Extreme Networks, Inc. (NASDAQ:EXTR) Q3 2023 Earnings Call Transcript April 26, 2023
Extreme Networks, Inc. beats earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.29, expectations were $0.26.
Operator: Good day and welcome to the Extreme Networks Q3 Fiscal Year 2023 Financial Results Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. . Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker, Mr. Stan Kovler. Please go ahead.
Stan Kovler: Thank you, operator. And good morning, everybody. Welcome to the Extreme Networks third fiscal quarter 2023 earnings conference call. Thank you all for your patience. We were experiencing some technical issues with the webcast that have been resolved now. So, everyone is able to join. I lead investor relations and corporate strategy. With me today are Extreme Networks’ President and CEO, Ed Meyercord, and Interim CFO, Cristina Tate. We just distributed a press release and filed an 8-K detailing Extreme Networks’ financial results for the quarter and earlier this week filed an 8-K announcing our new CFO. For your convenience, a copy of the press release, which includes our GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliations, is available in the Investor Relations section of our website at extremenetworks.com along with our presentation, which should be up right now.
There’s a link. I would like to remind you that, during today’s call, our discussion may include forward-looking statements about Extreme’s future business, financial and operational results, growth expectations and strategies. Our financial disclosures on this call will be made on a non-GAAP basis, unless stated otherwise. We caution you not to put undue reliance on these forward-looking statements as they involve risks and uncertainties that can cause actual results to differ materially from those anticipated by these statements, as described by our risk factors in our 10-K report for the period ended June 30, 2022 filed with the SEC. Any forward-looking statements made on this call reflect our analysis as of today and we have no plans or duty to update them except as required by law.
Now, I will turn the call over to Extreme’s President and CEO, Ed Meyercord.
Ed Meyercord: Thank you, Stan. And thank you all for joining us this morning. Extreme delivered another quarter of record results, driven by solid execution of our teams. Our top line performance was highlighted by improvements in our supply chain that drove 16% total revenue growth and 22% product revenue growth on a year-over-year basis. We achieved double-digit growth in eight of the past nine quarters. Our operating margin and EBITDA also achieved quarterly records in Q3. Product orders grew 6% sequentially and orders from new customers grew 20% during this timeframe. This is the second consecutive quarter where new logos are playing a substantial role in our growth. We believe demand trends will continue as customers recognize the simplicity of our one network, one cloud solutions relative to the complexity and total cost of ownership of our largest competitors.
Although our Q3 bookings typically declined sequentially in the March quarter, we in fact grew from December, reflecting strong demand. With our funnel of opportunities remaining robust, we expect more normal seasonality and higher sequential growth in Q4. We expect total revenue growth to accelerate to over 20% from the prior year based on improved product availability. And we’re reiterating our long-term growth outlook in the mid-teens through fiscal 2025 based on confidence in our ability to take market share, given the size of our market, where small share gains have a big impact on our growth rate. For the first time, Extreme’s non-GAAP operating margin surpassed the 15% mark, and we achieved EPS of $0.29 cents in Q3, up from $0.27 in Q2 and from $0.21 in the year ago quarter.
We expect these bottom line earnings trends to continue and for earnings to grow faster than revenues over the long term, given increasing gross margins and operating leverage. Demand is being driven by the execution of our field teams, our strategic partners, and a competitive differentiation of our solutions. We’re the only networking vendor that has flexible universal hardware and combines cloud choice with best-in-class automation, the most widely deployed fabric and the industry’s simplest licensing model. Our end-to-end solutions operationalized3 from one cloud makes it easy to manage the entire enterprise network. We offer visibility, access control security, machine learning and AI across wired, wireless and SD-WAN infrastructure via single cloud.
The evidence of our success can be seen in marquee new logo and large global deals with brands such as Kroger, Cedar Fair, Blingo , Ahold and others. We’re gaining share across our key verticals driven by our competitive differentiation. For example, in E-Rate, we grew faster than the market and we gained share, most notably against our largest competitors. During the quarter, bookings from customers who spent more than a million dollars with Extreme were the highest in our history. Given the strength of our solutions and our elevated profile with strategic partners, we’re being invited to compete for larger projects, and we’re winning more. We expect these trends to continue. Some top wins for the quarter including Kroger, one of the largest US grocers with 2,800 stores across the country.
This deployment will become the world’s largest cloud managed network, with more than 110,000 access points managed via ExtremeCloud. With Wi-Fi 6E, Kroger will benefit from faster speeds, lower latency and more security across its entire network. Our technology will help Kroger drive energy savings, improve the shopper experience, streamline operations, and drive business transformation initiatives to create their store the future. Our success in retail also extended into Europe, where Ahold Albert Heijn, a global supermarket chain with stores across 10 countries serving 60 million shoppers a week, chose Extreme for its cloud driven wireless deployment and our CoPilot AI/ML insights available in ExtremeCloud. In the Middle East, we won one of the largest health care providers in Saudi Arabia.
Extreme and a partner deployed a secure end-to-end n fabric enabled network at two new hospitals. The new state-of-the-art facilities will rely on Extreme to support and secure a wide range of new digital services. Cedar Fair, owner and operator of 15 amusement parks, five hotels across North America, selected Extreme to deploy Wi-Fi 6E ready networks across its properties to provide high speed connectivity and bandwidth for operational needs like digital signage, cashless payments, and guest device connectivity. Catawba College in North Carolina will leverage machine learning and AI featured in CoPilot to proactively detect network anomalies, improve network performance, reduce time consuming tasks for the IT team and streamline operations.
Catawba will also offer Extreme Academy as part of its computer science curriculum. In the venue space, we had continued success with sports franchises and won Amica Mutual arena in Rhode Island and Prudential Arena in New Jersey, home of the New Jersey Devils. This quarter, we were able to bring our lead times down faster than expected in Q3, putting us in a healthier position. The actions we have taken with our supply chain over the past year give us greater visibility and confidence that the consistently quarter ramp up of our product deliveries and revenue will continue. We expect our backlog will normalize to a range of $75 million to $100 million in our Q1 fiscal 2025. Our exposure to the fastest growing areas of the networking market, our share gains and expanding go-to-market partnerships provide ample growth opportunities to drive double-digit bookings growth.
We will also expand our subscription business to our entire hardware portfolio in fiscal 2024. We are forecasting market share gains with large, targeted partners, leveraging the strength of our existing integrated solutions and our core market verticals, and have new partnerships with Comcast and new go-to-market motions with Verizon, for example. Additionally, since we established a more strategic relationship with one particularly large US-based reseller, our E-Rate awards grew 100% year-over-year with total bids submitted on behalf of Extreme by this reseller up 50% despite softness in the market. We will build on this and these other relationships as we enter fiscal 2024. As we look forward to the next quarter, I’m excited about our incoming CFO, Kevin Rhodes, who starts on May 30 and brings a wealth of experience from several successful SaaS companies.
Kevin has a great track record of delivering operational and financial excellence with a clear focus on shareholder value. Last quarter, I asked Cristina Tate to step into the role of Interim CFO and she has executed flawlessly. Thank you, Cristina. I will move forward to her partnership continuing with Kevin to drive our financial strategy and take Extreme to the next level. And with that, I will turn the call over to Cristina.
Cristina Tate : Thanks, Ed. Q3 financial results reflect record revenue, operating margin and EBITDA, driven by increased product availability. We were also able to pay down $25 million in debt and repurchase $25 million worth of our shares, leaving net debt at just $34 million. The strong execution of our teams drove 29% growth in new SaaS bookings and our SaaS ARR continued to rise. We are confident in our Q4 and FY 2023 outlook and reiterate our commitment to mid-teens long term growth through fiscal year 2025. Our third quarter revenue of $332.5 million grew 16% year-over-year and 4% quarter-over-quarter, exceeding the high end of our expectations entering the quarter. Product revenue accelerated to 22% growth year-over-year and 8% sequentially, attributable to both campus switching and wireless LAN, partially offset by a decline in data center.
New subscription bookings grew by 29% year-over-year. SaaS ARR grew 22% year-over-year to $117 million, up from $96 million in the year-ago quarter. Subscription deferred revenue was up 39% year-over-year to $199 million. Revenue on a geographic basis once again reflects the timing of product shipments to our distributors across the regions. Regarding our bookings performance, as Ed mentioned, product bookings grew 6% sequentially, and we continue to expect sequential bookings growth into Q4 as well. The supply chain environment is improving significantly and lead times are coming down faster than we expected. During Q3, our direct customer order backlog did remain flat. With product shipment lead times coming down, our distributors are adjusting their stocking orders to align with delivery timing.
At the end of Q3, our backlog represented 5 times our expected normalized level. We continue to expect the normalized level of backlog to be in the range of $75 million to $100 million by Q1 fiscal year 2025. Although distributor backlog is releasing at an accelerated pace, our scenario based planning gives us confidence to reiterate our long term guidance of mid-teens revenue growth and gross margin in the range of 64 to 66% through fiscal 2025. From a vertical standpoint, our largest vertical remains government and education at over 35% of total bookings this quarter. The large wins in the retail sector increased the retail, transportation and logistics vertical mix to 15% of bookings. Manufacturing remained around 10%, while sports and entertainment grew to slightly less than 10% of bookings.
Services and subscription revenue was $91.4 million, up 5% year-over-year. This growth was largely driven by the strength of cloud subscription revenue, up 30% year-over-year. Total Q3 recurring revenue, including maintenance, managed services and subscriptions, was at $87 million or 26% of total company revenue. The growth of cloud subscriptions and maintenance drove the total deferred revenue to $464 million, up 25% from the year ago quarter and 4% sequentially. Our gross margin came in at 59.1%, up 60 basis points sequentially and 110 basis points from the year ago quarter. This was attributable to improvements in both our product gross margin and services gross margin. Product gross margin benefited from higher revenue and an improvement in supply chain and distribution costs as well as product mix.
Our services and subscription gross margin was at 67.3% in Q3, up 30 basis points from the prior quarter and 2.2 percentage points from last year due to lower managed services and RMA costs based on better product quality. Q3 operating expenses were $144 million, up from $130 million in the year-ago quarter and from $139 million in Q2 2023, reflecting higher R&D investment and sales and marketing expenses to support higher revenue growth. Total operating expense as a percentage of revenue was 43.4%, down 30 basis points versus last quarter and down 2.1 percentage points compared to last year as we continue to drive operating leverage in the business. The combination of strong revenue growth, gross margin expansion and operating leverage contributed to achieving a record operating margin of 15.6%, up from 12.5% in the year ago quarter and from 14.9% in Q2.
Q3 earnings per share were $0.29 at the high end of our guidance entering the quarter. This quarter, we generated free cash flow of $45.8 million, driven by record EBITDA as well as a sequential two-day improvement in our cash conversion cycle to 22 days. Now turning to guidance. We remain confident in the revenue outlook for Q4 as supported by our strong funnel of opportunities, our product backlog and our services and subscription deferred revenue balance. As products get delivered to customers and networks are installed, this should drive subscription and services bookings and billings that in many cases have been deferred or delayed until products are delivered to match service terms. We continue to expect that the reduction in expedite fees and shipping costs combined with the full impact of our recent pricing actions will lead to a continued recovery in gross margin in Q4 and into fiscal year 2024.
Against this backdrop, we expect for Q4 revenue to be in the range of $340 million to $350 million, gross margin to be in the range of 59% to 61%, operating margin to be in the range of 15.5% to 17.3%, and earnings to be in the range of $0.28 to $0.34 per diluted share. For full fiscal year 2023, we expect revenue growth of 16% at the midpoint with an operating margin of around 15%. With that, I will now turn it over to the operator to begin the question-and-answer session.
Q&A Session
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Operator: . Our first question will come from the line of Mike Genovese with Rosenblatt Securities.
Mike Genovese: I guess I have to ask you about the just the distributor backlog change, if you could give us more color on that. I guess from the numbers you guys gave on calculating that, backlog maybe went down about $100 million quarter-over-quarter? And I guess one question is, is all of that is going to be in revenue this quarter, next quarter, the quarter after or can some of that actually sort of “go away.”
Ed Meyercord: Mike, let me jump in. And then Cristina feel free to follow. There’s a distributor component of backlog and then there’s the customer order component. And as we said, the customer order component of backlog did not change during the quarter. But the distributor ordering is driven by lead times and lead times came in faster than we expected this quarter, which that occurrence is good news because it means that the market is getting healthier and we’re able to deliver products to customers sooner. At the same time, it means that our distributors will adjust their orders accordingly. And the early ordering that we had experienced earlier would effectively go away and older orders would be adjusted effectively and modified to the shorter lead time.
So, what we’re doing is we’re trying to focus people, Mike, on our revenue outlook and we’re confirming the mid-teens revenue growth through our fiscal 2025 and with a new target point of $75 million to $100 million in ending backlog. We think that distributors going forward are going to have – they’ll keep more orders on us and they’ll have more inventory on hand, so they don’t get caught the way they got caught this last cycle. So what we want people to do is focus on that $75 million to 100 million and then that would be a landing point for backlog, and then focus on what we’re calling is going to be this mid-teens revenue growth rate through fiscal 2025. Cristina, I don’t know if you want to add anything to that.
Cristina Tate: I would just add that, as we went through this constrained supply chain environment, the days the distributors were on order with us was elevated. And as lead times come down, as Ed mentioned, the whole environment is getting normalized, and so the distributor orders and the backlog is coming to that normalized level of $75 million to $100 million. And we expect that to get to that level at around Q1 2025. And as Ed said, our scenario based planning gives us commitment and confidence in the guidance that we gave.
Mike Genovese: Clearly, when I do look at the growth rate for this year and what you’re projecting for the next couple of years, we don’t see anything sort of macro negative here. And so, I was wondering if you believe that’s more of a function of healthy trends in the verticals that you play in and it’d be great if you could sort of go through some of those verticals and sort of rank what you’re seeing. Or is it a function of share gains? Or how do you see your success as what’s the main driver there?
Ed Meyercord: Mike, I think you hit on all three. First of all, we’re playing in – we mentioned and I think Cristina reviewed our verticals and how we’re doing in terms of our government accounts internationally and state and local governments in education. Retail was particularly strong for us this quarter. Obviously, when you get huge wins like Kroger, that has an effect on mix. Manufacturing remains strong. Overall, enterprise spending and networking has been pretty resilient. And I think when you do market checks with some of the larger distributors and some of the resellers out there, I think they’ll tell you that networking is probably one of the more resilient categories. The other one is, obviously, we’re taking share, and we’re taking share in terms of our batting average and winning competitive processes, Kroger being a great example.
And then also, we also mentioned an E-Rate win where we have a very large channel reseller, very well-known out in the market, that’s doubling down on Extreme. So they grew their E-Rate bids with Extreme by 100%. And then we won a 50% more. So, even in a E-Rate market that was considered to be somewhat soft this year, with that channel partner we saw 50% growth. So we have opportunities to grow with our partners. As I mentioned, our funnel looks very healthy and our batting average continues to hold up. We’re performing well because of competitive differentiation. And I think, overall, where we play in the enterprise market is pretty resilient.
Mike Genovese: If I just do one final, quick follow-up. Should we just assume that in the future that we won’t see the backlog and the book-to-bill in the quarterly presentation? So is that a change going forward?
Ed Meyercord: Yeah, I think what we’ll do is we’ll let you know how we’re trending towards that end goal.
Mike Genovese: Congratulations on a great outlook.
Operator: One moment for our next question. And that will come from the line of Alex Henderson with Needham.
Alex Henderson: Obviously, a very nice quarter, a nice print. The only thing that surprised me was that inventory actually went up. I was expecting, as supply improves, that inventory might go down and create additional cash flow. Obviously, you had excellent cash flow in the quarter, but inventory went up. Can you give us a sense of the timing of when you expect inventory to start to normalize and come back in and when that cash generation will occur?
Ed Meyercord: At a high level, Alex, we’re shipping out a lot more product and we’re expecting our product shipments to increase. So, I think you’ll expect to see that build is, is we’re building inventory to support shipments of more product. But let me have Cristina jump in.
Cristina Tate: Inventory was actually unnaturally low during the supply chain constrained environment. And so, the fact that our inventory is increasing is another sign that the supply chain environment is improving, raw material is flowing, finished goods. We’re building our finished goods to be able to ship out. So there is an element of timing to this as well. But we do actually expect inventory to keep going up for the next few quarters as the product flows and then we’ll get to normalized level. I’ll just say, just reiterate again that the levels we were seeing were not natural and we’re getting to a more normalized level of inventory internally as well.
Alex Henderson: Looking at the subscription business, the SaaS particularly, the mechanics of a high growth in SaaS subscription generally creates a reduction in realized revenue in the period that those contracts happen. If that had been a direct product order instead of a SaaS order, obviously, you would have ended up with higher revenues on the upfront sales instead of just the small portion of the SaaS subscription. So can you give us a sense of what the reduction in the contribution to growth is as a result of the high rate of success in your SaaS business?
Cristina Tate: We’re not seeing a high level of cannibalization. So, we had a very – I would call pretty low upfront software business that has been trending down over time, but it was not significant or material. And so, the subscription growth is not cannibalizing from that or from our product sales.
Alex Henderson: Well, it’s not cannibalizing, but it’s not being recognized in the current period. It’s being deferred into future periods because of the mechanics of SaaS. Whereas normally, if you sold the product, the same amount of product that you sign in a SaaS subscription, you would get more upfront and less in the future periods. So almost by definition, if you signed something on March 31, you get no revenues in the quarter, whereas if it was purchased, you would have the entire revenue. So clearly, it has to reduce the recognition of revenue.
Cristina Tate: Sure. As the mix of our revenue shifts to more recurring revenue, such as SaaS and subscription, absolutely, that is going to happen because we booked the contract, it may be a single year contract or a multi-year contract, but we recognize that revenue over time. So, yes, as our overall mix shifts, that phenomenon will be definitely there. I thought you were saying that it was actually reducing some other part of our business.
Alex Henderson: The recognition timing of it.
Cristina Tate: Yes, agree.
Alex Henderson: If it had been straight product sales, how much additional revenue growth would have been in the quarter?
Ed Meyercord: I don’t know if we have that answer.
Cristina Tate: Yeah, I don’t have that answer.
Ed Meyercord: Maybe we can take it offline and come back and dig in a little deeper. One of the things that Cristina mentioned earlier is that, because of backlog, we do have a lot of subscription, as well as service and maintenance tied up in that backlog. And then as that releases, we are expecting to see an acceleration in that growth rate. The other thing that I mentioned is that we’re doing a lot of work, so that we can effectively sell subscriptions on all of our hardware, which we don’t have today. And that that will also create a really nice growth wave in addition to some of the other – the packaging and the services that we’re putting together with some of our partners.
Alex Henderson: One last question. The universal product is making progress. I’m assuming that that’s increasing as a percentage of revenues. There’s gross margin benefit as that increases as a percentage of shipped product. And you additionally have a lot of supply chain costs that you’ve been absorbing as a result of inflated the logistics and parts costs. When we exit this year, how much is left of that cost to normalize in 2024/2025?
Cristina Tate: Our expectation for gross margin, we’re reiterating our long term guidance of 64% to 66% by the end of FY 2025. So that gives you a sense of how much left. We’re at 59.1% in Q3, we’re guiding a midpoint of 60% in Q4, and then we expect to see that step improvement to the 64% to 66% range by the end of FY 2025.
Alex Henderson: So 400 basis points to 500 basis points of margin that’s caught up in those two variables.
Cristina Tate: Both in supply chain costs as well as improvement in gross margin as well as the mix, seeing the subscription, higher margin subscription revenue, and our mix will also contribute to that margin expansion.
Operator: One moment for our next question. And that will come from the line of Dave Kang with B. Riley.
Dave Kang: My first question is regarding gross margins. So, you’ve provided 60% for fiscal fourth quarter and then you’re guiding to 65% for fiscal 2025. For fiscal 2024, should we think about gross margin sort of like – is it going to be like a linear ramp from fourth quarter to fiscal 2025?
Cristina Tate: Exactly. Similar to what we communicated last quarter. No change in that guidance that we expect to see about a half a point to a point of improvement each quarter sequentially as we head through FY 2024.
Dave Kang: On your universal platform, can you give us an update? When should we expect full 100% universal?
Ed Meyercord: We will be completing the build out of our universal platform over the course of this year. So we’re excited about that. And then the adoption of our universal platforms has been incredibly high. So we would expect 90% by the end of the year. It’s been our most popular seller in terms of the adoption. So the universal platforms have been our most successful product releases. The other thing I’ll say is that the quality of universal has been significantly higher than any other product we’ve had in our history. So as it relates to operational support, it’s been a very popular product.
Dave Kang: If I remember correctly, I believe you mentioned something about expecting an uptake once that happens. Can you kind of quantify the situation? So I guess you’re talking about next year? So should we expect some kind of a new uptick in orders or demand because of that?
Ed Meyercord: Well, it’s helpful. I’d say it’s part of our solution. If you recall, universal hardware is the most flexible hardware in the market in the enterprise space because you can run different personalities when you combine that universal hardware with management and the features of our cloud and the cloud choice we bring. And then you combine that with our unique fabric technology, we’re able to build solutions in the market that are better differentiated end-to-end, wired, wireless, across the wireless LAN in terms of our SD-WAN solution. So it creates a lot of flexibility. It provides simplicity and it provides choice. And yeah, that’s absolutely a contributor on the demand side. When we look at this linear growth in our gross margin, we factored in the adoption of universal platforms into that equation. Cristina, I don’t know if you want to add anything to that from a gross margin perspective.
Cristina Tate: No, just reiterate what you said. It’s built into our outlook.
Dave Kang: My last question is, should we still expect subscription revenue CAGR to be 35% to 45%?
Cristina Tate: Yes, we’re confirming our long term guidance. Yep.
Operator: One moment for our next question. And that will come from the line of Paul Silverstein with Cowen.
Paul Silverstein: It sounds like the demand you’re describing is broad based. But I’ve got to ask, how much of the strength is specific to education and government? It sounds like that was extremely strong from your comments.
Ed Meyercord: Paul, we had an incredibly large number of million dollar plus deals in education. And I’d say that, in that vertical, we are doing very well with the channel and partner community. I gave an E-Rate example where, even in a kind of a soft E-Rate climate, we have partner adoption, which is driving up our share in that market. We also have big wins this quarter, for example, Palm Beach County Schools, $6.5 million win. We’re getting into the larger deals and we’re winning more larger deals, and I think the channel community is realizing that they can get out and win with Extreme, quite frankly, we have a differentiated solution. What’s interesting is that because of our success and some of the even larger wins in the retail verticals and then sports verticals, it was actually down.
The math, normally, we talk about 40%, state/local government education, and in this quarter, it was down to 35%. We ticked up to 15% in retail. The other verticals kind of held in there. So it remains strong. And from our standpoint, we are seeing larger opportunities. We’re winning larger opportunities. And that’s part of the share gains story, which is why we talk about large crumbs and the opportunity for us to take small share points and it has a big impact on our bookings and, overall, our long term revenue target.
Paul Silverstein: Just to be clear, the question I’m trying to get at, just to be clear, the strength you’re describing is broad based. When you look at your order book, your funnel, your revenue, that’s not primarily or exclusively about that public sector and education vertical that’s been 35% to 40% of revenue. It’s throughout your customer base. I just want to make sure…
Ed Meyercord: That’s correct. That’s a correct statement. And the other point I’m trying to make is that there’s partner penetration. One of the things that we talked about, we have Comcast as a new partner of Extreme, pretty large company, they do a lot of business. We won Cedar Fair, $8 million plus deal with a new relationship with a partner like Comcast. Verizon, we’re now certified in Verizon’s portfolio, and we’re working directly with their enterprise sellers. Well, this is new. So we’re opening up. And this is another large channel partner, and they’re excited about our solution and bringing Extreme to market. So with some of these larger partners now, we have what are new growth opportunities with the same portfolio product. So from that standpoint, it is broad based. We will see overall enterprise growth. And then we would expect to see this growth happen really littered across all of our verticals.
Operator: One moment for our next question. That will come from the line of Eric Martinuzzi with Lake Street Capital.
Eric Martinuzzi: Yeah, understand the R&D spending is up. I know you guys have Extreme Connect coming up here in a couple of weeks, just where are we pointing those R&D dollars at? Are these kind of evolutionary enhancements to the existing products? Or can we see some expansion in the breadth of where you’re headed with the product portfolio?
Ed Meyercord: A lot of what we’re doing is investing in our existing platforms and developing the completion of our universal platforms, further development of our wireless platforms, and we’re investing a lot obviously in cloud and the kinds of features that we can orchestrate over cloud. Historically, we’ve had a NAC product, which is effectively access control and security in the network. We’re cloudifying that solution, and we’ll be adding that into our offerings. The other thing that we’re doing is we’re packaging our complete solutions for new channel partners to provide managed services. In our space, managed services are on the rise, but it’s commercially really complicated. And you hear us talk about simplicity, we’re bringing simplicity to a market that’s complicated.
And we think we have a real differentiator with our managed services solutions portfolio. And this is taking effectively the existing products and our cloud and services that we have that we’re developing and packaging it in a very simple licensing framework that’s generated a lot of interest in the marketplace. So, this is an area where we expect to take share. And effectively, what we’re doing is we’ll be supporting a managed service. So, yeah, that will be coming out at Connect. And then finally, edge cloud, there’s a lot of conversation about edge cloud. There will be a reveal at Connect, where, because of the way we’re developing our platform, and it’s really around cloud choice. No enterprise customer or supplier in the networking industry is able to offer the kind of choice that we can provide and choice has to do with public cloud versus private cloud versus what goes to data center versus kind of what stays on campus.
We’re going to be able to provide more flexibility than anyone as companies are wrestling with this. And so, there will be a reveal around Extreme edge cloud and where data resides in enterprise networks that I think will be further differentiation for Extreme. So these are areas that we’re investing in. And quite frankly, there’s a lot of interest in the market, particularly with large partners for these kinds of solutions.
Operator: One moment for our next question. That will come from the line of Greg Mesniaeff with West Park Capital.
Greg Mesniaeff: I have a question for you regarding your network security offerings. As you continue to move upstream into subscription-based, cloud-based services, what kind of next gen network security products – or services, rather, are you going to be offering? And in doing so, can you sort of deliberately encroach on the turf of some of the network security vendors that you’re working with right now?
Ed Meyercord: Security in our industry is pretty complicated. There’s a lot of different layers. People make the analogy of the layers of the onion to describe all the different elements. One of the big differentiators that we have in our solution set today is our fabric and our fabric technology that has inherent security built in, and then the idea that we can extend that security out across the wide area network with our SD-WAN solution is truly unique in the marketplace and brings a level of security that’s just inherent in the network. So one of the things that we can do with that is effectively provide inherent security as opposed to an over the top solution, which brings a lot of simplicity again, and likely savings. Remember, we also have air defense, which is one of the leading Wi-Fi security solutions that’s out in the marketplace.
Obviously, this is something that’s critical and winning something like a Kroger or these distributed networks. And that also is an element of our offer. And I referenced earlier, network access control and policy and identity management around who is accessing the network and access security. And we are taking what is very mature and proven technology and we’re cloudifying this. And once again, we will have an access control security element that will be inherent and built into the network which will be differentiated. So we will be in a position to compete and we think attract a lot of interest by simplifying these security elements into a single solution within a single license that we believe will be disruptive in the marketplace.
Operator: One moment for our next question. And that will come from the line of Christian Schwab with Craig-Hallum.
Christian Schwab: As we look at the backlog which we discussed looked to be down roughly $100 million due to adjustments in distributor orders, can you tell us what percentage of the backlog that’s left is deferred revenue customer orders or distributors still?
Ed Meyercord: What we’ve said it’s that the overall backlog is about 5x. Obviously, distributor behavior is a little more tied to lead times, and lead times came down faster. We’re expecting them to come down. So we really don’t want to get into sort of dissecting backlog. Really what we want to do is reinforce our outlook of revenue growth. And we’re doing that out through our fiscal 2025, which is out there. And so, we baked that into our revenue guide. And that’s where we’re trying to focus everyone.
Christian Schwab: What you guys are doing then, I guess my second question is, you look at your scenario based planning over the next two-and-a-half, three years, what do you expect the industry growth rate for the verticals you serve to be growing at, how much market share gain are you assuming in that growth rate over that timeframe? And then what percentage is your catch-up orders from backlog that couldn’t be shipped during COVID? Is that how you guys look at it or maybe you could explain…?
Ed Meyercord: We have to factor in the industry. We’re obviously factoring a backlog run-off. And then we’re also looking at share gains. So I would say the overall industry, we see this kind of mid-single digit growth in the overall industry. When you look at the release of backlog, as I mentioned before, we’re expecting our distributors to have more on order with us in the future than they did in the past because if we go back to pre-supply chain issues, it was very much a just-in-time model. And that, obviously, put a lot of risk on their business. So this is where we landed at that $75 million to $100 million number. So in your model, you should think about $75 million to $100 million of backlog as kind of the ending point in our Q1 fiscal 2025.
So that’s where we see that. And then, we have share gains. I know earlier in your report, you mentioned a large reseller that the outlook was down. In our case, with those kinds of resellers, because of their size, small share points create big opportunities. And we mentioned one of those resellers where literally in kind of a soft E-Rate market, we’re up 50%. So these are the kinds of things that we can do at Extreme because of our relative size. And it gives us a growth advantage, if you will. Some of these other larger partners I mentioned, when you open up a Comcast, when you open up a Verizon, when you open up some of these larger managed services partners, we open up the door for growth opportunities where, quite frankly, we haven’t played and the growth opportunities are quite large.
So, a point of market share is over 20% growth on top of the market. So it doesn’t take a lot of share gains for Extreme to outgrow the market and then for us to get to that that mid-teens number.
Operator: Thank you. And I’m showing no further questions in the queue at this time. I would now like to turn the call back over to Extreme Networks CEO, Mr. Ed Meyercord.
Ed Meyercord: Thanks, Sherrie. And thanks, everyone, for joining the call. Obviously, we’re excited about the quarter and the performance. We had a lot of records. I want to shout out to the Extreme employees, our partner community, everyone that joined in on these calls because we have a lot of momentum right now. And we say there’s never been a better time to be at Extreme. The competitive differentiation is there and it’s fun to be winning in the marketplace. So shout out to those teams. And then also investors for your continued participation and interest in the company. We’re holding on to a very strong guide in terms of top line growth and margin expansion, both with the gross margin line and then operating leverage down in the bottom line. So, we appreciate your interest in Extreme and we’re quite confident about the quarters to come. So thanks, everyone. And have a great day.
Operator: Thank you all for participating. This concludes today’s program. You may now disconnect.