NYSE:CHGG Chegg Q4 2025 Earnings Report $1.44 +0.22 (+17.62%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$1.39 -0.05 (-3.34%) As of 07:59 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Massive. Learn more. ProfileEarnings HistoryForecast Chegg EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.01Consensus EPS -$0.19Beat/MissBeat by +$0.18One Year Ago EPSN/AChegg Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$72.66 millionExpected Revenue$71.00 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$1.66 millionYoY Revenue GrowthN/AChegg Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2025Date2/9/2026TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateMonday, February 9, 2026Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsChegg's Q2 2026 earnings is estimated for Tuesday, August 4, 2026, based on past reporting schedules, with a conference call scheduled at 4:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Chegg Q4 2025 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 9, 2026 ShareLink copied to clipboard.Key Takeaways Positive Sentiment: Chegg has reorganized around a growth-focused Chegg Skilling unit and a cash-generating legacy academic business, reporting $18M in Q4 skilling revenue and guiding to $17.5–$18M skilling revenue in Q1 with double-digit skilling growth expected in 2026 and stronger H2 performance, targeting an adjusted EBITDA margin of at least 20% over the next couple of years. Positive Sentiment: Management significantly reduced costs—non‑GAAP operating expenses fell 47% YoY to $44.8M, adjusted EBITDA was $13M (18% margin), the company repurchased $9M of 2026 convertible notes, and plans to cut non‑GAAP expenses to under $250M in 2026 while aiming to end the year debt‑free. Positive Sentiment: Chegg is expanding B2B distribution and content—announcing partnerships with DHL, Gi Group and Woolf University (allowing courses to count toward accredited degrees), extending contracts with L'Oréal and PPG, and hiring Karine Allouche to scale European skilling, all to broaden AI, language and technical curriculum reach. Negative Sentiment: Liquidity and traffic risks persist—Q4 free cash flow was −$15M largely from $12M severance, the company expects about $18M more severance cash outflows in 2026 (mostly Q1), it finished Q4 with $85M cash/investments (net cash $31M), and it received an NYSE delisting notice while search interface changes continue to pressure traffic. AI Generated. May Contain Errors.Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallChegg Q4 202500:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xTranscript SectionsPresentationParticipantsPresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good evening and welcome to the Chegg, Inc. Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Tracey Ford, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin. Tracey FordVP of Investor Relations at Chegg00:00:25Good afternoon. Thank you for joining Chegg's Fourth Quarter 2025 conference call. On today's call are Dan Rosensweig, President and CEO; and David Longo, Chief Financial Officer. A copy of our earnings press release, along with our investor presentation, is available on our investor relations website, investor.chegg.com. A replay of this call will also be available on our website. We routinely post information on our website and intend to make important announcements on our media center website at chegg.com/mediacenter. We encourage you to make use of these resources. Before we begin, I would like to point out that during the course of this call, we will make forward-looking statements regarding future events, including the future financial and operating performance of the company. These forward-looking statements are subject to material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. Tracey FordVP of Investor Relations at Chegg00:01:22We caution you to consider the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. In particular, we refer you to the cautionary language included in today's earnings release and the risk factors described in Chegg's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as our other filings with the SEC. Any forward-looking statements that we make today are based on assumptions that we believe to be reasonable as of this date. We undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events. During this call, we will present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Our GAAP results and GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations can be found in our earnings press release on the investor slide deck found on our IR website, investor.chegg.com. Tracey FordVP of Investor Relations at Chegg00:02:14We also recommend you review the investor data sheet, which is also posted on our IR website. Now, I will turn the call over to Dan. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:02:22Thank you, Tracey, and thank you everyone for joining Chegg's Fourth Quarter 2025 earnings call. This is a period of reinvention at Chegg. We are rebuilding the company focused on the $40 billion skilling market, which we believe will be a double-digit revenue growth business for Chegg, with strong margins and cash flow in the years ahead. To achieve this, we have reorganized Chegg around two focused business units: Chegg Skilling, which is now our growth engine, and our legacy academic learning services, which we are managing to generate free cash flow. Together, this structure gives us the financial flexibility to invest and grow opportunities within skilling while creating long-term shareholder value. We are excited about our future and feel confident that this new structure sets us up for success. We are already seeing positive early signs. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:03:16In Q4, Chegg Skilling delivered $18 million in revenue, positioning us for double-digit growth for 2026. Our legacy business, Chegg Study, continues to serve more than a million students, and with our new streamlined org structure, is providing meaningful cash flow to fund value creation. As we have expressed, changes in search interfaces continue to impact our traffic. Yet despite these changes, the quality and accuracy of our services continues to drive high retention rates. We are now focused on optimizing pricing and packaging and testing multiple strategies to extend our operational runway and drive more free cash flow. We have a clear objective: to use that cash to fund new growth opportunities and increase the value for our shareholders. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:04:07Given the global demand for workforce skilling has already reached $40 billion, we feel it's a huge opportunity for Chegg, and we are well positioned to serve this market, particularly in AI, language, technical fluency, and durable skills. Our brand is trusted by learners worldwide, and our skills courses are grounded in learning science and data-driven instructional design. Our platform tracks learner progress in real time, delivering predictive nudges and timely interventions that improve engagement, retention, and completion rates. This combination of brand credibility, evidence-based course design, and intelligent learner support consistently leads our channel partners to report stronger outcomes versus our competitors. To capture the growth opportunity we see ahead, we are expanding our course catalog with high-demand technical AI language and professional skills while simultaneously broadening our global footprint across B2B distribution channels. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:05:08As part of this strategy, we are excited to announce new partnerships with DHL, Gi Group, and Woolf University. Woolf specifically expands how we can serve learners as they provide accredited degree pathways that allow us for acquired skills to count towards recognized credentials. We've also extended a few key contracts from companies like L'Oréal and PPG. Our goal is to further extend our reach into global enterprise, institutional, and academic markets. Looking ahead to 2026, we plan to onboard additional employer and institutional partners, both directly and through leading marketplaces. We continue to expand the depth and breadth of our curriculum. To support this opportunity, I'm thrilled to announce that Karine Allouche is joining our team to run our European language learning and skills operation. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:06:02Allouche brings deep experience in building and scaling enterprise businesses across Microsoft, NetApp, GlobalEnglish, and most recently at Coursera, where she led the transformation of their enterprise business. We are thrilled to have her leadership and expertise as we scale our skilling business around the world. We have made significant progress in the reinvention of Chegg. Our goal is to continue to grow our skilling business by double digits annually and over the next couple of years to achieve an adjusted EBITDA margin of at least 20%. To achieve that, our 2026 priorities are straightforward: accelerate the growth of our skilling business by expanding our offerings and network partners domestically and through Europe; increase free cash flow to invest in the future growth of skilling; and strengthen our balance sheet by ending the year with zero debt and meaningful cash balance. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:06:58We are encouraged by the results we are seeing in the skills business and are excited about the path ahead. We successfully transformed our business from a print textbook rental business to an online learning company, and now we are transitioning from a D2C business to a B2B skills learning platform. We are excited about the work we have done so far, and we look forward to updating you next quarter. With that, I'll turn it over to David. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:07:24Thank you, Dan, and good afternoon. Today, I will be presenting our financial performance for the fourth quarter of 2025, along with the company's outlook for the first quarter of 2026. We are introducing our new revenue breakout to provide transparency into our Chegg Skilling business. The historical revenue breakout for the past few years can be found on our data sheet on our investor relations website. We delivered a good fourth quarter. We exceeded our revenue expectations and surpassed the high end of our Adjusted EBITDA guidance by $2 million, reflecting the initial positive impact of our new focus and turnaround efforts. Our strategic shift into the large skilling market positions us for the next phase of long-term sustainable growth with strong margins. During the quarter, we also took steps to enhance our capital structure, repurchasing $9 million of our 2026 convertible notes at a discount. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:08:21In the fourth quarter, we delivered $18 million in skilling revenue with double-digit growth, underscoring the significant market opportunity and the momentum we are seeing. Academic services revenue was $55 million as we continued to operate the business with a focus on cash generation. As Dan mentioned earlier, we are testing different pricing and packaging strategies to extend its operational runway. Moving on to expenses, non-GAAP operating expenses were $44.8 million in the quarter, a reduction of $39.8 million or 47% year-over-year, as we maintain fiscal discipline and continue to benefit from the successful execution of our restructuring activities. Our fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA was $13 million, representing a margin of 18%. Our adoption of AI, along with our new business structure, has enabled us to significantly lower expenses while preserving our ability to grow. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:09:20We overhauled our cost structure to improve efficiency and create capacity for reinvestment in Chegg Skilling. We are on track to reduce total Non-GAAP expenses to less than $250 million in 2026, a 53% decline from 2024. Our strategic investments in AI have allowed us to significantly reduce Capex without compromising quality. Q4 Capex was $6 million, down 51% year-over-year. For 2026, we are targeting a further 60% reduction in Capex, with approximately 90% dedicated to our growing skilling business. Free Cash Flow in the fourth quarter was -$15 million, which was primarily impacted by $12 million in employee severance payments related to our restructuring activities. In 2026, we expect $18 million in severance-related cash expenditures related to our last two restructuring, with approximately 80% occurring in the first quarter. Despite these items, we expect to generate meaningful Free Cash Flow in 2026. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:10:30Looking at the balance sheet, we concluded the quarter with cash and investments of $85 million and a net cash balance of $31 million. Before I move to guidance, I'd like to quickly address the delisting notice we received from the NYSE. The notice has no immediate impact on our listing status, and we have ample time and multiple avenues available to regain compliance, including a potential reverse stock split. Our primary focus is on strengthening the fundamentals of the business. We believe that executing on our priorities will be the most effective path to restoring compliance and delivering long-term shareholder value. Looking ahead at Q1 guidance, we expect $17.5 million-$18 million of revenue from our Chegg Skilling business. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:11:20We expect double-digit growth through the year and anticipate stronger performance in the second half than in the first, driven by continued investment in the business and the addition of new distribution partners. Total revenue $60 million-$62 million, gross margin 57%-58%, and adjusted EBITDA $11 million-$12 million. In 2026, our capital allocation strategy is focused on optimizing free cash flow, strengthening our cash position, and eliminating our debt to create a more flexible and resilient balance sheet. We will also evaluate opportunities to deploy capital through a disciplined approach that supports sustainable growth and generates long-term shareholder value. In closing, we have taken deliberate actions to strengthen the company for long-term success. We are leaner, more efficient, and poised for double-digit revenue growth in our Chegg Skilling business and meaningful free cash flow in 2026. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:12:24We believe we are turning the corner and are on a clear path toward future growth, profitability, and increased shareholder value. With that, I will turn the call over to the operator for your questions. Operator00:12:39Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove yourself from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up the handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Brian Smilek with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Bryan SmilekVP at JPMorgan00:13:16Great. Thanks for taking the questions, and good to see the skilling progress. Dan, can you just help us understand the key drivers of the skilling growth and focus between Busuu and other skilling credentialing areas? And then secondarily, more on the core business as well. Can you just elaborate on what you're seeing in the early price tests and plan mix across the legacy business? Thanks. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:13:38Yeah. Great questions. I just want to reverse the way we think about it, which is the core business now is skilling. So the historic business is the academic services business. So let me start with that one, and then I'll talk about the key KPIs that we look at with skilling. So we're probably about 40% through the quarter on the learning business, and it's pretty much where we thought it would be, with the exception of the retention continues to be a little bit stronger than we thought, and that's very good for free cash flow generation. So what we know is when Google doesn't block our traffic or when the traffic gets through, that we continue to convert well, and retention continues to actually achieve the highest levels that I've seen, not since I've been back, but even before that. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:14:30So that gives us a runway to be able to reinvent that product, which we have several ideas, and we're sort of excited about them, of where Chegg Study can go in the future. But in the interim, the price testings, the key for us is how will they do a month in, which is retention, and so far they're performing actually quite well. So it's too early to declare one way or the other, but we're very pleased with the fact that retention continues to be so high. On the skilling business, so we used to be a B2C business on whether it was Busuu or whether it was on Chegg Skills. Both those businesses over the last 24 months have been converted into B2B businesses. Skills is exclusively B2B, and by the end of this year, Busuu will be more B2B than B2C. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:15:27And so the key metrics that we're looking at are some of the things that we began to talk about, which is how do we expand the number of distribution partners that we have, and we announced one, and we expect to announce more over the course of the year, which we're excited about. And then second is how do we continue to expand the curriculum we have to sell more into the businesses or the channels that we already have? And so we'll just be focused on number of channels and expanding curriculum. And over time, we'll talk about sort of the average volume of a transaction. It's too early to do that. But at the moment, it's more channels of distribution and more curriculum to be able to sell into the existing and to the new channels. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:16:12Both of those things are off to a slightly faster start than I would have expected only nine weeks back on the job. I'm actually excited about it. Bryan SmilekVP at JPMorgan00:16:23Great. Thanks, Dan. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:16:25You bet. Operator00:16:28Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan MacDonald with Needham & Company. Please proceed with your question. Ryan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & Company00:16:37Thanks for taking my questions. Dan, maybe to ask you about the state of the skilling market. Obviously, a lot of change that's about to happen with this Coursera/Udemy merger obviously two of the biggest players in the space. And so as they think about Chegg Skilling and sort of how you gain share within the marketplace in B2B, you talk about expanding the number of distribution partners, expanding the curriculum you have. What opportunities do you think present themselves from this impending merger of areas where you can look to either take mindshare from a distribution partner or expand content by bringing on maybe new content creators as this transition occurs over the next year or so? Thanks. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:17:16Yeah. It's a very interesting question, and that merger is sort of fascinating in terms of how the two companies are performing. But the significant difference is they are marketplaces for other people's content mostly, and one has a B2B, they both have a version of B2B and B2C. And so rather than look at how do we take share, you can actually think the other way, which is can we work with them? Because our content continues to outperform the places we put it, and the definition of outperform for us is not just conversion, but completion and renewal with those companies that are inside those channels. And we mentioned it in the prepared remarks that we continue to hear from the partners that we have that we continue to outperform the other partners in the channel. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:18:12It's because we have a basis for actually teaching that we've been able to apply over into this world. We don't see Coursera and Udemy as competitors. We actually see them as potential partners to work with going forward. Our view is, if you look at how value gets created, we think it's now the person that's creating the content and can actually serve the student, educate the student, and that those businesses are going to be more higher-margin businesses than just the channels of distribution. We see ourselves looking to expand. We don't have to take share from them. We could take share potentially by working with them by also providing our content through their channels and other channels. It's different than what we would have looked at before. Ryan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & Company00:19:05Really helpful clarification there, Dan. I appreciate the color on that. Maybe as a follow-up, obviously, we're starting to see a lot of the, let's call it, AI strategies at the board level start to be implemented within enterprise organizations broadly. Are you seeing that now translate into greater usage or consumption of AI learning content on your platform through your partnerships that you have? Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:19:32Absolutely, yes. So when we first started this several years ago, I mean, we went from 0 to the size that we plan to be this year in just three and a half years. So we're seeing actually real good growth. And this will be the first time that we've expanded beyond our partnership with Guild to add new partners. So we see double-digit growth ahead for the next several years because we're really just at the beginning of this thing. But when you ask what the demand is for, the original deals that we did were for frontline workers who needed just basic technology skills. Now the demand is shifting rapidly towards how do we make sure that every single employee, not just frontline workers, but workers across the board, actually begin to understand how to utilize AI? Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:20:26A different way to think about it is rather than say, "What should I build?" everybody needs to learn the tools that I can use to build. That's the role that we're playing. We think that's a very big growth market, which is why we're sort of accelerating the kinds of classes that we're teaching. Honestly, the relationship that we now announced with Woolf is also a very big opportunity going forward. It's very early to be able to size it. This is the first time Chegg is going to be offering courses through a partner where our courses can count towards a degree. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:20:58And so you can imagine the demand from students about wanting to have courses that they can take that also contribute to their college degree, where they can put on their resumes, that they actually understand how to use the tools around AI. And so these are all really fun and interesting and high-growth areas for us. Ryan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & Company00:21:17Awesome. Thanks for taking my questions. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:21:19Thanks for asking them, and thanks for covering us. We appreciate it. A lot of small companies don't get that kind of coverage, so we're grateful. Operator00:21:28Thank you. We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session, and this also concludes today's conference call. We do thank you for your participation, and we may now disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDan RosensweigPresident and CEODavid LongoCFOTracey FordVP of Investor RelationsAnalystsBryan SmilekVP at JPMorganRyan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & CompanyPowered by Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Chegg Earnings HeadlinesChegg (CHGG) Plunges 99% as AI Tools Replace Traditional EdTech ServicesMay 20 at 10:10 AM | finance.yahoo.comChegg Was Once a High-Flying Tech Stock. Its Shares Now Trade Down 99.03% from Record Highs, All Thanks to AI.May 14, 2026 | finance.yahoo.comI was right about SpaceXJeff Brown predicted Bitcoin before it climbed as high as 52,400%, Tesla before 2,150%, and Nvidia before 32,000%. Now he says SpaceX is shaping up to be the biggest IPO of the decade - and three key milestones just confirmed it. In the past 21 days: SpaceX crossed 10,000 active satellites, Elon filed confidential IPO paperwork with the SEC, and another rocket launched 25 more satellites. Two-thirds of every satellite in orbit now belongs to one company. The public filing could drop any day.May 21 at 1:00 AM | Brownstone Research (Ad)Chegg Expands Into AI Model Training – Leveraging a Decade of Learning Expertise, Subject Matter Experts, and Proprietary DataMay 13, 2026 | businesswire.comHead-To-Head Comparison: Intapp (NASDAQ:INTA) & Chegg (NYSE:CHGG)May 13, 2026 | americanbankingnews.comAnalysts’ Opinions Are Mixed on These Consumer Goods Stocks: Sysco (SYY), Kraft Heinz (KHC) and Chegg (CHGG)May 8, 2026 | theglobeandmail.comSee More Chegg Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Chegg? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Chegg and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About CheggChegg (NYSE:CHGG) (NYSE: CHGG) is a leading education technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California. Originally founded in 2005, Chegg has evolved from a textbook rental service into a comprehensive digital learning platform. Its suite of subscription-based offerings addresses a wide range of academic needs, catering primarily to high school and college students seeking homework help, study resources, and career guidance. The company’s core services include Chegg Study, which provides step-by-step solutions and expert Q&A support; Chegg Writing, offering plagiarism checks and guided writing assistance; and Chegg Math Solver, a tool for solving mathematical problems with detailed explanations. Chegg Skills enables students and professionals to acquire in-demand technical competencies through online courses, while Chegg Internships connects learners with real-world job and internship opportunities. Under the leadership of President and CEO Dan Rosensweig, who joined the company in 2010, Chegg has embraced growth through both organic innovation and strategic acquisitions. In recent years, it has broadened its portfolio by integrating platforms such as StudyBlue and Thinkful, enhancing its capacity to deliver interactive flashcards, coding bootcamps, and other specialized learning tools. Chegg went public in November 2013, marking a significant milestone in its expansion trajectory. While Chegg’s primary market remains the United States, its digital services are accessible to students worldwide. The company continues to invest in partnerships with educational institutions and publishers to integrate its offerings into curricula. By combining a robust technology infrastructure with user-focused content, Chegg aims to support learners at every stage of their academic and professional journeys.View Chegg 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 Latest Articles NVIDIA Price Pullback? 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PresentationSkip to Participants Operator00:00:00Good evening and welcome to the Chegg, Inc. Fourth Quarter 2025 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. If anyone should require operator assistance, please press star zero on your telephone keypad. It is now my pleasure to introduce your host, Tracey Ford, Vice President of Investor Relations. Thank you. You may begin. Tracey FordVP of Investor Relations at Chegg00:00:25Good afternoon. Thank you for joining Chegg's Fourth Quarter 2025 conference call. On today's call are Dan Rosensweig, President and CEO; and David Longo, Chief Financial Officer. A copy of our earnings press release, along with our investor presentation, is available on our investor relations website, investor.chegg.com. A replay of this call will also be available on our website. We routinely post information on our website and intend to make important announcements on our media center website at chegg.com/mediacenter. We encourage you to make use of these resources. Before we begin, I would like to point out that during the course of this call, we will make forward-looking statements regarding future events, including the future financial and operating performance of the company. These forward-looking statements are subject to material risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. Tracey FordVP of Investor Relations at Chegg00:01:22We caution you to consider the important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statements. In particular, we refer you to the cautionary language included in today's earnings release and the risk factors described in Chegg's annual report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2024, filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, as well as our other filings with the SEC. Any forward-looking statements that we make today are based on assumptions that we believe to be reasonable as of this date. We undertake no obligation to update these statements as a result of new information or future events. During this call, we will present both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. Our GAAP results and GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations can be found in our earnings press release on the investor slide deck found on our IR website, investor.chegg.com. Tracey FordVP of Investor Relations at Chegg00:02:14We also recommend you review the investor data sheet, which is also posted on our IR website. Now, I will turn the call over to Dan. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:02:22Thank you, Tracey, and thank you everyone for joining Chegg's Fourth Quarter 2025 earnings call. This is a period of reinvention at Chegg. We are rebuilding the company focused on the $40 billion skilling market, which we believe will be a double-digit revenue growth business for Chegg, with strong margins and cash flow in the years ahead. To achieve this, we have reorganized Chegg around two focused business units: Chegg Skilling, which is now our growth engine, and our legacy academic learning services, which we are managing to generate free cash flow. Together, this structure gives us the financial flexibility to invest and grow opportunities within skilling while creating long-term shareholder value. We are excited about our future and feel confident that this new structure sets us up for success. We are already seeing positive early signs. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:03:16In Q4, Chegg Skilling delivered $18 million in revenue, positioning us for double-digit growth for 2026. Our legacy business, Chegg Study, continues to serve more than a million students, and with our new streamlined org structure, is providing meaningful cash flow to fund value creation. As we have expressed, changes in search interfaces continue to impact our traffic. Yet despite these changes, the quality and accuracy of our services continues to drive high retention rates. We are now focused on optimizing pricing and packaging and testing multiple strategies to extend our operational runway and drive more free cash flow. We have a clear objective: to use that cash to fund new growth opportunities and increase the value for our shareholders. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:04:07Given the global demand for workforce skilling has already reached $40 billion, we feel it's a huge opportunity for Chegg, and we are well positioned to serve this market, particularly in AI, language, technical fluency, and durable skills. Our brand is trusted by learners worldwide, and our skills courses are grounded in learning science and data-driven instructional design. Our platform tracks learner progress in real time, delivering predictive nudges and timely interventions that improve engagement, retention, and completion rates. This combination of brand credibility, evidence-based course design, and intelligent learner support consistently leads our channel partners to report stronger outcomes versus our competitors. To capture the growth opportunity we see ahead, we are expanding our course catalog with high-demand technical AI language and professional skills while simultaneously broadening our global footprint across B2B distribution channels. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:05:08As part of this strategy, we are excited to announce new partnerships with DHL, Gi Group, and Woolf University. Woolf specifically expands how we can serve learners as they provide accredited degree pathways that allow us for acquired skills to count towards recognized credentials. We've also extended a few key contracts from companies like L'Oréal and PPG. Our goal is to further extend our reach into global enterprise, institutional, and academic markets. Looking ahead to 2026, we plan to onboard additional employer and institutional partners, both directly and through leading marketplaces. We continue to expand the depth and breadth of our curriculum. To support this opportunity, I'm thrilled to announce that Karine Allouche is joining our team to run our European language learning and skills operation. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:06:02Allouche brings deep experience in building and scaling enterprise businesses across Microsoft, NetApp, GlobalEnglish, and most recently at Coursera, where she led the transformation of their enterprise business. We are thrilled to have her leadership and expertise as we scale our skilling business around the world. We have made significant progress in the reinvention of Chegg. Our goal is to continue to grow our skilling business by double digits annually and over the next couple of years to achieve an adjusted EBITDA margin of at least 20%. To achieve that, our 2026 priorities are straightforward: accelerate the growth of our skilling business by expanding our offerings and network partners domestically and through Europe; increase free cash flow to invest in the future growth of skilling; and strengthen our balance sheet by ending the year with zero debt and meaningful cash balance. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:06:58We are encouraged by the results we are seeing in the skills business and are excited about the path ahead. We successfully transformed our business from a print textbook rental business to an online learning company, and now we are transitioning from a D2C business to a B2B skills learning platform. We are excited about the work we have done so far, and we look forward to updating you next quarter. With that, I'll turn it over to David. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:07:24Thank you, Dan, and good afternoon. Today, I will be presenting our financial performance for the fourth quarter of 2025, along with the company's outlook for the first quarter of 2026. We are introducing our new revenue breakout to provide transparency into our Chegg Skilling business. The historical revenue breakout for the past few years can be found on our data sheet on our investor relations website. We delivered a good fourth quarter. We exceeded our revenue expectations and surpassed the high end of our Adjusted EBITDA guidance by $2 million, reflecting the initial positive impact of our new focus and turnaround efforts. Our strategic shift into the large skilling market positions us for the next phase of long-term sustainable growth with strong margins. During the quarter, we also took steps to enhance our capital structure, repurchasing $9 million of our 2026 convertible notes at a discount. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:08:21In the fourth quarter, we delivered $18 million in skilling revenue with double-digit growth, underscoring the significant market opportunity and the momentum we are seeing. Academic services revenue was $55 million as we continued to operate the business with a focus on cash generation. As Dan mentioned earlier, we are testing different pricing and packaging strategies to extend its operational runway. Moving on to expenses, non-GAAP operating expenses were $44.8 million in the quarter, a reduction of $39.8 million or 47% year-over-year, as we maintain fiscal discipline and continue to benefit from the successful execution of our restructuring activities. Our fourth quarter adjusted EBITDA was $13 million, representing a margin of 18%. Our adoption of AI, along with our new business structure, has enabled us to significantly lower expenses while preserving our ability to grow. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:09:20We overhauled our cost structure to improve efficiency and create capacity for reinvestment in Chegg Skilling. We are on track to reduce total Non-GAAP expenses to less than $250 million in 2026, a 53% decline from 2024. Our strategic investments in AI have allowed us to significantly reduce Capex without compromising quality. Q4 Capex was $6 million, down 51% year-over-year. For 2026, we are targeting a further 60% reduction in Capex, with approximately 90% dedicated to our growing skilling business. Free Cash Flow in the fourth quarter was -$15 million, which was primarily impacted by $12 million in employee severance payments related to our restructuring activities. In 2026, we expect $18 million in severance-related cash expenditures related to our last two restructuring, with approximately 80% occurring in the first quarter. Despite these items, we expect to generate meaningful Free Cash Flow in 2026. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:10:30Looking at the balance sheet, we concluded the quarter with cash and investments of $85 million and a net cash balance of $31 million. Before I move to guidance, I'd like to quickly address the delisting notice we received from the NYSE. The notice has no immediate impact on our listing status, and we have ample time and multiple avenues available to regain compliance, including a potential reverse stock split. Our primary focus is on strengthening the fundamentals of the business. We believe that executing on our priorities will be the most effective path to restoring compliance and delivering long-term shareholder value. Looking ahead at Q1 guidance, we expect $17.5 million-$18 million of revenue from our Chegg Skilling business. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:11:20We expect double-digit growth through the year and anticipate stronger performance in the second half than in the first, driven by continued investment in the business and the addition of new distribution partners. Total revenue $60 million-$62 million, gross margin 57%-58%, and adjusted EBITDA $11 million-$12 million. In 2026, our capital allocation strategy is focused on optimizing free cash flow, strengthening our cash position, and eliminating our debt to create a more flexible and resilient balance sheet. We will also evaluate opportunities to deploy capital through a disciplined approach that supports sustainable growth and generates long-term shareholder value. In closing, we have taken deliberate actions to strengthen the company for long-term success. We are leaner, more efficient, and poised for double-digit revenue growth in our Chegg Skilling business and meaningful free cash flow in 2026. David LongoCFO at Chegg00:12:24We believe we are turning the corner and are on a clear path toward future growth, profitability, and increased shareholder value. With that, I will turn the call over to the operator for your questions. Operator00:12:39Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. If you would like to ask a question, please press star one on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate your line is in the question queue. You may press star two to remove yourself from the queue. For participants using speaker equipment, it may be necessary to pick up the handset before pressing the star keys. One moment, please, while we pull for questions. Our first question comes from the line of Brian Smilek with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Bryan SmilekVP at JPMorgan00:13:16Great. Thanks for taking the questions, and good to see the skilling progress. Dan, can you just help us understand the key drivers of the skilling growth and focus between Busuu and other skilling credentialing areas? And then secondarily, more on the core business as well. Can you just elaborate on what you're seeing in the early price tests and plan mix across the legacy business? Thanks. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:13:38Yeah. Great questions. I just want to reverse the way we think about it, which is the core business now is skilling. So the historic business is the academic services business. So let me start with that one, and then I'll talk about the key KPIs that we look at with skilling. So we're probably about 40% through the quarter on the learning business, and it's pretty much where we thought it would be, with the exception of the retention continues to be a little bit stronger than we thought, and that's very good for free cash flow generation. So what we know is when Google doesn't block our traffic or when the traffic gets through, that we continue to convert well, and retention continues to actually achieve the highest levels that I've seen, not since I've been back, but even before that. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:14:30So that gives us a runway to be able to reinvent that product, which we have several ideas, and we're sort of excited about them, of where Chegg Study can go in the future. But in the interim, the price testings, the key for us is how will they do a month in, which is retention, and so far they're performing actually quite well. So it's too early to declare one way or the other, but we're very pleased with the fact that retention continues to be so high. On the skilling business, so we used to be a B2C business on whether it was Busuu or whether it was on Chegg Skills. Both those businesses over the last 24 months have been converted into B2B businesses. Skills is exclusively B2B, and by the end of this year, Busuu will be more B2B than B2C. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:15:27And so the key metrics that we're looking at are some of the things that we began to talk about, which is how do we expand the number of distribution partners that we have, and we announced one, and we expect to announce more over the course of the year, which we're excited about. And then second is how do we continue to expand the curriculum we have to sell more into the businesses or the channels that we already have? And so we'll just be focused on number of channels and expanding curriculum. And over time, we'll talk about sort of the average volume of a transaction. It's too early to do that. But at the moment, it's more channels of distribution and more curriculum to be able to sell into the existing and to the new channels. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:16:12Both of those things are off to a slightly faster start than I would have expected only nine weeks back on the job. I'm actually excited about it. Bryan SmilekVP at JPMorgan00:16:23Great. Thanks, Dan. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:16:25You bet. Operator00:16:28Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Ryan MacDonald with Needham & Company. Please proceed with your question. Ryan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & Company00:16:37Thanks for taking my questions. Dan, maybe to ask you about the state of the skilling market. Obviously, a lot of change that's about to happen with this Coursera/Udemy merger obviously two of the biggest players in the space. And so as they think about Chegg Skilling and sort of how you gain share within the marketplace in B2B, you talk about expanding the number of distribution partners, expanding the curriculum you have. What opportunities do you think present themselves from this impending merger of areas where you can look to either take mindshare from a distribution partner or expand content by bringing on maybe new content creators as this transition occurs over the next year or so? Thanks. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:17:16Yeah. It's a very interesting question, and that merger is sort of fascinating in terms of how the two companies are performing. But the significant difference is they are marketplaces for other people's content mostly, and one has a B2B, they both have a version of B2B and B2C. And so rather than look at how do we take share, you can actually think the other way, which is can we work with them? Because our content continues to outperform the places we put it, and the definition of outperform for us is not just conversion, but completion and renewal with those companies that are inside those channels. And we mentioned it in the prepared remarks that we continue to hear from the partners that we have that we continue to outperform the other partners in the channel. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:18:12It's because we have a basis for actually teaching that we've been able to apply over into this world. We don't see Coursera and Udemy as competitors. We actually see them as potential partners to work with going forward. Our view is, if you look at how value gets created, we think it's now the person that's creating the content and can actually serve the student, educate the student, and that those businesses are going to be more higher-margin businesses than just the channels of distribution. We see ourselves looking to expand. We don't have to take share from them. We could take share potentially by working with them by also providing our content through their channels and other channels. It's different than what we would have looked at before. Ryan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & Company00:19:05Really helpful clarification there, Dan. I appreciate the color on that. Maybe as a follow-up, obviously, we're starting to see a lot of the, let's call it, AI strategies at the board level start to be implemented within enterprise organizations broadly. Are you seeing that now translate into greater usage or consumption of AI learning content on your platform through your partnerships that you have? Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:19:32Absolutely, yes. So when we first started this several years ago, I mean, we went from 0 to the size that we plan to be this year in just three and a half years. So we're seeing actually real good growth. And this will be the first time that we've expanded beyond our partnership with Guild to add new partners. So we see double-digit growth ahead for the next several years because we're really just at the beginning of this thing. But when you ask what the demand is for, the original deals that we did were for frontline workers who needed just basic technology skills. Now the demand is shifting rapidly towards how do we make sure that every single employee, not just frontline workers, but workers across the board, actually begin to understand how to utilize AI? Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:20:26A different way to think about it is rather than say, "What should I build?" everybody needs to learn the tools that I can use to build. That's the role that we're playing. We think that's a very big growth market, which is why we're sort of accelerating the kinds of classes that we're teaching. Honestly, the relationship that we now announced with Woolf is also a very big opportunity going forward. It's very early to be able to size it. This is the first time Chegg is going to be offering courses through a partner where our courses can count towards a degree. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:20:58And so you can imagine the demand from students about wanting to have courses that they can take that also contribute to their college degree, where they can put on their resumes, that they actually understand how to use the tools around AI. And so these are all really fun and interesting and high-growth areas for us. Ryan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & Company00:21:17Awesome. Thanks for taking my questions. Dan RosensweigPresident and CEO at Chegg00:21:19Thanks for asking them, and thanks for covering us. We appreciate it. A lot of small companies don't get that kind of coverage, so we're grateful. Operator00:21:28Thank you. We have reached the end of the question-and-answer session, and this also concludes today's conference call. We do thank you for your participation, and we may now disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you.Read moreParticipantsExecutivesDan RosensweigPresident and CEODavid LongoCFOTracey FordVP of Investor RelationsAnalystsBryan SmilekVP at JPMorganRyan MacDonaldSenior Analyst at Needham & CompanyPowered by