cloud. Speaker 500:15:55And so for us, That's optimistic as we think about next year and going into really pushing more heavily on cloud where we feel like we can start to shift towards TerraForm Cloud is a default motion for our land rather than self managed TerraForm, which historically has been driven by just customer appetite and interest. Speaker 700:16:14Great. Anything else? You said there was a few things? Speaker 500:16:18Yes, I think it's those few, right? It's the tip of the cloud to being We have more contracts on cloud than we have on self managed. I think it's the enterprise willingness to move to cloud as well. Great. Speaker 700:16:29Thank you very much. Speaker 600:16:31Thanks, Jason. Speaker 700:16:32Thank you. Operator00:16:34One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Ittai Kidron from Oppenheimer. Your line is open. Speaker 800:16:44Thanks. Couple of questions for me. First For Unifam, RPO, if my math is right, has now grown Faster than revenue for about 4 quarters in a row. That needless to say is not a relationship that can stay. So Help me understand, why did the disconnect has existed for such a long time? Speaker 800:17:13And When would you expect this to converge or reverse? That's number 1. And for you, Dave, you've talked about in the past how Your progress for the year is really reflection of budgets set late in the previous year. Hence, that was the reason why you didn't see a slowdown in your business activity at the beginning of the slowdown a couple of years ago. As you have conversations with customers here and now about 2024 and maybe this is asking Jason's question in a different kind of a way, What are they telling you about budgets for 2024? Speaker 800:17:53What is it that you're hearing about how 2024 can shape up directionally from Spend standpoint relative to 23. Thank Speaker 200:18:02you. Maybe I'll answer your second question first, it's Dave. I think the short version is we just have to be focused on Q4 for now. That's really where our attention is. But I would say To add to what Armin had indicated previously, I come back to our contract volumes being very, very healthy, very, very positive, notwithstanding the ASP changes, As you can understand based on the digestion process that's going on inside of our existing customers in particular. Speaker 200:18:30And then number 2, I will just add that our product downloads are at a record high and that certainly gives us confidence that the trends continue unabated. What we're just working through is the budgeting cycle and so we'll see how Q4 works out, but certainly ample optimism about the what comes over the longer arc. Speaker 300:18:50Yes, Italo. I'll cover your RPO question. We're very pleased with the RPO growth. It signifies basically that our customers are Through this vendor consolidation period, our customers are entering into longer term contracts with us, meaning, spanning multiple years and placing their faith in us In our products. So that's obviously a big positive for us and we're seeing continued momentum in RPO. Speaker 300:19:14CRPO is the more relevant one as it connects to revenue over the next 12 months. So that's a closer proxy for revenue. And obviously, we keep a close eye on that and we're seeing reasonably good growth rates on CRPO side as well. In terms of convergence, our view of revenue, as I mentioned during the prepared remarks is, we want to take a very measured view until the time that we see The buying behavior and the macro change. And we haven't taken a different view as to how we forecast the next quarter and how we think about the future. Speaker 300:19:50So it's been consistent with the prior periods forecast. Speaker 700:19:55Thank you. Speaker 600:19:56Thanks, Ittai. Next question. Operator00:19:58Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Henderson from Needham. Your line is open. Speaker 900:20:07Great, thanks. I was hoping you could talk through the AI issue With us a little bit to understand the mechanics around how enterprises are adopting it versus There are alternative uses of investment. It seems to me that there's 2 possible solutions here. One would be that It would drive app development and Internet as infrastructure as code Content and demand as a result or it could slow app development as they spend time ascertaining the value of how to use it and how to integrate it into their programs. So can you talk a little bit about Those 2 alternative world views? Speaker 400:21:00Sure. Speaker 500:21:00Yes. I mean, I can share certainly what we're seeing in the customer conversations that we're having. Our general sense is that there's a lot of excitement, certainly among people about, if nothing else, at least being able to dip their toes in and being able to Access these models, start leveraging them, being able to sort of see how they could apply to people's businesses. And so because of the specialization of these models in the different cloud providers. We've seen this as actually a tailwind for many customers actually go towards a multi cloud strategy, right? Speaker 500:21:30They might have been single CSP or You might have had a large percentage of the workload on prem and this has been a driver for them to accelerate either going multi cloud or going to cloud to begin with So they can leverage that because I think most customers realize they won't have access to certain best of breed capabilities and certainly if they're stuck on prem. So I think in that sense, it has been an accelerator in terms of customers pulling forward some of that strategy. On the flip side, I think we're also seeing it generate interesting opportunities across the portfolio. We did talk at our Financial Analyst Day about a very large financial company we work with that invested in Nomad to build a large scale compute grid based on thousands of GPUs, really looking at how do they leverage these techniques at scale in a cost effective way. And we've seen that playing out driving interest across the portfolio, certainly TerraForm for provisioning, Nomad for doing large scale workload orchestration and console for enabling networking across a multi cloud estate. Speaker 500:22:27So I think it's certainly been a useful tailwind for us. Speaker 900:22:32So you don't see any slowdown in the app development cycle. So that brings me to the second part of the question, which is We've gone through the year of efficiency over the last 18 months, more than a year now. And that obviously cleaned up a lot of wasteful cloud infrastructure. It seems likely that those teams are now shifting away from that thought process of how do I Fix the waste that I've got to how do I keep it from happening again in the future. And to that extent, I would think that TerraForm would Proved to be one of the key tools that would be used to produce A standardized model to manage resources in the cloud. Speaker 900:23:24Where are we on that The changeover and how do we think that will play out over the next 18 months? Is it a very shallow Slope to recovery, is it a longer process or is it something that could actually reaccelerate the growth outlook? Speaker 500:23:43Yes. It's a really great question. And the observation I would share is and you've heard us probably talk about this at a few different events, As we almost characterize an organization's adoption of cloud is going through multiple phases, right? Phase 1, we tend to think of as, I'll call it almost an ad hoc approach, right? Yes. Speaker 500:24:01Multiple application teams are all sort of lit up to go build their applications in cloud, but with no sort of standardized process workflow, Send our tooling, etcetera, it's every team sort of free for rolling. Operator00:24:12And I Speaker 500:24:13think what ends up happening is there's different catalysts. For some organizations, it might be a security issue. For others, it's a compliance issue. For others, it's a cost issue. But at some point, there's a catalyst for an organization to say, you know what, this is unsustainable. Speaker 500:24:26We actually need to get to a Phase 2 where we look at a more mature organizational approach where we have a centralized platform team It creates a standard set of process, standard set of tooling, put some guardrails around it, both from a cost perspective, security compliance perspective. And that Phase 2 tends to then be where organizations really unlock cloud adoption at scale, right, because now they have the controls in place to really scale. And so I think to your point, I think your observation is exactly right. What this year of optimization has done is basically pull forward That's Phase 2 in the construction of the platform team across a broad swath of customers that we certainly interact with, right? So I'd say we've I think that for us is a great tailwind because ultimately those platform teams are our customer. Speaker 900:25:12If that's the case, is it that then Causing a pull in and the time to reaccelerate? I mean that's the conclusion? Speaker 500:25:21I think what it's doing is it's creating a central ultimately these are the groups we sell to, right? So yes, it makes it easier for us over the long term to build a relationship with these platform teams and then ultimately drive our expand and extend motion to grow usage of the land product and ultimately sell them the rest of the portfolio. Speaker 600:25:40Thanks, Alex. Yes, we have Speaker 100:25:41a bunch of questions left to go. So we're just going Speaker 600:25:43to move along a little bit and we can just limit to one question for now and we'll Speaker 1000:26:03I'm wondering, Dave, if you detect any difference in the demand environment or willingness to invest in November or December, Being that we're on the heels of softer inflation, strong GDP growth, there's been very favorable interest rate movements. As you noted, there's optimization moderation being seen by consumption software companies and The stock market kind of breaking out and moving higher. I'm just wondering if any of that is kind of translating into your dashboard at this point? Speaker 200:26:34Hey, thanks Mark. Yes, I think you're exactly right on the correlation to the consumption models and the lag for the entitlement models, I think as you pointed out in the past. And So generally speaking, you saw from some of the assumption models commentary about improvement. I think for us, we sort of have to wait So the quarter progressed a little bit more to be able to make much of a commentary. I think as ever there's tremendous interest for what we do getting through the procurement departments becomes the question. Speaker 200:27:01I think that It is always the wildcard. I would say too early to tell based on the last month or As we indicated, our deal volumes in Q3 were as the volume gets higher than ever, our win rates were consistent, our discounted practices are no different. So, we're certainly optimistic that, that continues. Speaker 1000:27:26And then thank you, Dave. Nivam, just as a quick follow-up on the model considerations. When I look at the RPO, I mean, I see it kind of I see softness there. I see it sort of falling off trend. I just mean sequentially, it's still quite good year over year. Speaker 1000:27:46Is there anything notable there in terms of Were there any down sells, I mean cancellations? You said there were not pricing concessions, but there were some moving pieces with all the open tofu Was there anything unusual that might have impacted that? Or is it just kind of lingering of some of the by some of the tougher buying behavior? Speaker 300:28:12Yes. I think it's mostly the buying behavior. You talked about markets. It's deal volume being up, but at smaller deal sizes, Which causes NDR to go down. And that's what's impacting your RPO rates. Speaker 300:28:23So still strong from a growth perspective year to year, still long commitments from our customers. And we're feeling good about RPO, but it's mostly the smaller deal volume and combined with larger amounts of deals happening. Speaker 1000:28:38Understood. Thank Speaker 600:28:40you. All right. Thanks, Mark. Next question. Operator00:28:43Thank you. One moment for our next question. And our next question comes from the line of Alex Zukin from Wolfe Research. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:28:53Hey guys, Thanks for taking the question. So I'm going to push a little bit more on this because it's hard to reconcile three numbers for us. On the one hand, we have the guide for next quarter at 10%. We have CRPO bookings at 3% this quarter, And we have a consensus estimate for growth for next year at 18%. I completely understand the commentary about Smaller deal sizes and a larger volume of deals, but can you dimensionalize both of those attributes like how much more volume are you seeing? Speaker 1100:29:26How much Smaller are the deal sizes? When does NRR bottom? Because this would be a good time to maybe just Help us understand, is that 10% the right jumping off point? As we think about next year, is there an acceleration curve baked into next year based on Your conviction level around upselling on some of these land this larger volume of lands, give us a little bit of color We can kind of model this out. Speaker 500:29:57Yes. Thanks, Alex. I think Speaker 300:29:58a lot of your questions came out around sort of The view of 25 and I think the only thing I can say at this point is we're seeing good contract activity at the smaller sizes, which means that People still believe in our software and are designing us in, right? What have we haven't seen to Dave's point earlier is buying behavior changes and we're operating Under that assumption until we see it, which means that we aren't forecasting anything beyond what we see. So we got to execute Q4 first and we'll give you our 25 view in Q1 when we normally do. Speaker 1100:30:33Okay, understood. And I guess maybe Dave, How much of the how should we think about execution here and some of the new sales strategies either Making this pushing this faster or making it actually go slower, like is that a tailwind or a headwind to realizing to getting back to some of those larger deal conversations or dynamics over the next few quarters? Speaker 600:30:58Yes, got it. Thanks. I think Speaker 200:31:01You sort of asked me just sort of what's the implication of some of the modifications to go to market approach on that model. And I would just I would come back to the fact that We brought in a new President of Field Operations, as you know, as Susan said, Ledger, who's brought a bunch of simplification and rigor and efficiency to what we're doing. At the same time, these are infrastructure sales cycles. And so I would expect the impact of Speaker 600:31:21that to be felt in Speaker 200:31:21the coming quarters, not immediately. Super excited about the modifications there. She's brought on some strong folks and she's been a great partner. But I would really expect her impact to be felt over the future quarters as opposed to this quarter and the next. Speaker 600:31:38Okay. Thanks, Alex. Operator? Operator00:31:41Thank you. Our next question will come from the line of Nick Altman from Scotiabank. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:31:53Awesome. Thanks guys. Can you just give a little bit of an update on the revenue or the bookings mix between TerraForm and Vault and maybe just provide us some directional color around the growth rates there through 2023? And then just maybe on the other side of that, can Speaker 100:32:11you just talk about how some Speaker 1200:32:12of those Mix shift dynamics between TerraForm and Vault are sort of playing into the near term go to market strategy, the product roadmap and how you guys are thinking about net getting 2024? Speaker 200:32:26Maybe I'll start with that one. This is Dave. Thanks for that. So I think I would just decompose our portfolio into Two basic lifecycle solutions. 1 is around infrastructure lifecycle and the other one is around the security lifecycle. Speaker 200:32:38And obviously TerraForm is aligned with the infrastructure Cycle vault and boundary aligned with the security life cycle, I would say there's equivalent interest really in both. And I'd say over time those business been very, very consistently similar. When organizations get more mature in their operations, those two concerns get Combined into a common platform engineering function just to put the pieces together, but our fundamental consumer is an ops person and a security person. So that dynamic is unchanged and I think Security life cycle and ops life cycle is the way you think about it. And maybe I'll let Navam comment if there's a financial aspect. Speaker 300:33:13Yes, I think from a net new ACV perspective, I think they're roughly, give or take, a couple of 100 ks one way or the other on the 2. The security lifecycle products have Or slightly larger, so that the infrastructure products grow slightly faster at a smaller base. But combined, they combine, make up the majority of our revenue. Speaker 600:33:33All right. Thanks, Nick. Let's go to the next question. Operator00:33:36Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Oliver Kuukengen from JMP Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 100:33:48Actually, it's Pat Walravens. Thank you. Hey, Armand, this one I think is for you, which is I was just looking back at my old MongoDB model. And when they were at roughly 100 $1,000,000 in total revenue, the cloud was 47% of total revenue and growing 61%. And you guys had $150,000,000 of quarterly revenue, the cloud is $14,000,000 Speaker 300:34:11So just walk us through what Speaker 400:34:13are the sort of 2 or 3 key points we need to Speaker 1200:34:15understand about The difference between a database that's moving to the cloud and Speaker 100:34:25Hashi's Infrastructure Solutions. Speaker 500:34:28Hey, Pat. Yes, thanks for the question. Yes, I think what I'd point to is The major difference is if I think about something like a database like Mongo versus the solutions we have, it's where they sit in the stack and sort of their level of Criticality. And what I mean by that is, obviously, database is critical, but typically it's bound to the scope of a single application, right? I'm building a net new app, that app needs to store some data, great, I can When you think about our solutions by virtue of being infrastructure, they span horizontally across Usually 100, 1,000, if not the entire state, right? Speaker 500:35:03And so if you think about something like Vault, you might have hundreds of applications connected into it. So the criticality is different. And then the as a result of that, the customers' willingness to have that Outside of their control when something goes potentially wrong is very different. And I think that's the feedback we consistently get from our customers is, Guys, this is Tier 0 software. If I lose Vault, if I lose console, my data center goes down, right? Speaker 500:35:31And so I think that willingness to let a third party run it where they don't necessarily have the direct operational control. It's just a much higher bar. And when you think about what are the vendors these folks really trust, It's effectively Amazon, Azure, Google, right? And even that was a position of trust that took many years for the clouds to get to within these enterprise vendors. So I think that's the difference I would point to. Speaker 500:35:53The good news is we're seeing that shift, right? And so I think we're increasingly seeing Our enterprise customers realize they don't have the operational expertise to operate this the way we do. And so we are starting to see even our largest enterprise customers Go down the path of HCP. And so we're excited about that. Particularly, we see a difference in behavior between our sort of runtime products and non runtime. Speaker 500:36:15So for non runtime Like TerraForm, for example, there's more willingness. And so I think that's why next year we're looking at really defaulting a land motion to TerraForm Cloud because we feel like we're at that point where customer willingness is there, platform capability is there. Speaker 600:36:30All right. Thanks, Pat. Let's go to the next question, please. Thank Operator00:36:34you. And our next question comes from the line of Fatima Boolani from Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:36:41Thank you. Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. Arman, just on that line of discussion around lending more and leading more with Cloud, especially in the enterprise. I'm wondering as you put your head together with Naveen and Dave, what sort of implications does that Have for how you might have to re architect your pricing strategy for the enterprise, in the same breath driving adoption, But also managing the complexity that might come with partially self managed and partially consumption oriented offerings. Speaker 1300:37:17So I guess the question is you kind of have to blow up your pricing model to drive that behavior in the enterprise. And how would that impact Your reported financial metrics. Thank you. Speaker 500:37:29Hey Fatima, yes, great question. Obviously, it's something we've spent a lot of time Thinking about for the reasons you outlined, we obviously don't want to be in a position to blow up a pricing model. And so the reality is what we looked at really doing for customers is there should effectively be no change to their licensing costs, plus or minus, as they're going from self As to cloud, what we don't want to do is create a tax on them for doing the thing we want them to do. We want customers to adopt cloud. We want them to be on the HCP platform Because it gives us a bunch more visibility into their usage. Speaker 500:38:03We don't have as much support issues. We have to navigate for customers who don't have the operational skills. So we want them fundamentally to be on the cloud. We don't want to tax them for doing that. So there's always been a lot of time making sure the pricing and packaging is consistent to help them navigate through that. Speaker 500:38:17So it's more about Making sure the customers have a willingness to adopt cloud and the capabilities are there to meet their enterprise requirements and we feel good that we're at that point where customers are certainly signaling that willingness now for TerraForm. Speaker 200:38:30Fatima, the only point I may I think I'm just trying to dig at your question to be clear, our Cloud pricing is an entitlement based model, just like our self managed model is. So for us, it's really not a huge transition contractually. That makes sense. Speaker 600:38:44All right. Thanks Fatima. Let's go to the next question please. Operator00:38:48Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Derrick Wood from Cowen. Your line is open. Speaker 100:38:54Great. Thanks. This is for Nivam and I wanted to ask about the net revenue retention number. Curious if that's been all pressure on just the expansion side or if you've seen any churn and what wondering as if you're seeing any customers move from paid to free open source at all. And then, what is your average contract Because I presume that once you get through this cycle of renewals, the pressure on that expansion cadence would probably get lifted. Speaker 100:39:26Thanks. Speaker 200:39:27Hey, Jack, it's Dave. I'll answer the first one. As a general rule, people don't move from our Commercial offerings to the open stores. There are certainly instances where if someone is under extreme budget pressure, they might do that temporarily, but that is That is sort of a bit of an anti pattern although you certainly hear about it anecdotally, but given the scale of number of customers we have and the scale of users, It's not the most common one. But let Devon answer the financial side. Speaker 300:39:53Yes. On the net retention side, Derek, the Most of the net retention impact quarter over quarter comes from the expansion and extension side, meaning smaller expansions and extensions. Now there's some Gross retention impact, for example, this quarter there was an acquisition which caused the churn, but for the most part, the net retention is impacted by the smaller deal sizes on Speaker 600:40:17All right. Thanks, Derek. Let's go to the next question, please. Operator00:40:21And our next question comes from the line of Gary Powell from BTIG. Your line is open. Speaker 700:40:27Great. Thanks for taking the question. I just want to follow-up on, I think it was Alice's earlier question. So if I look at the guidance, the high end of the Q4 guide implies that you exit the year with revenue growth of 11%. I'm not asking for fiscal 'twenty five guidance, but maybe if you could just talk directionally about like The top factors, whether it be product initiatives, go to market, things that could drive improved growth? Speaker 300:40:59Hey, yes, this is Navam. So in 2025, like I said, we really want to go execute Q4 and then get into the New Year to see what the demand environment looks like. We're holding a very measured view into the forecast and the view is that we're going to grow revenue faster than we are going to go cost And maintain our profitability our free cash flow profitability and move towards operating profitability on the by the end of next year or by the back half of next year. So the oping trends and the FCF trends are going to be good, while we wait for or see for signs of macro improvement, which will Drive productivity up. Speaker 600:41:38Okay. Thanks. Next question please. Operator00:41:41Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brad Reback from Stifel. Your line is open. Speaker 700:41:50Great. Maybe going back to Pat's question a little bit on the cloud. It's been 3 quarters in a row that the absolute dollar adds, I understand they're small, have come down sequentially. What needs to happen to Get that absolute spend accelerating. Thanks. Speaker 500:42:08Hey, Brad. Yes, I think ultimately it's really about Flipping the behavior of the enterprise sales team, right? I think we've talked about this before. We sort of think about a commercial sales motion versus an enterprise sales motion. Historically, we've mostly sold the cloud product into commercial. Speaker 500:42:24I think that's where you see more macro pressure with the smaller customers, which impacts on the sequential cloud growth. I think for us to really see a dramatic shift in the sort of the dynamics, it's really about changing the behavior of the core sales team that's looking at the enterprise. And that's where we're signaling that we feel that the demand signals we're now seeing from the enterprise customers tell us that the appetite is there. And certainly, we feel like the product Capabilities are there that we feel that at least we're going to flip TerraForm Cloud where the customer appetite is there to a default cloud motion and we expect That would have a significant impact on that quarter over quarter behavior. Speaker 600:43:03Okay. Thank you. Operator, let's go to the next question. Operator00:43:06Our next question will come from the line of Ari Terjaniyan from Cleveland Research. Your line is open. Speaker 700:43:14Hello. Thanks for taking the question. Nice to meet everybody in the call. I wanted to double click on how you're thinking about The role of the partner ecosystem as you change and reevaluate the go to market, specifically CSPs, AWS and Marketplace as well as the global system integrator partner community. Thank you. Speaker 200:43:38Yes, I'll take that one. Hey, thanks So our partner focuses are really around the cloud providers, Amazon, Azure, GCP, etcetera. And then secondarily, it's the system integrated community. I think we actually had a huge presence at re:Invent last week, which I think is indicative of our very tight go to market relationship With all 3 of the big clouds, we certainly think we won Collaboration Partner of the Year from Amazon this past year, which is probably the best indicator of how our teams are working together. So It's very much a co sell behavior with them. Speaker 200:44:11And certainly, we work closely with them. A material percentage of our opportunities Go through their cloud marketplaces and that's good for them and good for us. So very, very close with the CSPs and that's been a very strong relationship for us for a very long time. On the system integrator side, our focus is around the skills gap that exists for the deployment and adoption of Cloud Technologies. And I would say, like many vendors, our scale, the majority of our efforts have been to date with the smaller SIs around the world of which we have hundreds that we work with, that we certainly are working ever closer with the global center system integrators. Speaker 200:44:49But those are the primary partners we work with, we have a large investment in it and we feel really, really good about how they're both going to be candid. Speaker 600:44:56Okay. Thank you. Let's go to the next question please. Operator00:45:00And our next question will come from the line of Brad Sills from Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 1400:45:07Hi. This is Carly on for Brad. I guess, first question, I want to ask on the enterprise customers' ACV. I guess the customer net add is kind of healthy compared to last quarter, but then just on per customer spend basis, The number the quarter over quarter growth, 0.2% is kind of flattish. You guys definitely mentioned smaller contract size, but just any additional like nuances that you can share on those like bigger, like larger customer spending? Speaker 300:45:45Hey, Carly, it's Nivam. No, I think it boils down to the deal volume being higher and the contract sizes being smaller. They're still consuming our software and still designing us in, but doing that in smaller quantities this year as they go through that digestion period that Dave talked about following the aggressive investment cycle. Speaker 600:46:04Okay. Let's go to the next question operator. Operator00:46:07Thank you. One moment for our next question. And our next question comes from the line of Michael Turcis from KeyBanc. Your line is open. Speaker 1500:46:17Hey guys, thanks. So on the expansion, where they've been the expansion from an MDR perspective, the challenge has been more on the expand side or on the So in other words, is it just number of seats and units in the entitlement or is it adding new products and People buying more into the platform. Speaker 600:46:38Hey, this is Dave. Speaker 200:46:40I don't think there's a real difference to be totally honest. I think every Company we engage with has both sides of the problem, the infrastructure problem and the security problem, and I think it's pretty consistent. It goes back more towards the digestion process of entitlements that they've consumed. And so no real difference between the two is the short answer. They're very connected to the meta position of our customer base. Speaker 200:47:05They're just getting through what they've got. Speaker 600:47:08All right. Thanks, Mike, and good luck in your next endeavor. Next question, please. Operator00:47:14Thank you. And one moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Miller Jump from Truist Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 100:47:24Great. Thank you for taking the question. Maybe on the packaging side, you all introduced your first bundle approach this year. Can you just talk about maybe what you've learned there and how that could impact the upsell opportunity heading into the renewal heavy Q4? Like is this something that could potentially drive increased deal sizes in your mind? Speaker 500:47:46Yes, thanks for the question. Yes, I think the bundle has been relatively successful for us. I think the way we think about it is ultimately it's an opportunity to help accelerate that extension motion, right? So customers who typically We don't position the bundle as a land. It's usually something we leverage as a renewal time to the point you made as a way of introducing the additional products into the account, helping seed them and then ultimately growing those within the estate as well. Speaker 500:48:14So I think the lesson learned is that it has been successful. We introduced it on the Security life cycle today with the 0 Trust bundle, I think we're going to look at continuing to probably leverage that as we think about simplifying go to market next year and having a similar type approach across our security and infrastructure lifecycle. Thanks, Miller. Operator00:48:37Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Dave McJanet, CEO for closing remarks. Speaker 600:48:45Yes. I'd just like to express my Speaker 200:48:46thanks for the participation from everyone here, and we certainly appreciate you dialing in and for all the questions. We look forward to speaking to everybody soon. Thank you. Operator00:48:54And thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.Read morePowered by Key Takeaways HashiCorp reported Q3 revenue of $146 million, a 17% year-over-year increase that beat both top- and bottom-line guidance, and achieved positive non-GAAP EPS and free cash flow. HashiCorp Cloud Platform revenue reached $19.9 million (14% of subscription revenue), though sequential dollar adds have moderated amid smaller deal sizes and higher deal volumes. The company unveiled several AI-driven and cloud-centric innovations, including generative AI for Terraform testing, HashiCorp Developer AI beta, HCP Vault Secrets and Vault Radar, and Terraform Stacks enhancements. Management is simplifying its go-to-market messaging around “lifecycle management,” installing new leadership in field operations and pursuing cost-efficiency measures to drive operating leverage and target non-GAAP profitability by the back half of fiscal 2025. For Q4, HashiCorp guided to $148–150 million in revenue (around 10% growth) and a non-GAAP operating loss of $13–16 million, signaling continued pressure from a cautious macro environment and smaller average deal sizes. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallHashiCorp Q3 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) HashiCorp Earnings HeadlinesDexcom Report Unveiled at ATTD 2025 Reveals HCPs Favour Tech Over Medication for Future of Type ...March 19, 2025 | gurufocus.comVeeva Systems Inc (VEEV) Launches Veeva CRM Pulse for Enhanced HCP Access DataMarch 4, 2025 | gurufocus.comTrump Exec Order 14179 is wealth “gift” to good Americans?Is President Trump’s Executive Order 14179… A secret way to restore wealth for good citizens? If you’ve suffered financial hardship…Our President may have solved everything.May 29, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)HashiCorp Inc.March 2, 2025 | wsj.comGuru Fundamental Report for HCPMarch 1, 2025 | nasdaq.comM&A News: IBM Finally Closes $6.4B HashiCorp DealFebruary 28, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More HashiCorp Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like HashiCorp? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on HashiCorp and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About HashiCorpHashiCorp (NASDAQ:HCP) engages in the provision of multi-cloud infrastructure automation solutions worldwide. The company offers infrastructure provisioning products, including Terraform, that enables IT operations teams to apply an Infrastructure-as-Code approach, where processes and configuration required to support applications are codified and automated instead of being manual and ticket-based; Packer, that provides a consistent way to define the process of transforming the raw source inputs into a production worthy artifact, across any environment or packaging format; and Vagrant, that allows teams to define how development environments are set up. It also provides security products, such as Vault, a secrets management and data protection product, which enables security teams to apply policies based on application and user identity to govern access to credentials and secure sensitive data; and Boundary, that applies an identity-based approach to privileged access management and unifies the controls to a single system. In addition, the company offers Consul, an application-centric networking automation product that enables practitioners to manage application traffic, security teams to secure and restrict access between applications, and operations teams to automate the underlying network infrastructure; Nomad, a scheduler and workload orchestrator, which provides practitioners with a self-service interface to manage the application lifecycle; and Waypoint, an application delivery product that provides a developer-focused workflow for the build, deploy, and release process. Further, it provides HashiCorp Cloud Platform, a fully-managed cloud platform for multiple products to accelerate enterprise cloud migration by addressing resource and skills gaps, improving operational efficiency, and speeding up deployment time for customers. The company was incorporated in 2012 and is headquartered in San Francisco, California.View HashiCorp ProfileRead more More Earnings Resources from MarketBeat Earnings Tools Today's Earnings Tomorrow's Earnings Next Week's Earnings Upcoming Earnings Calls Earnings Newsletter Earnings Call Transcripts Earnings Beats & Misses Corporate Guidance Earnings Screener Earnings By Country U.S. Earnings Reports Canadian Earnings Reports U.K. Earnings Reports Latest Articles CrowdStrike Stock Slips: Analyst Downgrades Before Earnings Bullish NVIDIA Market Set to Surge 50% Ahead of Q1 EarningsAdvance Auto Parts: Did Earnings Defuse Tariff Concerns?Booz Allen Hamilton Earnings: 3 Bullish Signals for BAH StockAdvance Auto Parts Jumps on Surprise Earnings BeatAlibaba's Earnings Just Changed Everything for the StockCisco Stock Eyes New Highs in 2025 on AI, Earnings, Upgrades Upcoming Earnings CrowdStrike (6/3/2025)Haleon (6/4/2025)Broadcom (6/5/2025)Oracle (6/10/2025)Adobe (6/12/2025)Accenture (6/20/2025)FedEx (6/24/2025)Micron Technology (6/25/2025)Paychex (6/25/2025)NIKE (6/26/2025) Get 30 Days of MarketBeat All Access for Free Sign up for MarketBeat All Access to gain access to MarketBeat's full suite of research tools. 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There are 16 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to HashiCorp's Fiscal 20 24 Third Quarter Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer session. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your first speaker today, Alex Kurtz, Vice President of Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Operator00:00:24Thank you. Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:28Good afternoon, and welcome to HashiCorp's fiscal 2024 Third Quarter Earnings Call. This afternoon, we will be discussing our Q3 fiscal 2024 financial results announced in our press release issued after the market close today. With me are HashiCorp's CEO, Dave McJanet CFO, Navam Walienda and CTO and Co Founder, Armand Dagar. In conjunction with our earnings press release, we have published an earnings presentation that provides additional financial information We encourage you to review that presentation in advance of our call. You can access it on our investor website at ir.hashiCorp.com. Speaker 100:01:07Today's call will contain forward looking statements, which are made under the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Forward looking statements include statements concerning financial and business trends, our expected future business and financial performance and financial condition, and our guidance for the Q4 and full 2024 fiscal year. These statements may be identified by words such as expect, anticipate, intend, plan, believe, seek or will or similar statements. These statements reflect our views as of today only and should not be relied upon as representing our views at any subsequent date and we do not undertake any duty to update these statements. Forward looking statements by their nature address matters that are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. Speaker 100:01:59During the call, we will also discuss certain non GAAP financial measures, which are not prepared in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The financial measures presented on this call are prepared in accordance with GAAP unless otherwise noted. A reconciliation of these non GAAP Financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures as well as how we define these and other metrics is included in our earnings press release, which has been furnished to the SEC and is also available on our website at ir.hashiCorp.com. With that, let me turn the call over to Dave. Dave? Speaker 200:02:34Thank you, Alex, and welcome everyone to our Q3 earnings call for fiscal 2024. We reported solid 3rd quarter results that exceeded our top and bottom line guidance with revenue of $146,000,000 representing year over year growth of 17%. Current non GAAP remaining performance obligations reached $421,000,000 representing 23% year over year growth And we added 26 customers with greater than or equal to $100,000 in annual recurring revenue to reach a total of 877. Our HashiCorp cloud platform offerings reached $19,900,000 in revenue, representing 14% of subscription revenue in the quarter. The team performed well under difficult circumstances with continued new large customer wins despite sustained deal scrutiny that's a result of the broader macro Coming out of our Annual User Conference in October this quarter, we remain convinced about the long term opportunity ahead of us as the world's largest enterprises move to the cloud. Speaker 200:03:35With that as backdrop, I want to talk today about what we're doing both short term and long term to fully realize this opportunity. HashiCorp's position as an enabler for the cloud makes us unique. At HashiCorp in October, we had more than 1200 in person and 12,000 virtual attendees and hosted keynotes with customers such as Home Depot and Unity Games. The size of our community and the variety of customer use cases on display At HashiCorp underscore that we have a large long term opportunity that touches multiple facets of cloud infrastructure. At HashiCorp, we unveiled multiple new product advancements aimed at enabling both developers and platform teams with workflow automation capabilities and lifecycle management. Speaker 200:04:18We announced HCP Vault secrets, a good example of how our continued investment in cloud capabilities is expanding our portfolio. And also you have a preview of HCP Vault Radar, which is based on the secret scanning startup we acquired earlier this year. We also made several announcements related to TerraForm, the industry standard for infrastructure as code. I think attendees and users were most excited about TerraForm stacks, a major investment and enhancement to the TerraForm execution engine. We also announced our first generative AI feature within TerraForm, which uses LLMs to generate module tests for users. Speaker 200:04:54Additionally, we announced the private beta of HashiCorp developer AI, And AI powered companion for finding reference materials, architectural guidance and product examples from the HashiCorp developer portal. You'll also continue to see us being targeted about incorporating AI capabilities into our products over time. We're being thoughtful about what AI use cases are valuable Our customers and are proceeding deliberately. However, you will continue to see investments across our portfolio with the focus on lifecycle management capabilities across infrastructure and security. As I mentioned earlier, it's no secret that market conditions remain difficult. Speaker 200:05:31While there are many things we cannot control, there are many others we can. So we've taken steps to help us with both near term performance and meeting the long term opportunity ahead of us. First, we are focused on simplifying our go to market messaging and strategy. At our Financial Analyst Day, we introduced new messaging centered on lifecycle management, which we apply to both our infrastructure and security offerings. This helps our sales teams more easily position key parts of the HashiCorp product portfolio as comprehensive solutions to common problems and package them together. Speaker 200:06:02Susan St. Leger, our President of Worldwide Field Operations is Key to this go to market approach and she's already having an impact with new leadership hires and enablement efforts to our field teams. With our help, our field teams will be better positioned to execute on this new strategy, while also putting additional focus on our cloud offerings. This investment in our go to market is aligned with the investments in our products I mentioned earlier and together they will help us to continue to win and expand within the Global 4000. 2nd, it's worth noting that these go to market efforts are also crucial to our ongoing focus on building a wholly integrated offering around the HashiCorp cloud platform. Speaker 200:06:40These cloud managed products are a fast growing part of our business as you can see in our results. Through HCP, these products can be sold and consumed more easily We simplified opportunities for product expansions and extensions and we can better respond to changing customer needs. We are already seeing positive responses to the new cloud pricing frameworks introduced earlier this year. Finally, we remain focused on increasing efficiency and are committed to creating further operating leverage in our business. Those efforts are already underway and we are making good progress on our path to profitability. Speaker 200:07:13Navam will discuss those in more detail. These efforts do not alter our ability to build new products as you can see from the broad set of announcements we made at HashiCorp. Now I'll turn it over to Navam to walk through the details of our Q3 performance and then I'm happy to take any questions. Speaker 300:07:29Thank you, Dave, and thanks everyone for joining us today. Echoing Dave, I also wanted to reflect on how great it was to host everyone at our user conference, HashiCorp, last quarter. It was amazing to see the energy our community, customers and employees created at this event. I also wanted to extend a big thank you to those who joined us in person or virtually and to all employees who worked hard to make this event a success. During HashiCorp's, we also hosted a Financial Analyst Where we talked about 2 key fundamental focus areas for us financially. Speaker 300:08:021st was the focus on customer count momentum and second was the focus on cost efficiency. On the customer count focus, our team continues to simplify our go to market approach, resulting in continued momentum on our net new customers at or over 100 ks in ARR. We added 79 net new customers at or above 100 ks in ARR year to date. Given this progress, we remain well on track against our goal of adding 80 to 100 customers over 100 ks in ARR per year. As you may know, our 100 ks ARR customers are foundational to our model, and they have a high growth potential as a group and provide a significant portion of our current revenue as well as our future revenue potential. Speaker 300:08:47Customer bookings in the 3rd quarter played out largely as we expected. It was a seasonal quarter with unchanged macro buying behavior from most customers, very similar to what we experienced during the first half of FY twenty twenty four. The buying behavior led to smaller land contracts and smaller expansion and extension Despite the contracts being smaller, we saw growth in the number of contracts we engaged in with our customers. On the efficiency focus, I want to announce a significant corporate milestone for the company. We reached both a positive non GAAP earnings per share this quarter and a positive free cash flow this quarter. Speaker 300:09:27The milestone is an important step towards our goal of non GAAP operating profit by the back half of next year. We expect free cash flow to be positive from this point forward other than in Q2, which is a seasonal low free cash flow period for us due to booking seasonality. Before moving on to guidance, I wanted to briefly revisit our approach to the financial outlook. We are confident in the company's long term positioning, especially after the positive customer conversations we had with many of our larger customers during and after Hashi About the new innovation we're bringing to the market. In the shorter term, we remain judicious in our guidance approach given the demand environment and how that impacts our sales cycles and contract size with our larger customers. Speaker 300:10:13We will continue our assessment of the demand environment and provide guidance for next year as we customarily do in the next earnings call. Our full guidance numbers can be found in our earnings presentation available on our ir.hashiCorp.com website under Financials Quarterly Results. I encourage you to read through the doc for full financial metric disclosures, share count disclosures and GAAP to non GAAP reconciliations. To summarize our guidance, for the Q4 of fiscal 2024, we expect total revenue in the range of 148,000,000 to $150,000,000 and a non GAAP operating loss in the range of $16,000,000 to 13,000,000 For the full fiscal year 'twenty four, we expect total revenue in the range of $576,000,000 578,000,000 and expect FY 'twenty four non GAAP operating loss in the range of $89,000,000 $86,000,000 Thanks for your attention. Dave, Arman and I are available to take any of your questions. Speaker 300:11:19Alex? Speaker 100:11:21Thanks, Navam. With that, operator, let's go to our first question. Operator00:11:25Thank you. And wait for your name to be announced. One moment for our first question. Our first question will come from the line of Sanjit Singh from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open. Speaker 400:11:49Thank you for taking the questions and congrats on the positive free cash flow and the positive non GAAP EPS. When I look at the results, though, I don't think you guys have been pretty clear about this that I haven't really seen any improvement yet in sort of buying behavior in the broader macro backdrop. And as you guys sort of look to simplify the sales motion, which you guys are very clear about at the investor session. I was wondering to get a sense of how you feel or how long do you think it will take to see Returns on these go to market investments and some of the changes you're making to go to market, is this something that's going have to play out through the balance of next year or is next year a period where we could see growth start to bottom and potentially accelerate? Speaker 200:12:39Hey, Sanjay, thanks. This is Dave. I'll answer that one. I think the way that we think about it is we're clearly coming out of a period of aggressive investment in software In the Global 2,000 for the last couple of years. And what's clear is that cohort of companies is digesting the entitlement that they have Purchased and you see that in the net dollar retention numbers of us and others in our peer group. Speaker 200:13:03And I think that's A significant aspect of the demand environment that we're speaking about. On the positive side, the consumption vendors and the cloud vendors who obviously have consumption based models are Getting stabilization and that's positive for the entire ecosystem and you would expect that to flow through to the entitlement vendors over the course of the next several quarters. I think what we do see, certainly we're excited about the simplification we're bringing to bear and we already see, as Navam highlighted, demand for our products remains Consistent deal volumes that Navam indicated are as high as ever. Our win rates are as consistent as ever and we're not seeing any change The discounting behavior in our field, we're just seeing smaller land and expand activity from our customers. So super optimistic about the longer arc and do I think that simplification we're bringing to bear will help. Speaker 400:13:55I appreciate the thoughts, Dave. And then Arman, just love to get an update on Boundary and how you The demand funnel building for that offer? Speaker 500:14:06Yes. Thanks, Sung Ji. Yes. So over summer, I think there was 2 fairly significant announcements. 1 was our introduction of session recording and the second was the introduction of the Foundry self managed enterprise product. Speaker 500:14:18And I think what we've seen since then is a pretty healthy construction of pipeline. We have Major enterprises that we're engaged with, a few of which talked at HashiCorp, folks like ManTech, major FSI partner as well as EQ Bank talking about how they've adopted Boundary in their environment and continue to be excited about the pipeline that we're seeing building and the opportunity around Boundary. Speaker 400:14:42Awesome. I'll leave it there. Thank you very much. Speaker 600:14:44All right, Sanjit. Thank you. Next question please. Operator00:14:47Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Jason Ader from William Blair. Your line is open. Speaker 700:14:59Okay. Thank you. Good afternoon, guys. I just wanted to ask sort of high level, what in the last 90 days has occurred That gives you the most optimism for 2024? Speaker 500:15:17Sure. Yes, Jason. Happy to. This is Armand. I think a few things. Speaker 500:15:21I think one was we were pleasantly surprised that as of this Last quarter, we officially have more cloud contracts than we have self managed. And I think for us, that's a really exciting sign in terms of just where we're seeing the demand shift towards the cloud platform versus self managed. And obviously, that's sort of weighted towards the commercial customers today. I think equally we're starting to see that shift now happen where the larger enterprise customers are signaling their willingness to move. And Particularly for management products like TerraForm, I think we're seeing increased demand to move those to cloud. Speaker 500:15:55And so for us, That's optimistic as we think about next year and going into really pushing more heavily on cloud where we feel like we can start to shift towards TerraForm Cloud is a default motion for our land rather than self managed TerraForm, which historically has been driven by just customer appetite and interest. Speaker 700:16:14Great. Anything else? You said there was a few things? Speaker 500:16:18Yes, I think it's those few, right? It's the tip of the cloud to being We have more contracts on cloud than we have on self managed. I think it's the enterprise willingness to move to cloud as well. Great. Speaker 700:16:29Thank you very much. Speaker 600:16:31Thanks, Jason. Speaker 700:16:32Thank you. Operator00:16:34One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Ittai Kidron from Oppenheimer. Your line is open. Speaker 800:16:44Thanks. Couple of questions for me. First For Unifam, RPO, if my math is right, has now grown Faster than revenue for about 4 quarters in a row. That needless to say is not a relationship that can stay. So Help me understand, why did the disconnect has existed for such a long time? Speaker 800:17:13And When would you expect this to converge or reverse? That's number 1. And for you, Dave, you've talked about in the past how Your progress for the year is really reflection of budgets set late in the previous year. Hence, that was the reason why you didn't see a slowdown in your business activity at the beginning of the slowdown a couple of years ago. As you have conversations with customers here and now about 2024 and maybe this is asking Jason's question in a different kind of a way, What are they telling you about budgets for 2024? Speaker 800:17:53What is it that you're hearing about how 2024 can shape up directionally from Spend standpoint relative to 23. Thank Speaker 200:18:02you. Maybe I'll answer your second question first, it's Dave. I think the short version is we just have to be focused on Q4 for now. That's really where our attention is. But I would say To add to what Armin had indicated previously, I come back to our contract volumes being very, very healthy, very, very positive, notwithstanding the ASP changes, As you can understand based on the digestion process that's going on inside of our existing customers in particular. Speaker 200:18:30And then number 2, I will just add that our product downloads are at a record high and that certainly gives us confidence that the trends continue unabated. What we're just working through is the budgeting cycle and so we'll see how Q4 works out, but certainly ample optimism about the what comes over the longer arc. Speaker 300:18:50Yes, Italo. I'll cover your RPO question. We're very pleased with the RPO growth. It signifies basically that our customers are Through this vendor consolidation period, our customers are entering into longer term contracts with us, meaning, spanning multiple years and placing their faith in us In our products. So that's obviously a big positive for us and we're seeing continued momentum in RPO. Speaker 300:19:14CRPO is the more relevant one as it connects to revenue over the next 12 months. So that's a closer proxy for revenue. And obviously, we keep a close eye on that and we're seeing reasonably good growth rates on CRPO side as well. In terms of convergence, our view of revenue, as I mentioned during the prepared remarks is, we want to take a very measured view until the time that we see The buying behavior and the macro change. And we haven't taken a different view as to how we forecast the next quarter and how we think about the future. Speaker 300:19:50So it's been consistent with the prior periods forecast. Speaker 700:19:55Thank you. Speaker 600:19:56Thanks, Ittai. Next question. Operator00:19:58Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Henderson from Needham. Your line is open. Speaker 900:20:07Great, thanks. I was hoping you could talk through the AI issue With us a little bit to understand the mechanics around how enterprises are adopting it versus There are alternative uses of investment. It seems to me that there's 2 possible solutions here. One would be that It would drive app development and Internet as infrastructure as code Content and demand as a result or it could slow app development as they spend time ascertaining the value of how to use it and how to integrate it into their programs. So can you talk a little bit about Those 2 alternative world views? Speaker 400:21:00Sure. Speaker 500:21:00Yes. I mean, I can share certainly what we're seeing in the customer conversations that we're having. Our general sense is that there's a lot of excitement, certainly among people about, if nothing else, at least being able to dip their toes in and being able to Access these models, start leveraging them, being able to sort of see how they could apply to people's businesses. And so because of the specialization of these models in the different cloud providers. We've seen this as actually a tailwind for many customers actually go towards a multi cloud strategy, right? Speaker 500:21:30They might have been single CSP or You might have had a large percentage of the workload on prem and this has been a driver for them to accelerate either going multi cloud or going to cloud to begin with So they can leverage that because I think most customers realize they won't have access to certain best of breed capabilities and certainly if they're stuck on prem. So I think in that sense, it has been an accelerator in terms of customers pulling forward some of that strategy. On the flip side, I think we're also seeing it generate interesting opportunities across the portfolio. We did talk at our Financial Analyst Day about a very large financial company we work with that invested in Nomad to build a large scale compute grid based on thousands of GPUs, really looking at how do they leverage these techniques at scale in a cost effective way. And we've seen that playing out driving interest across the portfolio, certainly TerraForm for provisioning, Nomad for doing large scale workload orchestration and console for enabling networking across a multi cloud estate. Speaker 500:22:27So I think it's certainly been a useful tailwind for us. Speaker 900:22:32So you don't see any slowdown in the app development cycle. So that brings me to the second part of the question, which is We've gone through the year of efficiency over the last 18 months, more than a year now. And that obviously cleaned up a lot of wasteful cloud infrastructure. It seems likely that those teams are now shifting away from that thought process of how do I Fix the waste that I've got to how do I keep it from happening again in the future. And to that extent, I would think that TerraForm would Proved to be one of the key tools that would be used to produce A standardized model to manage resources in the cloud. Speaker 900:23:24Where are we on that The changeover and how do we think that will play out over the next 18 months? Is it a very shallow Slope to recovery, is it a longer process or is it something that could actually reaccelerate the growth outlook? Speaker 500:23:43Yes. It's a really great question. And the observation I would share is and you've heard us probably talk about this at a few different events, As we almost characterize an organization's adoption of cloud is going through multiple phases, right? Phase 1, we tend to think of as, I'll call it almost an ad hoc approach, right? Yes. Speaker 500:24:01Multiple application teams are all sort of lit up to go build their applications in cloud, but with no sort of standardized process workflow, Send our tooling, etcetera, it's every team sort of free for rolling. Operator00:24:12And I Speaker 500:24:13think what ends up happening is there's different catalysts. For some organizations, it might be a security issue. For others, it's a compliance issue. For others, it's a cost issue. But at some point, there's a catalyst for an organization to say, you know what, this is unsustainable. Speaker 500:24:26We actually need to get to a Phase 2 where we look at a more mature organizational approach where we have a centralized platform team It creates a standard set of process, standard set of tooling, put some guardrails around it, both from a cost perspective, security compliance perspective. And that Phase 2 tends to then be where organizations really unlock cloud adoption at scale, right, because now they have the controls in place to really scale. And so I think to your point, I think your observation is exactly right. What this year of optimization has done is basically pull forward That's Phase 2 in the construction of the platform team across a broad swath of customers that we certainly interact with, right? So I'd say we've I think that for us is a great tailwind because ultimately those platform teams are our customer. Speaker 900:25:12If that's the case, is it that then Causing a pull in and the time to reaccelerate? I mean that's the conclusion? Speaker 500:25:21I think what it's doing is it's creating a central ultimately these are the groups we sell to, right? So yes, it makes it easier for us over the long term to build a relationship with these platform teams and then ultimately drive our expand and extend motion to grow usage of the land product and ultimately sell them the rest of the portfolio. Speaker 600:25:40Thanks, Alex. Yes, we have Speaker 100:25:41a bunch of questions left to go. So we're just going Speaker 600:25:43to move along a little bit and we can just limit to one question for now and we'll Speaker 1000:26:03I'm wondering, Dave, if you detect any difference in the demand environment or willingness to invest in November or December, Being that we're on the heels of softer inflation, strong GDP growth, there's been very favorable interest rate movements. As you noted, there's optimization moderation being seen by consumption software companies and The stock market kind of breaking out and moving higher. I'm just wondering if any of that is kind of translating into your dashboard at this point? Speaker 200:26:34Hey, thanks Mark. Yes, I think you're exactly right on the correlation to the consumption models and the lag for the entitlement models, I think as you pointed out in the past. And So generally speaking, you saw from some of the assumption models commentary about improvement. I think for us, we sort of have to wait So the quarter progressed a little bit more to be able to make much of a commentary. I think as ever there's tremendous interest for what we do getting through the procurement departments becomes the question. Speaker 200:27:01I think that It is always the wildcard. I would say too early to tell based on the last month or As we indicated, our deal volumes in Q3 were as the volume gets higher than ever, our win rates were consistent, our discounted practices are no different. So, we're certainly optimistic that, that continues. Speaker 1000:27:26And then thank you, Dave. Nivam, just as a quick follow-up on the model considerations. When I look at the RPO, I mean, I see it kind of I see softness there. I see it sort of falling off trend. I just mean sequentially, it's still quite good year over year. Speaker 1000:27:46Is there anything notable there in terms of Were there any down sells, I mean cancellations? You said there were not pricing concessions, but there were some moving pieces with all the open tofu Was there anything unusual that might have impacted that? Or is it just kind of lingering of some of the by some of the tougher buying behavior? Speaker 300:28:12Yes. I think it's mostly the buying behavior. You talked about markets. It's deal volume being up, but at smaller deal sizes, Which causes NDR to go down. And that's what's impacting your RPO rates. Speaker 300:28:23So still strong from a growth perspective year to year, still long commitments from our customers. And we're feeling good about RPO, but it's mostly the smaller deal volume and combined with larger amounts of deals happening. Speaker 1000:28:38Understood. Thank Speaker 600:28:40you. All right. Thanks, Mark. Next question. Operator00:28:43Thank you. One moment for our next question. And our next question comes from the line of Alex Zukin from Wolfe Research. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:28:53Hey guys, Thanks for taking the question. So I'm going to push a little bit more on this because it's hard to reconcile three numbers for us. On the one hand, we have the guide for next quarter at 10%. We have CRPO bookings at 3% this quarter, And we have a consensus estimate for growth for next year at 18%. I completely understand the commentary about Smaller deal sizes and a larger volume of deals, but can you dimensionalize both of those attributes like how much more volume are you seeing? Speaker 1100:29:26How much Smaller are the deal sizes? When does NRR bottom? Because this would be a good time to maybe just Help us understand, is that 10% the right jumping off point? As we think about next year, is there an acceleration curve baked into next year based on Your conviction level around upselling on some of these land this larger volume of lands, give us a little bit of color We can kind of model this out. Speaker 500:29:57Yes. Thanks, Alex. I think Speaker 300:29:58a lot of your questions came out around sort of The view of 25 and I think the only thing I can say at this point is we're seeing good contract activity at the smaller sizes, which means that People still believe in our software and are designing us in, right? What have we haven't seen to Dave's point earlier is buying behavior changes and we're operating Under that assumption until we see it, which means that we aren't forecasting anything beyond what we see. So we got to execute Q4 first and we'll give you our 25 view in Q1 when we normally do. Speaker 1100:30:33Okay, understood. And I guess maybe Dave, How much of the how should we think about execution here and some of the new sales strategies either Making this pushing this faster or making it actually go slower, like is that a tailwind or a headwind to realizing to getting back to some of those larger deal conversations or dynamics over the next few quarters? Speaker 600:30:58Yes, got it. Thanks. I think Speaker 200:31:01You sort of asked me just sort of what's the implication of some of the modifications to go to market approach on that model. And I would just I would come back to the fact that We brought in a new President of Field Operations, as you know, as Susan said, Ledger, who's brought a bunch of simplification and rigor and efficiency to what we're doing. At the same time, these are infrastructure sales cycles. And so I would expect the impact of Speaker 600:31:21that to be felt in Speaker 200:31:21the coming quarters, not immediately. Super excited about the modifications there. She's brought on some strong folks and she's been a great partner. But I would really expect her impact to be felt over the future quarters as opposed to this quarter and the next. Speaker 600:31:38Okay. Thanks, Alex. Operator? Operator00:31:41Thank you. Our next question will come from the line of Nick Altman from Scotiabank. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:31:53Awesome. Thanks guys. Can you just give a little bit of an update on the revenue or the bookings mix between TerraForm and Vault and maybe just provide us some directional color around the growth rates there through 2023? And then just maybe on the other side of that, can Speaker 100:32:11you just talk about how some Speaker 1200:32:12of those Mix shift dynamics between TerraForm and Vault are sort of playing into the near term go to market strategy, the product roadmap and how you guys are thinking about net getting 2024? Speaker 200:32:26Maybe I'll start with that one. This is Dave. Thanks for that. So I think I would just decompose our portfolio into Two basic lifecycle solutions. 1 is around infrastructure lifecycle and the other one is around the security lifecycle. Speaker 200:32:38And obviously TerraForm is aligned with the infrastructure Cycle vault and boundary aligned with the security life cycle, I would say there's equivalent interest really in both. And I'd say over time those business been very, very consistently similar. When organizations get more mature in their operations, those two concerns get Combined into a common platform engineering function just to put the pieces together, but our fundamental consumer is an ops person and a security person. So that dynamic is unchanged and I think Security life cycle and ops life cycle is the way you think about it. And maybe I'll let Navam comment if there's a financial aspect. Speaker 300:33:13Yes, I think from a net new ACV perspective, I think they're roughly, give or take, a couple of 100 ks one way or the other on the 2. The security lifecycle products have Or slightly larger, so that the infrastructure products grow slightly faster at a smaller base. But combined, they combine, make up the majority of our revenue. Speaker 600:33:33All right. Thanks, Nick. Let's go to the next question. Operator00:33:36Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Oliver Kuukengen from JMP Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 100:33:48Actually, it's Pat Walravens. Thank you. Hey, Armand, this one I think is for you, which is I was just looking back at my old MongoDB model. And when they were at roughly 100 $1,000,000 in total revenue, the cloud was 47% of total revenue and growing 61%. And you guys had $150,000,000 of quarterly revenue, the cloud is $14,000,000 Speaker 300:34:11So just walk us through what Speaker 400:34:13are the sort of 2 or 3 key points we need to Speaker 1200:34:15understand about The difference between a database that's moving to the cloud and Speaker 100:34:25Hashi's Infrastructure Solutions. Speaker 500:34:28Hey, Pat. Yes, thanks for the question. Yes, I think what I'd point to is The major difference is if I think about something like a database like Mongo versus the solutions we have, it's where they sit in the stack and sort of their level of Criticality. And what I mean by that is, obviously, database is critical, but typically it's bound to the scope of a single application, right? I'm building a net new app, that app needs to store some data, great, I can When you think about our solutions by virtue of being infrastructure, they span horizontally across Usually 100, 1,000, if not the entire state, right? Speaker 500:35:03And so if you think about something like Vault, you might have hundreds of applications connected into it. So the criticality is different. And then the as a result of that, the customers' willingness to have that Outside of their control when something goes potentially wrong is very different. And I think that's the feedback we consistently get from our customers is, Guys, this is Tier 0 software. If I lose Vault, if I lose console, my data center goes down, right? Speaker 500:35:31And so I think that willingness to let a third party run it where they don't necessarily have the direct operational control. It's just a much higher bar. And when you think about what are the vendors these folks really trust, It's effectively Amazon, Azure, Google, right? And even that was a position of trust that took many years for the clouds to get to within these enterprise vendors. So I think that's the difference I would point to. Speaker 500:35:53The good news is we're seeing that shift, right? And so I think we're increasingly seeing Our enterprise customers realize they don't have the operational expertise to operate this the way we do. And so we are starting to see even our largest enterprise customers Go down the path of HCP. And so we're excited about that. Particularly, we see a difference in behavior between our sort of runtime products and non runtime. Speaker 500:36:15So for non runtime Like TerraForm, for example, there's more willingness. And so I think that's why next year we're looking at really defaulting a land motion to TerraForm Cloud because we feel like we're at that point where customer willingness is there, platform capability is there. Speaker 600:36:30All right. Thanks, Pat. Let's go to the next question, please. Thank Operator00:36:34you. And our next question comes from the line of Fatima Boolani from Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:36:41Thank you. Good afternoon. Thank you for taking my questions. Arman, just on that line of discussion around lending more and leading more with Cloud, especially in the enterprise. I'm wondering as you put your head together with Naveen and Dave, what sort of implications does that Have for how you might have to re architect your pricing strategy for the enterprise, in the same breath driving adoption, But also managing the complexity that might come with partially self managed and partially consumption oriented offerings. Speaker 1300:37:17So I guess the question is you kind of have to blow up your pricing model to drive that behavior in the enterprise. And how would that impact Your reported financial metrics. Thank you. Speaker 500:37:29Hey Fatima, yes, great question. Obviously, it's something we've spent a lot of time Thinking about for the reasons you outlined, we obviously don't want to be in a position to blow up a pricing model. And so the reality is what we looked at really doing for customers is there should effectively be no change to their licensing costs, plus or minus, as they're going from self As to cloud, what we don't want to do is create a tax on them for doing the thing we want them to do. We want customers to adopt cloud. We want them to be on the HCP platform Because it gives us a bunch more visibility into their usage. Speaker 500:38:03We don't have as much support issues. We have to navigate for customers who don't have the operational skills. So we want them fundamentally to be on the cloud. We don't want to tax them for doing that. So there's always been a lot of time making sure the pricing and packaging is consistent to help them navigate through that. Speaker 500:38:17So it's more about Making sure the customers have a willingness to adopt cloud and the capabilities are there to meet their enterprise requirements and we feel good that we're at that point where customers are certainly signaling that willingness now for TerraForm. Speaker 200:38:30Fatima, the only point I may I think I'm just trying to dig at your question to be clear, our Cloud pricing is an entitlement based model, just like our self managed model is. So for us, it's really not a huge transition contractually. That makes sense. Speaker 600:38:44All right. Thanks Fatima. Let's go to the next question please. Operator00:38:48Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Derrick Wood from Cowen. Your line is open. Speaker 100:38:54Great. Thanks. This is for Nivam and I wanted to ask about the net revenue retention number. Curious if that's been all pressure on just the expansion side or if you've seen any churn and what wondering as if you're seeing any customers move from paid to free open source at all. And then, what is your average contract Because I presume that once you get through this cycle of renewals, the pressure on that expansion cadence would probably get lifted. Speaker 100:39:26Thanks. Speaker 200:39:27Hey, Jack, it's Dave. I'll answer the first one. As a general rule, people don't move from our Commercial offerings to the open stores. There are certainly instances where if someone is under extreme budget pressure, they might do that temporarily, but that is That is sort of a bit of an anti pattern although you certainly hear about it anecdotally, but given the scale of number of customers we have and the scale of users, It's not the most common one. But let Devon answer the financial side. Speaker 300:39:53Yes. On the net retention side, Derek, the Most of the net retention impact quarter over quarter comes from the expansion and extension side, meaning smaller expansions and extensions. Now there's some Gross retention impact, for example, this quarter there was an acquisition which caused the churn, but for the most part, the net retention is impacted by the smaller deal sizes on Speaker 600:40:17All right. Thanks, Derek. Let's go to the next question, please. Operator00:40:21And our next question comes from the line of Gary Powell from BTIG. Your line is open. Speaker 700:40:27Great. Thanks for taking the question. I just want to follow-up on, I think it was Alice's earlier question. So if I look at the guidance, the high end of the Q4 guide implies that you exit the year with revenue growth of 11%. I'm not asking for fiscal 'twenty five guidance, but maybe if you could just talk directionally about like The top factors, whether it be product initiatives, go to market, things that could drive improved growth? Speaker 300:40:59Hey, yes, this is Navam. So in 2025, like I said, we really want to go execute Q4 and then get into the New Year to see what the demand environment looks like. We're holding a very measured view into the forecast and the view is that we're going to grow revenue faster than we are going to go cost And maintain our profitability our free cash flow profitability and move towards operating profitability on the by the end of next year or by the back half of next year. So the oping trends and the FCF trends are going to be good, while we wait for or see for signs of macro improvement, which will Drive productivity up. Speaker 600:41:38Okay. Thanks. Next question please. Operator00:41:41Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brad Reback from Stifel. Your line is open. Speaker 700:41:50Great. Maybe going back to Pat's question a little bit on the cloud. It's been 3 quarters in a row that the absolute dollar adds, I understand they're small, have come down sequentially. What needs to happen to Get that absolute spend accelerating. Thanks. Speaker 500:42:08Hey, Brad. Yes, I think ultimately it's really about Flipping the behavior of the enterprise sales team, right? I think we've talked about this before. We sort of think about a commercial sales motion versus an enterprise sales motion. Historically, we've mostly sold the cloud product into commercial. Speaker 500:42:24I think that's where you see more macro pressure with the smaller customers, which impacts on the sequential cloud growth. I think for us to really see a dramatic shift in the sort of the dynamics, it's really about changing the behavior of the core sales team that's looking at the enterprise. And that's where we're signaling that we feel that the demand signals we're now seeing from the enterprise customers tell us that the appetite is there. And certainly, we feel like the product Capabilities are there that we feel that at least we're going to flip TerraForm Cloud where the customer appetite is there to a default cloud motion and we expect That would have a significant impact on that quarter over quarter behavior. Speaker 600:43:03Okay. Thank you. Operator, let's go to the next question. Operator00:43:06Our next question will come from the line of Ari Terjaniyan from Cleveland Research. Your line is open. Speaker 700:43:14Hello. Thanks for taking the question. Nice to meet everybody in the call. I wanted to double click on how you're thinking about The role of the partner ecosystem as you change and reevaluate the go to market, specifically CSPs, AWS and Marketplace as well as the global system integrator partner community. Thank you. Speaker 200:43:38Yes, I'll take that one. Hey, thanks So our partner focuses are really around the cloud providers, Amazon, Azure, GCP, etcetera. And then secondarily, it's the system integrated community. I think we actually had a huge presence at re:Invent last week, which I think is indicative of our very tight go to market relationship With all 3 of the big clouds, we certainly think we won Collaboration Partner of the Year from Amazon this past year, which is probably the best indicator of how our teams are working together. So It's very much a co sell behavior with them. Speaker 200:44:11And certainly, we work closely with them. A material percentage of our opportunities Go through their cloud marketplaces and that's good for them and good for us. So very, very close with the CSPs and that's been a very strong relationship for us for a very long time. On the system integrator side, our focus is around the skills gap that exists for the deployment and adoption of Cloud Technologies. And I would say, like many vendors, our scale, the majority of our efforts have been to date with the smaller SIs around the world of which we have hundreds that we work with, that we certainly are working ever closer with the global center system integrators. Speaker 200:44:49But those are the primary partners we work with, we have a large investment in it and we feel really, really good about how they're both going to be candid. Speaker 600:44:56Okay. Thank you. Let's go to the next question please. Operator00:45:00And our next question will come from the line of Brad Sills from Bank of America. Your line is open. Speaker 1400:45:07Hi. This is Carly on for Brad. I guess, first question, I want to ask on the enterprise customers' ACV. I guess the customer net add is kind of healthy compared to last quarter, but then just on per customer spend basis, The number the quarter over quarter growth, 0.2% is kind of flattish. You guys definitely mentioned smaller contract size, but just any additional like nuances that you can share on those like bigger, like larger customer spending? Speaker 300:45:45Hey, Carly, it's Nivam. No, I think it boils down to the deal volume being higher and the contract sizes being smaller. They're still consuming our software and still designing us in, but doing that in smaller quantities this year as they go through that digestion period that Dave talked about following the aggressive investment cycle. Speaker 600:46:04Okay. Let's go to the next question operator. Operator00:46:07Thank you. One moment for our next question. And our next question comes from the line of Michael Turcis from KeyBanc. Your line is open. Speaker 1500:46:17Hey guys, thanks. So on the expansion, where they've been the expansion from an MDR perspective, the challenge has been more on the expand side or on the So in other words, is it just number of seats and units in the entitlement or is it adding new products and People buying more into the platform. Speaker 600:46:38Hey, this is Dave. Speaker 200:46:40I don't think there's a real difference to be totally honest. I think every Company we engage with has both sides of the problem, the infrastructure problem and the security problem, and I think it's pretty consistent. It goes back more towards the digestion process of entitlements that they've consumed. And so no real difference between the two is the short answer. They're very connected to the meta position of our customer base. Speaker 200:47:05They're just getting through what they've got. Speaker 600:47:08All right. Thanks, Mike, and good luck in your next endeavor. Next question, please. Operator00:47:14Thank you. And one moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Miller Jump from Truist Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 100:47:24Great. Thank you for taking the question. Maybe on the packaging side, you all introduced your first bundle approach this year. Can you just talk about maybe what you've learned there and how that could impact the upsell opportunity heading into the renewal heavy Q4? Like is this something that could potentially drive increased deal sizes in your mind? Speaker 500:47:46Yes, thanks for the question. Yes, I think the bundle has been relatively successful for us. I think the way we think about it is ultimately it's an opportunity to help accelerate that extension motion, right? So customers who typically We don't position the bundle as a land. It's usually something we leverage as a renewal time to the point you made as a way of introducing the additional products into the account, helping seed them and then ultimately growing those within the estate as well. Speaker 500:48:14So I think the lesson learned is that it has been successful. We introduced it on the Security life cycle today with the 0 Trust bundle, I think we're going to look at continuing to probably leverage that as we think about simplifying go to market next year and having a similar type approach across our security and infrastructure lifecycle. Thanks, Miller. Operator00:48:37Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Dave McJanet, CEO for closing remarks. Speaker 600:48:45Yes. I'd just like to express my Speaker 200:48:46thanks for the participation from everyone here, and we certainly appreciate you dialing in and for all the questions. We look forward to speaking to everybody soon. Thank you. Operator00:48:54And thank you for your participation in today's conference. This does conclude the program. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.Read morePowered by