Shutterstock, Inc. (NYSE:SSTK) Q1 2024 Earnings Call Transcript May 2, 2024
Shutterstock, Inc. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $0.447 EPS, expectations were $0.95. SSTK isn’t one of the 30 most popular stocks among hedge funds at the end of the third quarter (see the details here).
Operator: Thank you for standing by. My name is Alex, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to the Q1 2024 Shutterstock Earnings Conference call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers’ remarks, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] I would now like to turn the call over to Chris Suh, Investor Relations and Corporate Development. Please go ahead.
Chris Suh: Thanks, Alex. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us for Shutterstock’s first quarter 2024 earnings call. Joining us today is Paul Hennessy, Shutterstock’s CEO, and Jarrod Yahes, Shutterstock’s CFO. Please note that some of the information you’ll hear during our discussion today will consist of forward-looking statements, including, without limitation, the long-term effects of investments in our business, the future success and financial impact of new and existing product offerings, our ability to consummate acquisitions and integrate the businesses we have acquired or may acquire into our existing operations, our future gross margins and profitability, our long-term strategy and our performance targets including 2024 guidance and long range financial targets.
Actual results or trends could differ materially from our forecast. For more information, please refer to today’s press release and the presentation material referencing our long range financial targets, which we have posted to our IR website. Please also refer to the reports we file with the SEC from time to time, including the risk factors discussed in our most recently filed Form 10-K for discussions of important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from any forward-looking statements we may make on this call. We’ll be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures today, including adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted net income, adjusted net income per diluted share, revenue growth including by distribution channel on a constant currency basis, billings and free cash flow.
Reconciliations of these non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures can be found in the tables included with today’s press release and in our 10-Q. I’d now like to turn the call over to Paul Hennessy, Chief Executive Officer.
Paul Hennessy: Thank you, Chris. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us today. On our last earnings call, I laid out the long-term targets for Shutterstock 2027 with the commitment of reaching $1.2 billion of revenue and $350 million of EBITDA in 2027. And now, after another successful quarter and a great acquisition, we expect to accelerate our path to reaching that goal. Our business performed ahead of expectations this quarter and I’m pleased to report that we signed a definitive agreement to acquire Envato, a leading provider of digital creative assets and templates. As I’ll explain in further detail later, this acquisition delivers to Shutterstock an exciting Trifecta, a new product that fills a critical gap, faster growing audiences and new content types.
But let’s first turn to this quarter’s results. Shutterstock delivered a strong first quarter with revenue of $214 million and EBITDA of $56 million, meaningfully exceeding our expectations. The composition of our business continues to evolve with rapid growth in our data distribution and services business, while our content business works to get back to growth. I’m excited to provide greater line of sight into our data distribution and services business, but first, let’s take a moment to talk about what we’re seeing in our content business. As a reminder, our content business includes a range of different asset types and global distribution channels. Our results and content in the first quarter were aligned to our expectations and characterized by the same trends we’ve been experiencing for the past year.
Demand from larger customers is growing and resilient, while demand from small and medium-sized customers who purchase from us online is muted. While we have not experienced an end-to-end recovery thus far, we are seeing leading indicators that are extremely encouraging and indicate a return to growth in the back half of the year even before adding on Envato’s exciting products. These indicators include continued strength in top-of-funnel activity with total traffic up 18% year-on-year, proof that our efforts to drive SEO growth and additional investments in paid marketing are paying off. This strong top-of-funnel as well as product experimentation translated into better customer acquisition in Q1. In removing our free trial offering earlier this year, we eliminated low to no-intent shoppers from our business.
As a result, new and win-back customer orders grew 4% year-on-year, and serving higher intent customers has already begun to show in other health metrics of the business. For example, we’re seeing more active customers who download, showcasing their engagement. One key recent new product launch is a generative AI subscription. Customers now have the ability to purchase credits to generate and download AI images directly within our ecosystem. Through an API, this product leverages the best available models in the market, including Google’s imaging, OpenAI’s DALL.E 3, and Amazon’s Titan, and we can direct generations to a specific model based on our customers’ use case. In the coming quarters, we plan to offer the full suite of generative asset types including image, video, audio, and 3D generative capabilities.
Lastly, we’re making strong progress in bringing our generative 3D capabilities to market in partnership with Nvidia. Moving to data distribution and services, our revenue was up 90% in the quarter and made up almost 20% of total revenues, constituting a larger part of our overall business and well on our way to achieving our targets for Shutterstock 2027. Within data, it is now abundantly clear that emerging legislation and regulation in the EU and U.S. will drive demand for Shutterstock’s ethically sourced, licensable datasets. There is real momentum towards accepting the reality that copyrighted data contains better metadata, and that retraining a model built on scrape data can ultimately be very costly with additional CPU costs and carries with it potential legal and brand issues.
Shutterstock is uniquely positioned to benefit from this trend towards leveraging ethically sourced, licensed dataset for training AI. With our trust framework solidly in place, we are now and continue to be the go-to destination for massive scale AI and ML multimodal model training data. We uniquely have a size and scale in video, audio, and 3D that nobody else can match. Now that many of the world’s largest technology platforms have done the diligence and selected Shutterstock, we are benefiting from demand from companies that are following the course charted by these leaders in AI. On the supply side, to match the demand we are seeing for data, we are focused on growing our base of contributors and the depth and breadth and size of our library.
Our contributor base has increased by over 40% to 3.4 million in the past year alone, and our library growth is accelerating, growing 34% to almost 900 million assets in the last 12 months. We have never seen contributors in data grow this fast and we believe that the flywheel is spinning faster. Within distribution, our test and use cases are now behind us, and we have proven that the Giphy platform is poised for flight. We are aggressively hiring sales professionals and believe — we believe we are well positioned to grow both Giphy’s advertising business and to monetize its API connections to third parties. The business has been winning deals, most recently with Anheuser-Busch, Sony, PepsiCo and Universal Studios, and we are seeing AOV increase meaningfully from early test insertion orders averaging $50,000 to newer customers coming in at scale with $200,000 to $400,000 insertion orders.
Available inventory for sale also continues to grow with media served on Giphy growing at 19% this quarter. Lastly, within services, we continue to see growing demand for our cutting-edge global creative and production studio solutions. Many of the world’s largest marketers are leveraging our full suite of services from creative strategy to post-production and beyond. As proof of our quality, we’ve recently been selected by a leading global consumer products company as the preferred vendor for all U.S. based commercial production. Much of our recent demand is driven by our immersive production solution, which leverages XR and 3D and enable the most creative, flexible, cost-effective and environmentally sustainable approach around, and it’s all made possible through the powerful combination of studios and our TurboSquid 3D assets.
Switching gears, let’s turn to Envato. As I mentioned at the top of the call, the Envato acquisition delivers a new product that fills a critical gap, expands into faster growth audiences, and further diversifies into new content types. I’ll address each one of these in turn. First, the Envato acquisition fills a critical gap in Shutterstock’s product offering with the addition of Envato Elements to our portfolio. Elements serves as a one-stop shop for fresh, diverse, and curated content that cuts across content types such as video, audio, graphics, fonts, code and web themes, templates and mockups. At $16.50 per month for unlimited consumption, Elements offers a highly compelling value proposition catering to the needs of creatives that fits perfectly between the packs we have today for episodic users and the high-priced premium subscribers we offer the entire Shutterstock library.
Second, this acquisition expands Shutterstock’s reach within faster-growing, attractive audiences such as freelancers, influencers, small agencies and hobbyists, all of whom find great value in Elements’ content’s depth and breadth and unlimited consumption offering. And lastly, Envato further diversified Shutterstock’s revenue into a broader range of content types with more than 80% of Elements content downloads attributable to video, audio, graphics and mockups. We are expanding our offerings to meet this need for multi-asset consumption, which helps us sustain a more durable content business with faster growth potential. With Envato, Shutterstock’s revenue from video, audio, 3D, and other content types will increase from 35% to 45% as a percent of total content revenue.
The acquisition adds an extremely talented contributor community who have brought a diverse library of 6 million videos, 1 million audio clips, 500,000 design templates, 300,000 3D models, 200,000 graphics and fonts, and 10 million images, all of which have tremendous potential value for both our creative content customers and our data customers. Envato will immediately have a meaningful impact on the composition of Shutterstock’s revenue base. Shutterstock’s subscriber count will more than double to 1.15 million subscribers and subscription revenue as a percent of total content revenue will increase from 48% to 55%. Envato has successfully built a product that appeals to a highly retentive user base. 56% of Elements’ subscriber base are annual subscribers who pay upfront and have higher retention rates than monthly subscribers.
We are beyond excited about this pending transaction and we expect to close in Q3 2024 when we will officially welcome the talented Envato team to Shutterstock. In conclusion, our mission, as ever, remains the same, to empower the world to tell their stories by bridging the gap between idea and execution and to connect customers to the content they need. Our execution against Shutterstock 2027 is ahead of schedule and we feel extremely well-positioned to deliver on our long-term targets. I’ll now turn the call over to Jarrod who will walk through our Q1 results and updated full-year guidance for 2024.
Jarrod Yahes: Thank you, Paul. And good morning, everyone. Revenue was $214.3 million for the first quarter, exceeding our expectations. Content revenue was down 10%, in line with our expectations. As Paul discussed, we feel good about the progress we are seeing and expect to get back to growth this year, consistent with our commentary last quarter. Data distribution and services was up 90% in the first quarter to $40 million, driven by exceptionally strong growth in our data offering. The rapidly changing regulatory backdrop around AI, combined with the credibility and scale we now have, is resulting in a clear demand acceleration. We anticipate providing additional forward-looking growth indicators in data distribution and services in the second quarter.
As I review the P&L, please note that the line items are net of related depreciation and amortization, stock compensation, and other expense items necessary to reconcile to adjusted EBITDA. In the first quarter, we stepped on the gas with respect to sales and marketing at 25% of revenue compared to 22% in the first quarter of 2023. We made planned growth investments in branding spend and customer marketing across our businesses in the quarter and we expect the pace of marketing spend to continue throughout the year. Product development was 7% of revenue compared to 6% in the first quarter of 2023, reflecting continued investment in our product offering and ongoing integration of our acquisitions. We saw solid operating leverage in the quarter, particularly in G&A expenses.
G&A expenses were 10% of revenue compared to 12% in the first quarter of 2023. This is the third consecutive quarter with G&A leverage and Shutterstock is well set up to drive adjusted EBITDA as our business scales. Adjusted EBITDA was strong at $56 million with margins of 26.1%. Margins were impacted this quarter by the addition of Giphy and Backgrid as compared to the prior year, the heightened pace of marketing spend in the first quarter as well as $2 million of one-time costs associated with the acquisitions of Backgrid and Envato. Turning to our balance sheet, we had $72 million of cash at the end of the first quarter. In the quarter, we paid our annual performance bonus and closed on our acquisition of Backgrid for $20 million in cash.
At the time of this report, cash balances were back up to $90 million and cash flow generation remains strong. In terms of capital return, we paid out $11 million of dividends in the first quarter. We just increased dividends by another 10% in January to $0.30 per share. This is our fourth consecutive year of double-digit dividend increases. As is typical in the first quarter, we also paid $8 million to buy back stock from employees in respect of the taxes on the vesting of their equity awards, further reducing share count. I’d like to spend a few minutes providing additional details on Envato before turning to guidance. We believe the Envato acquisition is an incredibly positive strategic move for Shutterstock, consistent with our M&A strategy and historical track record.
We have acquired a world-class content business at an attractive purchase price that is both growing and highly profitable. As Paul discussed, the strategic merits speak for themselves, including product line extension into unlimited multi-asset subs, audience expansion into faster-growing audiences, and increased exposure to strategic content types like video and audio. We’re also adding an extremely talented and valuable management team in Envato. In connection with the acquisition, we received a commitment for an unsecured $375 million credit facility provided by BofA, Citi, Wells Fargo and Citizens, consisting of $125 million term loan and a $250 million revolver. The cost of capital is low in the current rate environment, priced at 6.7%.
Access to low-cost and flexible capital is a testament to the robust cash flow generating business we have built and our future business prospects. We expect to have approximately $275 million drawn on the facility post the expected acquisition close in the third quarter. Expected leverage will be extremely low with net debt to pro forma combined adjusted EBITDA of just 0.7 times. Post close, we expect to have 100 million of unused revolver capacity to invest in the growth of our business, acquire additional companies, and return capital to shareholders. In line with our prior deals, this transaction is structured as a straightforward 100% cash purchase with no earnouts or other contingencies, allowing us to quickly integrate and focus on our plans for growth.
From a financial perspective, Envato is growth-accretive to our content business, growing revenues in line with the industry average of 5% to 7%. Consistent revenue growth is paired with strong profitability of 20% adjusted EBITDA margins, which we believe can go higher as the business scales over time. Envato adds meaningful revenue scale and profitability to Shutterstock, adding 20% to revenues and 15% to adjusted EBITDA on a full year basis. For the full year, we are raising our 2024 revenue guidance to 5.5% to 7% revenue growth based on our strong performance in the first quarter, combined with the Envato acquisition, which is expected to close in Q3. Data distribution and services is experiencing powerful growth and momentum and content is poised to improve consistently year-on-year throughout the course of the year with key data points indicating a turnaround.
Adjusted EBITDA guidance increases to $245 million to $248 million based on the revenue raise and including $6 million of one-time deal and integration costs we expect to incur. With our 2024 guidance updated for the Envato acquisition and that we are pacing well ahead of where we expected, we are pacing well ahead of where we expected against our Shutterstock 2027 long-range targets of $1.2 billion of revenue and $350 million of EBITDA. We expect to formally update our long-range targets with our fourth quarter results. In closing, we are extremely pleased with the quarter and the amazing demand we are seeing in data distribution and services. We believe our turnaround in content is underway and we are thrilled to get the Envato deal signed.
An exciting strategic roadmap lies ahead, and Shutterstock is extremely well positioned to execute on it. And with that, operator, we’ll open the line for questions.
See also 15 Freest Countries in Africa and 20 States With the Most Beautiful Flags According to Reddit.
Q&A Session
Follow Shutterstock Inc. (NYSE:SSTK)
Follow Shutterstock Inc. (NYSE:SSTK)
Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] And your first question comes from the line of Bernie McTernan with Needham & Company. Please go ahead.
Bernie McTernan: Great. Good morning. Thanks for taking the questions. Maybe just to start, we’d love to just get insights in terms of how we should be thinking about the guidance change for the addition of Envato versus organic changes to the guidance.
Jarrod Yahes: Sure, Bernie. And we’re very pleased in the first quarter out of the gate to be able to meaningfully raise our guidance for the year. We meaningfully outperformed our first quarter expectations that we had internally for our business. We outperformed those expectations in the aggregate, and in particular, our data distribution and services business significantly outperformed our expectations. We’re effectively rolling that outperformance into the guidance. We’re also rolling in the acquisition of Envato, assuming that the business is going to contribute about 20% to our revenues for the full year and 15% to our EBITDA for the full year, assuming the transaction closes in the third quarter. So that’s the detail I can provide for you, and I think we’re thrilled to be able to roll in both the deal contribution as well as well as the meaningful outperformance in the first quarter.
Bernie McTernan: That’s great. Thanks, Jarrod. And then on the DDS business, is $60 million still the right number to think about for Computer Vision? There were some rumors that an Apple deal was signed early in the quarter. So I’m not sure how much you can give on specifics for the Apple deal, but maybe just framing in terms of the 60 million that you referred to prior.
Jarrod Yahes: So we’re not able to comment on specific customers and we don’t have a track record of doing that or talking about their specific contribution in the quarter. What we can say is that data distribution and services as a whole is outperforming. And so that $60 million that we referenced with respect to data, your assumption should be that that is going up. And as we think about our 2027 plan, what we’ve baked in is 20% plus growth for data distribution and services as a whole and 20% growth for each of the components of data distribution and services. If the first quarter is any indication, that growth target is looking conservative. We feel really, really good about how each of these components is performing, and the first quarter was a phenomenal start out of the gate for Shutterstock.
Bernie McTernan: Understood. And then just lastly for me, on Giphy expenses, how should we expect those to pace throughout the year? I know Meta is covering a portion of those at least for part of the year, and then a portion of those expenses too. It sounds like you guys are going out and hiring a sales force as well. So just how we should expect maybe just Giphy profitability to be trending throughout the year?
Jarrod Yahes: Sure, Bernie. So the first thing I would call out is, although we are getting reimbursed for many of the cash expenses, all of the typical salary and bonus expenses associated with the employee population is hitting our EBITDA. We are aggressively hiring for Giphy. We’re hiring sales professionals and business development professionals. We’re seeing a clear market demand and need, and we need more feet on the street to be able to satisfy that demand that’s out there. So we’re thrilled to be able to making those investments right now. The good news is, as the revenue grows over the course of the year, that’s actually going to be a tailwind to our profitability. The business is making losses today. The revenue is growing quickly, and we expect to more quickly cover those expenses such that the revenue growth is going to exceed any expense that we put on from the hiring of the sales force.
And so Giphy growth is actually going to allow us to sequentially improve profits in the business and profits for Shutterstock overall over the course of the year.
Bernie McTernan: Understood. Thanks, Jarrod.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Boone with JMP. Please go ahead.
Unidentified Participant: Thank you for taking my question. This is Matt on for Andrew. Maybe just back on the data sales business, can you just give us any color on just the pipeline there? And then as it relates to adding on Envato, what does this do actually to your data sales business as it adds to your and diversifies your data core business?
Paul Hennessy: Yeah. I’ll take that one. And I think the — we don’t give a lot of the specifics around the particulars around the data business around the pipeline; what’s on the common, what’s not. I think we’ve been trying to give much greater line of sight to the entire DDS business. That’s why we broke that out. But what I can tell you is we’re seeing a lot of demand. I referenced the change in regulatory environment, some of the early signs that we’re seeing, and that’s all goodness for Shutterstock’s uniquely positioned, ethically sourced content, and customers of all sizes are coming for that content. You saw the growth in the DDS business and a lot of that is related to data. So what I would just say is we are very bullish on the DDS side of the house.
On the Envato question, more content. I talked about the growth in content in our core business; more content, diversified content, specific content that we may not have is all great opportunities to grow our data business, and there’s interest from data partners in wide varieties of content and as much as we can give them. So we’re seeing real change in that market where we are wondering if people would be demanding all product types and we’re actually seeing a level of insatiable desire for a diversity of content types with all sorts of levels of specificity increasing. So we’re bullish.
Unidentified Participant: And then maybe one more, if I could. Just as you talk about the Envato acquisition doubling your subscriber base, can you just talk about what opportunities are there just for cross-sell? Thank you.
Paul Hennessy: Yeah. I think it’s all the things you would normally suspect in an acquisition like that. When we’ve got more subscribers that are more retentive, that’s great for the business. To the extent that we have content that’s not currently offered to Envato customers, that becomes upside levels of retention. We’ve talked kind of clearly about we believe that this could fit very, very nicely into our small and medium-sized customer offering sitting in between packs and larger subscriptions. There’s a lot to like in this acquisition, and I’d just say, you combine that with a great company that’s really well run by a great leadership team with a talented set of employees, we really like the combination of Shutterstock and Envato.
Unidentified Participant: Thank you so much.
Paul Hennessy: Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Agnieszka Pustula. Please go ahead.
Agnieszka Pustula: Hi, and thank you for taking my question. I’ve got a couple. The first one is a follow-up on your new guidance. So just wanted to clarify, do you assume in that guidance that Envato will be added to your revenues and EBITDA from the start of Q3? And secondly, on your content business, if you could maybe talk a little bit more about the trend within the quarter. Is there any month-on-month improvement already and what trend are you seeing in April so far? Thank you.
Jarrod Yahes: Sure. So thank you so much for your question. I’ll take the first part and then we’ll talk a little bit about trends in April. So I think it’s probably unlikely the acquisition is going to close in July. So I think to your point, the back part of Q3 is more likely with respect to the acquisition. We feel really good about this deal, I think, as we mentioned, and we’re really excited to be able to offer this to our customers and to include this into our overall business.
Paul Hennessy: And regarding — if I heard the question properly, it was what are we seeing on the content business in the — in April timeframe. You heard in my prepared remarks that there’s some really positive trends in our small and medium business. And it starts with the idea of, amazingly, if you charge customers rather than give away our very valuable content, they actually pay, and not only do they pay, but they download and come back. And so we’re very encouraged. And then I gave more insight into our level of encouragement by saying that we expect our business to kind of return to growth in the back half of the year. We’re seeing good signs on the content business and while we won’t call this turnaround complete, we’re very encouraged, and all of that is reflected in an increase in our overall guidance.
Jarrod Yahes: One other point I would add on that is, you should fully expect the year-over-year growth in content to improve over the course of the year each and every quarter both in terms of year-over-year growth percentage, but also in terms of sequential revenue contribution. And I think that’s really important to note. We feel quite good about that. And I think April is looking good. So we’re excited about what we’re seeing. And I think Paul’s point on the way we’ve extracted ourselves from the free trial is spot on. This was the right strategic move for Shutterstock and it’s going to create a more durable, longer term, faster growing content business for us.
Agnieszka Pustula: That’s fantastic. Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Nitin Bansal with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Nitin Bansal: Thank you for taking my question. As the pace of building GenAI applications accelerate across verticals, can you throw some light on where you are seeing the demand for your data beyond the LLMs? And how has your go-to-market strategy evolved in the last few months to monetize this data opportunity?
Jarrod Yahes: Sure. So let me just give a little bit of a perspective of some of the demand that we’re seeing. And by the way, what I would call out is we’re seeing demand increases from both new customers as well as existing customers. Existing customers are asking us for more, so greater scale in existing content types. They’re asking us for specific types of metadata as well as specific types of content. So we’re increasingly being asked for — to source specialized types of content for those customers. And there is a common misperception that visual media content is only needed for companies that are training image generators or video generators as outputs. It is the case that multimodal models, broadly speaking, require visual media training data in order to create inputs as well as generate outputs.
And I think that’s something that’s not well understood. The perception is that if the output is chat-based that visual media is not needed as a training input. That is incorrect. Visual media is a critical component of training chat-based output models or large language models. So we’re seeing demand across the spectrum for the various model types, particularly as things go multimodal, more broadly defined. In terms of the way the pipeline and distribution are trending, Paul, any thoughts?
Paul Hennessy: Well, we’re not giving a lot of insight into that that you haven’t already covered, Jarrod. And I mentioned on to the prior question, we’re seeing lots of strong demand across channels.
Nitin Bansal: Thank you. One more. On the Giphy business, what are some of the challenges that you are encountering in scaling up this business? And by when do you think we can start to see like a more meaningful impact from the Giphy on your top line?
Paul Hennessy: Yeah. The challenge of restarting any business from a cold start is all of the things you would expect is reaching back out and telling our story to the tens of thousands of interested advertisers getting in front of them, getting in front of their budgets. But when they hear the story, it’s a very compelling story. So again, we believe that market’s coming our way. We’re not giving an exact date of when meaningful revenue comes in. We’re already seeing, again, high interest and ascending AOV. Those are the trends of a critical advertising model. And so again, we feel very good about overcoming any of the hurdles of moving a business from a cold start to a bonafide ad platform, but we’re — every single month that goes by, we’re making headway, and you heard we’re investing in that business with more salespeople because we see the demand.
Nitin Bansal: Given it is an advertising business, do you think a potential third-party partnership with a bigger platform similar to something that Pinterest did can expedite the monetization of this asset?
Paul Hennessy: Yeah. I like the way you think. I think that’s spot on. And we’re — as you might expect, we’re exploring those opportunities and have interested folks that are talking to us about just that. I can’t say much more about that, but you can imagine a large-scaled, high use platform has interest from a lot of folks.
Nitin Bansal: Okay. Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Kieran Kenny with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Kieran Kenny: Great. Thank you for taking my questions. First, Jarrod, can you comment on whether the data deals signed in the quarter were all recognized ratably? And then related to that, any color you can provide on whether or not the data revenue grew year-on-year? And then Paul, you talked about the growth in the contributor base and the library. Can you talk about some of the trends that are driving that both organically and some of the inorganic contribution? Thank you.
Jarrod Yahes: Thanks so much for your question, Kieran. I think as you think about our data deals, we are increasingly structuring these deals such that the revenue is recognized over time. We signed a number of deals under that construct. There are different structures that we have for different deals that create an inherent lumpiness in this business. And so this business is becoming more visible and the recurring base of revenue in this business is becoming higher as a percentage of the total revenues in this business, but there will be an inherent lumpiness in this business and we expect that. With our data distribution and services business growing 90% year-over-year, this is going to go up and down, but we’re thrilled with the start.
I mean, we couldn’t be any more excited about the momentum, not just in data, but also in Giphy and studios. We really feel like these are three large TAM opportunity, high growth business segments that we expect to have a long runway for growth over time.
Paul Hennessy: And regarding the contributors, our content growth, the scale, organic and otherwise, what I can tell you is as our business evolves from purely serving the needs of advertisers and folks that would have more traditional use for our content, as we opened up the aperture to include accepting content for data, the market follows that trend. And so now we’re seeing demand and supply pouring in, relating to giving us content across content types and across content use cases. So we think that that flywheel spins very, very nicely for in our favor and is actually spinning faster because as we have more content, that theoretically helps our conversion rate because we’ve got more to offer our customers that are — have more traditional use, that creates a broader opportunity for our data buyers.
And so again, more of that is, and I think is critical to driving our business forward. I think I could go further and say, and as we identify gaps in any supply that we have, we now become well positioned to actually go acquire and fill those gaps, meeting the demand side of the equation for our customers. So again, love to see the content. We’re a content company and that scaling content is good — helps both sides of our business.
Kieran Kenny: That’s really helpful. Thank you both.
Jarrod Yahes: Thanks, Kieran.
Paul Hennessy: You bet.
Operator: That concludes our Q&A session. I will now turn the conference back over to Paul Hennessy, Chief Executive Officer, for the closing remarks.
Paul Hennessy: Yeah. I just want to thank all of our contributors, our employees, and all of our customers for helping us deliver an extraordinary Q1 and set us on a path to deliver our 2027 plan. Thank you all for joining our call, and this ends our call for today.
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, that concludes today’s call. Thank you all for joining. You may now disconnect.