AudioEye, Inc. (NASDAQ:AEYE) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript November 4, 2023
Operator: Good afternoon and welcome to AudioEye’s Third Quarter 2023 Earnings Conference Call. Joining us for today’s call are AudioEye’s CEO, Mr. David Moradi; and CFO, Ms. Kelly Georgevich. Following their remarks, we will open the call for questions from the Company publishing analysts. I would like to remind everyone that this call will be recorded and made available for replay via a link available in the Investor Relations section of the Company’s website at www.audioeye.com. Before I turn the call over to AudioEye’s Chief Executive Officer, the Company would like to remind all participants that statements made by AudioEye management during the course of this conference call that are not historical facts are considered to be forward-looking statements.
The Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 provides a safe harbor for such forward-looking statements. The words believe, expect, anticipate, estimate, confident, will; and other similar statements of expectation identify forward-looking statements. These statements are predictions, projections or other statements about future events; and are based on current expectations and assumptions that are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual results could materially differ because of factors discussed in today’s press release; in the comments made during this conference call; and in the Risk Factors section of the Company’s annual report on Form 10-K, its quarterly reports on Form 10-Q and its other reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
Participants on this call are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements, which reflect management’s beliefs only as of the date hereof. AudioEye does not undertake any duty to update or correct any forward-looking statements. Further, management’s remarks today will include certain non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of the most directly comparable GAAP financial measures to these non-GAAP financial measures is available in the Company’s earnings release posted in the Investor Relations section of its website at www.audioeye.com. Now I would like to turn the call over to AudioEye’s Chief Executive Officer, Mr. David Moradi. Sir, please proceed.
David Moradi: Thank you, operator. Welcome, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We’ve been hard at work and are pleased to deliver several exciting announcements: first, record annual recurring revenue or ARR of $30.5 million, an increase of approximately $800,000 sequentially, representing the largest sequential growth in six quarters; second, revenue of $7.84 million, representing the 31st sequential quarter of record revenue; record reported non-GAAP profitability of $300,000 in the third quarter, ahead of expectations of $100,000. Lastly, we remain on track to deliver positive free cash flow in the fourth quarter. Kelly will discuss the financial performance in more detail shortly. During the quarter, we released the industry’s first digital accessibility index report.
The results confirmed that traditional consulting approaches to solving web accessibility have failed and that mostly Internet remains inaccessible for those with disability. As part of the study, AudioEye conducted an automated scan of over 2 million pages across 40,000 websites from companies with over $100 million in annual revenue. More than 3 billion site-specific elements were tested, including images, links and headers. Following the scan, accessibility experts, including members of the disability community, audited the top sites in each industry, revealing which issues are most disruptive to users. Of the 3 billion website elements tested, the findings concluded every page had at least one accessibility error. And the average page had 37 items that failed one of the success criteria of WCAG.
Our study found that the most frequent barriers were related to image accessibility, descriptive links and keyboard accessibility, which significantly impacts people with a disability in the world trying to utilize the Internet. The barriers found were significant: preventing people with disabilities from accomplishing critical tasks that many of us regularly depend on such as online shopping, banking, news archives and job-related activities. AudioEye has the best product in the market to solve digital accessibility at scale, utilizing a unique combination of AI coupled with a scalable approach to leverage human-assisted technology to catch errors that technology alone cannot detect. Recently, we also shared findings from an analysis of over 900 legal claims from over 100 lawsuits and demand letters.
The data is compelling. Customers using AudioEye managed plans are 67% less likely to receive a lawsuit with a valid WCAG issue compared to competitors, offering the highest rates of protection against legal claims in the industry. In addition, while digital accessibility lawsuits increased year-over-year, lawsuits against AudioEye customers are decreasing. In the first half of 2023, lawsuits against AudioEye customers decreased by over 33% compared to the first half of ’22 despite an increase in industry-wide lawsuits. Moving on to guidance. We are guiding revenues between $7.9 million and $8 million for the fourth quarter of 2023. Fourth quarter will see the final sequential impacts of onetime revenue from the BoIA integration. We expect to generate a sequential increase in non-GAAP profitability in the fourth quarter and remain on track to deliver free cash flow in the quarter.
I’ll now turn the call over to AudioEye’s CFO. Kelly?
Kelly Georgevich: Thank you, David. Q3 2023 marks the 31st straight quarter of record revenue with $7.84 million, which represents 2% growth over the comparable period of prior year. Annual recurring revenue or ARR at the end of the third quarter of 2023 was $30.5 million, an $800,000 increase from ARR at the end of the second quarter of 2023 and represents an ARR annualized growth rate of 10.8%. We were pleased to see ARR grow at its highest rate in 1.5 years. Our two revenue channels are continuing to deliver solid performance. The Partner and Marketplace channel includes all revenue from our SMB-focused marketplace products and revenue from a variety of partners to deploy these same products for their SMB customers. In the third quarter of 2023, this revenue channel grew 14% year-over-year and represented approximately 59% of revenue and 61% of ARR.
Q3 2023 saw the highest growth in ARR for the Partner and Marketplace channel since Q4 of 2020, with growth coming from a variety of sources within this channel. We expect this momentum to continue in the next quarter. Our Enterprise revenue channel, which [typically consists] of our larger customers and organizations, made up 41% of revenue and 39% of ARR in the third quarter of 2023. As mentioned previously, this channel faced additional headwinds in the first half of 2023, with one large customer contract renegotiations having an impact on total Enterprise revenue which we expect to normalize in the first half of 2024. We have seen early success in the integration of BoIA and selling existing customers an expanded suite of services, so as expected, the conversion of onetime audit revenue to recurring services did have an approximately $200,000 impact to Q3’s 2023 revenue.
Our Q4 revenue guidance incorporates a lesser impact to complete this process. The total customer count increased notably in Q3 2023 to approximately 107,000 customers from approximately 81,000 customers on September 30, 2022, and 104,000 customers on June 30, 2023. Increase in the customer count was the result of customer additions in our Partner and Marketplace channel. Gross profit for the third quarter was $6.1 million or about 77% of revenue compared to $5.8 million and 75% of revenue in Q3 of last year. We continue to gain efficiency in the delivering of our products and services, which has resulted in lower cost of revenue while revenues increased. While revenues were relatively consistent with the comparable period of prior year with 2% growth, operating expenses decreased approximately 8% or $600,000 to $7.4 million.
This decrease was the result of continued efficiencies in sales and marketing and G&A, offset by continued investments in R&D. Our total R&D spend in Q3 2023 was approximately $2.4 million, with approximately $500,000 reflected as software development costs in the investing section of the cash flow statement. The total R&D spend is about 31% of our revenue this quarter versus 33% sequentially. We have invested notably in R&D over the last 12 months, improving our software and adding new products. We expect R&D investment as a percent of revenue to continue coming down over the next few quarters. Net loss in the third quarter of 2023 was $1.4 million or $0.11 per share compared to $2.3 million or $0.20 per share in the same year ago period. Total net loss decreased 41% or $900,000 from the comparable period of prior year, thanks to an increase in gross profit as well as strategic and efficient spending in all departments.
On a non-GAAP basis, our Q3 net profit was $300,000 or $0.02 per share compared to a net profit of $100,000 and $0.01 per share in the same year ago period. The primary adjustments to GAAP earnings and EPS for Q3 2023 were noncash share-based compensation, depreciation and amortization and other nonrecurring items. Cash decreased by $1 million in the quarter, which was a result of cash outlays for tax payments from employee share-based grants of approximately $100,000, non-GAAP litigation expenses of approximately $100,000, software capitalization of $500,000 and $300,000 of net cash used from other operating activities. As David mentioned, we expect to generate free cash flow and build cash in the fourth quarter. With that, we open up the call for questions.
Operator, please give instructions.
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Q&A Session
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Operator: We will now take questions from the Company’s publishing analysts. [Operator Instructions] Our first question will come from George Sutton with Craig-Hallum.
George Sutton: David, I wondered if you could work for a second with us on the DOJ proposed rule. The comment period ended last month, meaning we should get a final rule in the relative near term. I assume, like us, you were actively reading the comments and have a bit of perspective, so I’m just curious what your perspective would be relative to the final rule. And then separate from that, how are you thinking of positioning the business to benefit from that ultimate rule?
David Moradi: Yes, as you said — it’s a good question. There was a 60-day comment period. We’re really excited about this for Title II. Hopefully, we hear something soon. And we’re ramping up, looking at this for the government sector as well in terms of what we’re going to do on sales and marketing initiatives, but we think we’re going to have some time. Demand probably picks up on this after the rule comes out in one to two years.
George Sutton: Separate from that, you’ve talked about building out your sales team over the last couple of quarters. Can you just give us an update on the go-to-market plans and sort of how that feeds into your expectations for 2024?
David Moradi: You’re talking about the Enterprise sales team, right?
George Sutton: Yes.
David Moradi: Yes. We expect this process to ramp up over the next few months. We just hired these folks back in July, August. So they take about six months to ramp, but we’re seeing really good progress, so far. And pipeline is also building, so that gives us a lot of confidence we’re going to see good growth into 2024.
George Sutton: And I understand you’re not giving guidance yet on ’24, but good growth in 2024, any perspective on what that might look like?
David Moradi: More than ’23, ’23 to ’22.
Operator: Our next question comes from Zach Cummins with B. Riley FBR.
Zach Cummins: Congrats on the sequential increase in the ARR and strong profitability in this quarter. David, just starting off, I mean, can you talk a little bit more about the current environment, just speaking more so to the selling environment on both the Partner and Marketplace side — and obviously Enterprise will take a little more time to ramp up in accordance with your sales team. But just curious on your perspective of the overall environment. And what’s driving your confidence in continued ARR growth?
David Moradi: Yes. The macro environment is a bit tough out there. You’re seeing some tightness on enterprise budgets. People are looking to cut costs, but we are seeing good pipeline growth because of our products and positioning. But there are definitely budget and cost pressures. I’m sure you’re seeing that as well out there in enterprise SaaS.
Zach Cummins: Got it. And in terms of the, I guess, time line to positive free cash flow, good to see that reaffirmed here in Q4. I’m just curious how you’re thinking about the necessary capital to continue to execute upon growth plans moving forward. Say demand really starts to pick up or you execute on the Enterprise side. Just how you’re thinking about available or necessary capital you need to run the business.
Kelly Georgevich: Yes. I can take that, Zach. We do continue to believe that we have sufficient cash on hand to fund ongoing operations. We do expect revenue, with the momentum on the partnership side and expansion on the Enterprise side, to grow and a lot of that to drop to the bottom line. And so we feel good about our cash position and where we stand, especially with the generation expected in Q4 and beyond.
Zach Cummins: Understood. And final question for me is you are now going to have multiple quarters in a row of improving profitability. What’s the approach to investing in growth versus continuing to expand margins here in the foreseeable future?
David Moradi: Yes, it’s a good question. We look at things holistically on the business, decide if we should invest more into sales and marketing, with LTV-to-cap ratios, or more into R&D, but we think that’s coming down. Or we buy back stock with cash generation. That’s a possibility.
Operator: Our next question comes from Scott Buck with H.C. Wainwright.