Kaltura, Inc. (NASDAQ:KLTR) Q4 2023 Earnings Call Transcript February 22, 2024
Kaltura, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $-0.03 EPS, expectations were $-0.02. Kaltura, Inc. isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).
Operator: Good morning, everyone, and welcome to Kaltura Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2023 Earnings Call. All material contained in the webcast is the sole property and copyright of Kaltura with all rights reserved. For opening remarks and introductions, I will now turn the call over to Erica Mannion at Sapphire Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Erica Mannion: Thank you, and good morning. With me today from Kaltura are Ron Yekutiel, Co-Founder, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer; Yaron Garmazi, Chief Financial Officer; and John Doherty, Kaltura’s incoming CFO. Ron will begin with a summary of the results for the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2023, and the company’s plans and expected trends for 2024. Yaron will then review details of the financial results for the fourth quarter and full year of 2023, followed by the company’s outlook for the first quarter and full year of 2024. We will then open the call for questions. Please note that this call will include forward-looking statements within the meaning of the federal securities laws, including, but not limited to, statements regarding Kaltura’s expected future financial results and management’s expectations and plans for the business.
These statements are neither promises nor guarantees and involve risks and uncertainties that may cause actual results to differ materially from those discussed here. Important factors that could cause actual results to differ from forward-looking statements can be found in the Risk Factors section of Kaltura’s quarterly report on Form 10-Q for the quarterly period ended September 30, 2023, and other SEC filings, including the annual report on Form 10-K for the fiscal year ended December 31, 2023, to be filed with the SEC. Any forward-looking statements made in this conference call, including responses to your questions, are based on current expectations as of today, and Kaltura assumes no obligation to update or revise them, whether as a result of new developments or otherwise, except as required by law.
Please note, we will be discussing a non-GAAP financial measure, adjusted EBITDA during this call. For a reconciliation of this non-GAAP financial measure to the most directly comparable GAAP metric, please refer to our earnings release, which is available on the company’s website at www.investors.kaltura.com. Now I will turn the call over to Ron.
Ron Yekutiel: Thank you, Erica, and thank you, everyone, for joining us on the call this morning. Today, we reported total revenue for the fourth quarter of 2023 of $44.5 million, up 1% year-over-year and subscription revenue of $40.8 million, up 3% year-over-year. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $0.8 million. We posted record high total revenues in the fourth quarter, which also marked the fifth consecutive quarter of year-over-year growth. The quarter wrapped up a year where, as we had previously forecasted, we saw increased subscription revenue and growth rates and despite declining professional services revenues, as expected, total revenue growth rates also increased. As for our bottom line, the fourth quarter was also a second consecutive quarter of adjusted EBITDA profitability and a positive cash flow from operations, both for the first time since 2020.
It was also our highest adjusted EBITDA results since the fourth quarter of 2020. This concluded the year with marked bottom line improvements year-over-year, where we posted $2.5 million of adjusted EBITDA losses compared to $28.3 million in the prior year and reduced our cash flow used for operations by $38.5 million from $46.8 million to $8.3 million. As we draw 2023 to a close, we are pleased to have achieved and surpassed our revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance for the year, delivering on our goal of accelerating revenue growth while also returning to adjusted EBITDA profitability in the past two quarters and has forecasted dramatically improving our cash flows. At that end, we are reaffirming our expectation of posting both a positive adjusted EBITDA and positive cash flow from operations this year.
Moving on to the business update. While bookings and retention results in the fourth quarter continued to be lower than in 2022, we closed more deals achieved higher new bookings and posted a higher gross retention rate than in each of the first three quarters of 2023. In addition, the top of our sales funnel continued to show a sequential increase in the number of qualified leads in the passing quarter. We believe that our differentiated horizontal platform and continuous product portfolio expansion enables our customers to increasingly consolidate many video use cases internally and externally around Kaltura. And by doing so, to reduce their costs and complexities and avoid this joint workflows and content silos. This consolidation brought forth in 2023 larger deals and continued to increase our average customer size as evidenced by record high E&C new logo ARPU and a record high average ARR per customer in 2023, which we believe will help our future growth.
In the fourth quarter, we saw our new event platform [Gartner Tech]. We extended our reach within a pair of global enterprise software giants to support them with our events and webinar offerings, both for internal communication and training as well as external marketing and partner enablement. Additionally, a prominent technology company already leveraging our event platform has substantially broadened the range of events supported by our platform and the leading U.S. automotive company upgraded from Kaltura webcasting to Kaltura events. Datavant webinars, a Fortune 100 financial institution, one of Kaltura’s largest and earliest customers have purchased additional accessibility features to further extend the reach and inclusion of their internal video communication.
One of the world’s largest restaurant chains expanded its usage and increased its access to Kaltura’s product suite capabilities in a very well-known global leader in the direct-to-consumer streaming space, a new customer, selected Kaltura Power its internal video-on-demand portal for employees and partners. In the education sphere, we continued our global expansion by securing a large European university and a prestigious European business school as new customers after conducting successful proof of concept with our product. We also continue to increase the number of end users of our media and telecom platform with our top EMEA customers migrating hundreds of thousands of new households into our Cloud TV service. On the product front, during the fourth quarter, we continued boosting our event platform with roles and permissions, enriched registration reporting an advanced landing page editor and additional features that encourage interactivity of both virtual and in-person audiences.
Our video portal now enables users to seamlessly stitch videos together, and we also improved the user experience and branding options. We added to our video player additional call to action capabilities and enhanced podcast experience and customizable pre and post broadcast fleets. Kaltura real-time conferencing rooms continue to evolve with the launch of our proprietary new white board, which complements existing third-party integrations. We have also introduced simulcast features to improve broadcast quality and network efficiency. On the infrastructure front, we continue to support new regional SaaS cloud and have made strategic investments in enhancing our capabilities around hold-your-own key options, enforcing our commitment to security and data sovereignty.
As for AI, as previously discussed, we believe that we are in the cusp of a transformative era for video-first AI-infused experiences will drive great engagement and improve business results. In the passing quarter, we expanded our AI assistant to provide real-time insights and suggested actions to organizers and presenters during webinars and other events by identifying changes in viewer engagement in real time and initiating actions such as launching relevant quizzes and fold and evoking audience reaction. The AI accelerator program, which we launched last quarter, continued to grow with more technology partners joining and more customers exploring with us the possibilities of AI-powered video experiences and how they can support their interest and needs and boost their business results.
Throughout 2024, we expect to gradually cater to many of their needs and for AI to become an increasingly important part of our offering. As we look ahead to 2024 and beyond, we anticipate a more favorable market environment that is expected to ease budgetary constraints for enterprises, particularly in North America. We believe that enterprises will gradually reinvest in digital technologies, including a video-based experiences for employees, customers and prospects. We believe that this will be fueled by an increasingly hybrid workplace with lesser travel in order to reduce costs and carbon emissions by a growth in the millennial and Gen Z workforce, which is both savvy and reliant on video and by the much greater expected ROI generated by AI infused video experience.
We believe Kaltura provides the most robust, engaging and impactful advanced video-based solutions, powering use cases such as marketing and customer engagement, employee and partner communication and training, student learning and engagement and online entertainment. Beyond this, we believe we are unique in offering a single platform that addresses all these use cases and others to follow. As mentioned, we see the single platform approach not only boosting functionality, reliability and scalability, but also being much more cost effective. While we believe our advantages helped us outperform many of our competitors in the passing challenging year, we believe that will become even more impactful when improved macroeconomic conditions are expected to cause customers to start making longer-term investments to elevate their system’s quality, performance and efficiency.
As mentioned, we’ve already seen this trend affect our entire sales funnel when growing leading demand indicators such as the number of new qualified leads through fueling higher win rates to continue to increase our new logo ARPU and average ARR per customer. In 2024, we will continue to focus on and cater to the growing demand for our event platform from existing and new customers for both internal and external use cases. We plan to continue our expansion down market and increase the size of our commercial sales team that sells low-touch solutions to SMEs and to departments within large enterprises. At that end, while in 2023, we reduced for the first time the size of our sales team to match the lower enterprise budgets and longer sales cycles and to address our profitability goals.
This year, we plan to gradually regrow our sales force. In summary, we wrapped up a tough year with strong macroeconomic-induced headwinds that weighed down our new bookings and gross retention and generated a revenue growth rate that albeit better than last year’s guidance than that of the previous year is far below our historical level. We entered 2024 with a robust product offering, a clear strategic direction and a validated go-to-market thesis. With market conditions improving, enterprise spending recovering and new opportunities arising from AI, we believe we are well positioned to capture the increasing demand for video experiences. While we believe we have the right products and market positioning to support faster growth given the still unclear macro conditions and considering last year’s outcome, we’re thoughtful with our revenue guidance for 2024.
Regardless of our top line growth, we are reaffirming our expectations of posting both a positive adjusted EBITDA and positive cash flow from operations this year. Now before handing it over to Yaron Garmazi, our CFO, to discuss our financial results in more detail, I would like to address his planned transition, which we announced a few weeks ago. First, I’d like to extend to earn our deepest gratitude for his great contributions to the company throughout the past seven years. On commitment to Kaltura’s growth and in professional excellence have been invaluable. We wish him success in his next endeavor. As we have shared, iron shall remain CFO until March 1 and will continue to support the company throughout the second quarter to ensure a smooth transition.
We have a saying at Kaltura. Once a Kalturian always a Kalturian. While you one is moving on, you’ll be seeing close and will forever remain a partner and friend of the company and me. With that, I am pleased to warm me welcome and briefly introduce to you our soon to be CFO, Mr. John Doherty. John joined us earlier this month and she’ll formally take the reins of CFO on March 1. John brings more than three decades of financial and operational experience. Most recently, he served as CFO and COO at Magic Leap. Prior to that, he served as CFO of publicly traded in InterXion until after its $8 billion-plus acquisition. Part of that John held a variety of senior financial and operational roles at Verizon, including Head of Corporate Development and Verizon Ventures, Head of Investor Relations and CFO of multiple large divisions.
I am excited to welcome John to our team. His experience in both financial and corporate development functions of large publicly traded enterprises will greatly contribute to our efforts, including our plans to explore strategic opportunities that advance our commercial goals. Welcome on board, John?
John Doherty: Thank you, Ron, and hello to everyone on the call today. I’m very excited to join Ron and the talented Kaltura team. I firmly believe that Kaltura has the potential for significant growth in an exciting domain and that it is well positioned to lead the market. I’m looking forward to the exciting journey ahead and to getting to know many of you personally soon.
Ron Yekutiel: Thank you, John. And now over to you, Yaron.
Yaron Garmazi: Thank you, Ron, and good morning, everyone. I would like to start off by welcoming John and thanking Ron and the team for the amazing past seven years. My period at Kaltura left me with great learning, close friendship and very found memory. I’m very excited about the road ahead of the company, and I’m confident that it has the right leadership, right product and the right strategy in place to return to a meaningful profitable growth and to lead the market. As Ron said, I shall be supporting John and the company on a full-time basis throughout the second quarter to ensure a smooth transition. As Ron also said once a Kalturian always a Kalturian. Now back to our financial results. As I review the fourth quarter and the full year fiscal year results today, please note that I will be referring to a non-GAAP metric adjusted EBITDA.
A reconciliation of CapEx to non-GAAP financials is included in today’s earnings release, which is available on our website at www.investors.kaltura.com. Total revenue for the fourth quarter ended December 31, 2023, was $44.5 million, up 1% year-over-year. Subscription revenue was $40.8 million, up 3% year-over-year, while professional services revenue contributed $3.7 million, down 18% year-over-year. The remaining performance obligations were $185.3 million, up 8% year-over-year, of which we expect to recognize 59% as revenue over the next 12 months. Annualized recurring revenue was $164.7 million, up 3% year-over-year. Our net dollar retention rate was 99% in the fourth quarter, up from 96% in Q4 2022. Within our E&P segment, total revenue for the fourth quarter was $31.6 million, up 5% year-over-year.
Subscription revenue was $30.4 million, up 5% year-over-year, while professional services revenue contributed $1.1 million, up 13% year-over-year. Within our M&T segment, total revenue for the fourth quarter was $12.9 million, down 8% year-over-year. Subscription revenue was $10.4 million, down 2% year-over-year, while professional services revenue contributed $2.5 million, down 27% year-over-year. The gross profit in the quarter was $28.6 million, representing a gross margin of 64%, up from 63% in Q4 2022. Within our E&P segment, gross profit for the fourth quarter was $23 million, representing a gross margin of 73%, up from 70% gross margin in Q4 2022. Within our M&T segment, gross profit for the fourth quarter was $5.6 million, representing a gross margin of 44%, down from 46% gross margin in Q4 2022.
GAAP net loss in the quarter was $12.1 million or $0.09 per diluted share. Adjusted EBITDA for the quarter was $0.8 million, improving from a negative $4.2 million in Q4 of 2022. And now for the full year fiscal year results. Total revenue for the year ended December 31, 2023, was $175.2 million, up 4% year-over-year. Subscription revenue was $162.8 million, up 7% year-over-year, while professional services revenue contributed to $12.4 million, down 24% year-over-year. Within our EE&T segment, total revenue for 2023 was $125.2 million, up 4% year-over-year. Subscription revenue was $120.6 million, up 6% year-over-year, while professional services revenue contributed $4.6 million, down 31% year-over-year. Within our M&T segment, total revenue for 2023 was $50 million, up 3% year-over-year.
Subscription revenue was $42.2 million, up 8% year-over-year, while professional services revenue contributed $7.9 million, down 19% year-over-year. Our net dollar retention rate was 100% in 2023 and was 100% in 2022. GAAP gross profit in 2023 was $112.2 million, representing a gross margin of 64%, up from 63% gross margin in 2022. Subscription revenue gross margin was 73%, down from 74% in 2022. Within our E&P segment gross profit in 2023 was $91.6 million, representing a gross margin of 73%, up from 70% gross margin in 2022. Subscription revenue gross margin was 79%, up from 78% in 2022. Within our MMP segment, gross profit in 2023 was $20.6 million, representing a gross margin of 41%, down from 48% gross margin in 2022. Subscription revenue gross margin was 55%, down from 63% in 2022.
GAAP net loss in 2023 was $46.4 million or $0.34 per diluted share. Adjusted EBITDA in 2023 was negative $2.5 million, improving from a negative of $28.3 million in 2022. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the quarter with $75.2 million in cash and marketable securities. Net cash provided by operating activity was $1.6 million in the quarter compared to $5.8 million net cash used in operating activities in Q4 2022. For the full year 2023, net cash used in operating activity was $8.3 million compared to $46.8 million net cash used in operating activities in 2022. In the fourth quarter, we also entered into a new agreement with our lenders, extending the maturity and amending the certain financial terms and discussing our Form 8-K filed on December 27, 2023.
I would now like to turn to our outlook for the first quarter of 2024 and for the fiscal year ending December 31, 2024. In the first quarter, we expect subscription revenue to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase to between $39.9 million and $40.6 million and total revenue to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase to between $42.7 million and $43.5 million. We expect an adjusted EBITDA to be between a negative $0.5 million and a positive $0.3 million. For the full year, we expect subscription revenue to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase to between $161.2 million and $164.2 million and total revenue to range from a 1% decrease to a 1% increase to between $173.7 million and $176.7 million. We expect adjusted EBITDA to be between $0 million and $1 million.
In summary, due to a tough macro condition and industry headwind, we closed a much slower growth year than usual, albeit better than last year’s guidance and that of the previous year. While we believe that we have the right product and market positioning to accelerate growth and that market conditions shall gradually improve, considering the market uncertainty and last year’s outcome, we are thoughtful with our guidance for 2024. We are set aside to have achieved our bottom-line accrual and cash flow goal from the passing year and are reaffirming our expectation of posting above positive adjusted EBITDA and the positive cash flow from operations this year. With that, we will open the call for questions. Operator?
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Q&A Session
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Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from Matt Niknam with Deutsche Bank. Please proceed with your question.
Matthew Niknam: Hi, guys. Thanks so much for taking the question. Maybe two, if I could. One, Ron, if you could talk about some of the confidence you have in terms of improving market conditions that you referenced and when you could maybe see this driving more positive inflections in subscription revenue? And then secondly, just in terms of competitive backdrop, if you could just talk about what you’re seeing there? And then any change in terms of competitive dynamics over the last couple of months? Thanks.
Ron Yekutiel: Thank you, Matt. And hello to everyone on the call today. Let’s start with the first one, confidence for market conditions. Let’s wrap what we had this quarter by way of demand and trends and leading indicators. It was, as mentioned, the highest booking quarter of last year, albeit relatively flattish, but also the best retention that we had in the year past, and it’s also coming back to the levels that we had prior years, which are much better. So from a net booking perspective, it was a better quarter than the ones before. Again, it’s been a tough year, and it’s another quarter of improvement. We’re going to wait a bit and see where things go, but it is headed in the right direction. Also important to note that as we wrapped up the year and our bookings had come down from the year before by about 25%.
As mentioned earlier, we also had about 25% less salespeople than the year before, which is the first time that we’ve actually done that. And so productivity hasn’t fallen down. It has kept — and now that we’ve become profitable, we could invest and we could put more, we believe we could cater to the demand with more people. So it’s not just about the demand, it’s our ability to cater to the demand. But other points to your question about demand, we look at the leading indicators we had throughout the year. We look at the QM that qualified by marketing leads. They continue to grow, and they grew sequentially throughout the whole year. They had come down from the year before at the beginning of the year, but ever since have gradually climbed up.
And also the RFP submissions have also grown materially, both sequentially and year-over-year. And so that’s a good sign. And lastly, on that point, we are selling bigger deals into bigger customers because of all the additional products and our strategy to consolidate around cultural or internal and external. We’ve seen this year record ARPUs and continued increase in average MRR per customer all the time that win rates have remained high. So if you look all these things together, I think for us, they still – and we believe things are going in the right direction. We’re talking to folks, I think, in North America more so than in Europe, there’s a conversation about more comfort around taking a decision. It was always the case that people said that in the mid- to long term because there makes more sense, not just because it’s a premium technology, but the consolidation that we offer enables them to have less silos, less broken workflows and lesser total cost of ownership.
It was just doing it in the tough year that it was harder because people were looking very nearsighted to additional costs just to get things shaken and moved. But as people look into the following years, I think people are getting geared and ready to make the better decision for the mid- to long term, which is Kaltura. So again, we’re careful. We’re not celebrating. It’s been a tough year. We’ve talked about slower growth rates than we’ve seen in the past, but we’ve also delivered on what we said we would. And let’s look how next year pounds out and hopefully, it continues to climb up. To your second question around competitive change, we have not seen a material difference at the last quarter. So we continue to lead for reasons that we’ve always led the 4 main differentiators for Kaltura.
One, the depth of our APIs and the integration that we could offer, enabling a lot more mission criticality. And to the breadth of what we offer that enables us to offer VOD live and real-time internal and external. And as I said earlier, to enable consolidation, one-third is the enterprise ability that we offer, meaning by way of scale, reliability, security, compliance and the last is the degree of engagement and analytics that comes from our products. And we continue to see these strong. We have not seen lower win rates for stronger competition coming from elsewhere. It’s up to you to look at the end year results of the other companies. I think most of the public companies out there have shown lower growth rates, if not negative this year.
And we think that the reason that we have done relatively better is because of these advantages. Does that address your question, Matt?
Matthew Niknam: It does, yes. Just one quick follow-up. In terms of sales cycles, are you seeing those may be shortened or maybe stabilize? Just curious in terms of how that’s been impacted as well of late?
Ron Yekutiel: Good question. Not yet. But the good news is that the ones that have come in into the pipe are gas are going to need to come out. So they do come out. We are closing the deals. As mentioned at the beginning of the year, the pressures, the headwinds that we’ve seen that have caused this year to be our past year 2023 to be so off are a significant lengthening of the sales cycle as well as price pressures, and we’re still seeing that. Too early to say that it’s suddenly getting better. But as mentioned, since win rates are held in the top of the funnel is continuing to grow, then what comes in must come out, and we are closing these deals. So we believe there will be more opportunity to close these deals in 2024.
Matthew Niknam: That’s great. Thank you so much.
Ron Yekutiel: Thank you, Matt.
Operator: Our next question comes from George Iwanyc with Oppenheimer & Co. Please proceed with your question.
George Iwanyc: Thank you for taking my question. And just to start off Ron, best of luck on what’s ahead, and congratulations to you, John. So maybe, Ron, starting off with kind of the comments on the sales productivity. Can you maybe give us some perspective on what you’re expecting from a hiring perspective this year and when those additions might happen during the year?
Ron Yekutiel: Sure. Happy to do that. So first, on sales productivity, as mentioned, it had kept compared to last year, but I can also say it’s broadly aligned with the pre-COVID productivities. But we had — we do quite materially our sales force after growing it always year-over-year. We had a 25% drop in order to be profitable, but also aligning us to the lesser productivities than during COVID. We’re not ready given our profitability metric and the ability of additional salespeople to contribute in a decent way. It’s not as great as it has always been, but we’re ready to do that. And even if it is the existing productivity over the last couple of years, it’s still good. And so far as numbers, order of magnitude of maybe another 10 at this point, we’re doing it gradually.
We’re doing it throughout the year. There’s going to be more focus on inside sales, commercial sales rather than outside sales, but we’re going to increase both because we want to continue going down market, a discussion we could continue separately, and that’s important for us. But that’s the order of magnitude. Does that address your question?
George Iwanyc: Yes. And Yaron, maybe on the net expansion number, that was up year-over-year, but it did decline a little bit on a quarterly basis. Can you give us some perspective on what you’re seeing there from an expansion perspective and what your expectations are for 2024?
Yaron Garmazi: Yes. So first of all, you are right, there was a decline of 1%. It was 99% this quarter. But as you can see, for the year, it was 100%. We said in the previous call that we believe that for the short term, it’s going to be around the 100% based on the fact that we saw, as Ron mentioned, the improvement in both bookings and retention rates, we believe that we will be able to see are coming to a bit better numbers than the 100%. But at least for the short term, and I believe that this is the new normal obviously, if and when we will see a reacceleration of both bookings and retention rates, we do believe that we will see an increase to the rate that we saw before COVID, which was in the low 100.
George Iwanyc: Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from Gabriela Borges with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question.
Gabriela Borges: Hi, good morning. Thank you. I wanted to follow-up on your comments on the macro. I appreciate the detail. I wanted to understand what you think is driving that? How much of this is just curve normalization, we’re a couple of years out and customers are ready to reinvest again. Any qualitative color from your customer conversations that you can share with us?
Ron Yekutiel: Well, thank you, Gabriela. I think we had the two back-to-back issues, right? COVID was the first one when people said, we’ve just bought a lot. Give us a bit of time to figure out what we’re doing in a more strategic way. And we heard a lot of that in the end of 2021, the beginning of 2022. When people said, listen, there were a bunch of different systems that we had bought. There’s a bunch of new use cases that we’re powering. We want to make order in the whole thing, give us a few quarters or less, and we’ll come back to you with thoughts. And they said that they love the fact that we can consolidate and offer a solution across and the fact that we could offer even more mission-critical services that are more tightly integrated that could be customized and tailored to their needs.
And everybody said, “Look, we understand video is a new normal and something that happened here, we intend to do more in video. Just as this was getting ready to impact us, we have the financial downturn. So I think ever since over the last 1.5 years, a couple of years, it’s more the financial downturn than a post-COVID impact. People said, look, we already know that we want to have more. It’s just now is not the right time. And so, we have the price pressures and people staying with incumbent vendors, even if it’s not the most ideal system, saying that they’re going to make a switch later on, but that’s the main, main rationale. Also bear in mind that sometimes some of the products, definitely, the internal ones are FTE-based licenses. And so if there’s also reduction of FTEs because companies are letting go people as opposed to hiring then that in itself is also pushing against usage.
And so I think that was the biggest issue so far. And what we’re hearing from folks now is they’re saying, look, we waited enough we need to be smarter about what we do. Our goals are not just 2024 goals. They’re also 2025 and beyond, and we’re spending too much money and it’s still complex plus there’s more things that need to be done. Now I want to be cautious about this and our guidance is in that as well. It’s not yet time to celebrate. This industry has gone down, and it’s gradually hopefully going to start going up again. But at this point, we’re seeing our competitive advantage being accepted in the market, and there is interest in moving forward with Kaltura. Let’s see how quickly that goes.
Gabriela Borges: That makes sense. And on the sales productivity metrics, remind us, how long does it take typically for a deal to go from top of the funnel to close? How long does it take typically for a salesperson to ramp up to full productivity? And any color on the trading and enablement that you’re providing to help with some of the larger deals and some of the hostile? Thank you.
Ron Yekutiel: On the third one, training enablement is that for the customers or enablement for our new salespeople.
Gabriela Borges: The latter.
Ron Yekutiel: The salespeople. Okay, good. Let me start with the last. I mean, we’re definitely very structured in how we’re onboarding folks into the company, and we’re a video-first company. So we have everything video five. We have an internal group that’s also experts in training our customers, and they’re the ones that are also helping us. So, we do that well. To your first question, connected to that or the second one on the ramp-down in our models, we put six months ramp for outside salespeople. And three months ramp for CSMs, and we factor that into our expectations around booking. I can tell you that most salespeople if they come in and to get some leads, they could start selling before. But that’s for us to be careful in our modeling around when booking is going to hit.
And so far as the sales time line, it varies between the different markets. Media and telecom, which is why most of our focus was not there. It was more on the E&T is longer sales cycle. If you’re coming into a new logo, it could be sometimes 1.5 years, 2 years. It’s a lengthy discussion and then even more so, the deployment times are relatively long and the time that it takes all the way to profitability is longer. Back to my point that we’ve, during downtimes, have always enjoyed the organic growth of users within the existing customers, which is quite significant. This quarter, we added hundreds of thousands, but we’re putting our foot off the gas a bit and try to hunt new customers that will take longer to bring and longer to make revenue and longer to make profit.
On the enterprise side of the business, it’s usually had been somewhere around six to 12 months cycle, albeit that as we’ve come to offer more low touch products. And we’ve moved from internal, which is more content management to external, which is more event than they have shortened. But over the course of the last year, given trends that have happened in the industry, it has started to elongate. And we’re seeing things go beyond the year, which is in line if you talk to major large software companies out there. So, we don’t have enough statistical answer to tell you if it’s exact 12 months or 18 months, but it’s not a few months’ time. On average, we definitely have in time to time deals that come in. And I’m talking about new logos, not upsell that are way faster.
Education is a tweener. It takes sometimes – depending on the situation, there’s also cycles around when they actually deploy the software for the new learning year. But I’d say it’s closer to added price than the other ones. Does that address your questions, Gabriela?