Taboola.com Ltd. (NASDAQ:TBLA) Q2 2023 Earnings Call Transcript August 9, 2023
Taboola.com Ltd. misses on earnings expectations. Reported EPS is $-0.08907 EPS, expectations were $-0.03.
Operator: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Taboola Q2 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers’ presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Please be advised that today’s conference is being recorded. I will now like to turn the conference over to Brinlea Johnson [ph], Investor Relations. Please go ahead.
Unidentified Company Representative: Thank you, and good morning, everyone. And welcome to Taboola’s second quarter 2023 earnings conference call. I’m here with Adam Singolda, Taboola’s Founder and CEO; and Steve Walker, Taboola’s CFO. The company issued earnings materials today before the market and they are available in the Investors section of Taboola’s website. Now, I’ll quickly cover the Safe Harbor. Certain statements today, including our expectations for future periods are forward-looking statements. They are not facts and are subject to material risks and uncertainties described in our SEC filings. These statements are based on currently available information and we undertake no duty to update them, except as required by law.
Today’s discussion is also subject to the forward-looking statement limitations in the earnings press release. Future events could differ materially and adversely from those anticipated. During this call, we will use terms defined in the earnings release and refer to non-GAAP financial measures. For definitions and reconciliations to GAAP, please refer to the non-GAAP tables in the earnings release posted on our website. And with that, I’ll turn the call over to Adam.
Adam Singolda: Thanks, Brinlea. Good morning everyone and thank you all for joining us for our second quarter call. We had a strong performance in Q2, beating the high-end of our guidance across all metrics. We achieved $123 million in ex-TAC gross profit, $16 million in adjusted EBITDA and $8 million in free cash flow. We are also excited to raise the midpoint of our full year 2023 guidance. As we are getting closer to 2024, we are bullish on our future, we expect a step change in our financial performance, and we are reiterating our guidance for 2024 of over $200 million in adjusted EBITDA and over $100 million in free cash flow. Our performance in Q2 was driven by a few things. In our core business, publishers all over the world continue to trust us and sign long-term partnerships, which we saw with new and competitive wins this quarter from Nexstar Media, Barstool Sports, Futura, and more.
This is on top of key partners like Time, Disney, Unidad Editorial, BBC, One India, The Print and Bangkok Post renewing their long-term relationships with us. Publishers are demanding less vendors and more true partners as they chart their growth, diversify their revenue, empower their editorial teams and battle the never ending changes being thrown at them by the walled garden platforms. Being an ad provider is not enough, and this is where Taboola is unique, addressing all of these objectives in a win-win manner with our publishers. Let me share more about our momentum in Q2. We are outpacing our expectations on eCommerce, which now represents nearly 20% of ex-TAC, up from 15% last quarter. I believe eCommerce will continue to be a key part of our business as users are looking to make decisions that matter to them based on information from publishers they trust.
There is a lot of growth for us to capture here between publishers looking to launch an eCommerce business, retailers looking for profitable channels, and Retail Media dollars growing fast where brands are looking for places to spend and bring clients back to their site. This is not all. We are also outpacing expectations with Taboola News. This is our version of Apple News, which is integrated into Android devices from Samsung, Xiaomi and others. It continues to experience rocket ship growth, and will approach $100 million in revenue this year from over $50 million in 2022. I love that business because first, we built it organically and it shows that Taboola continues to be a startup of startups, redefining our dreams. Second, this has high synergy to our core business, as publishers are getting a growing volume of traffic from us at a time when Generative AI is threatening to limit search traffic for publishers.
As I look into the rest of 2023, our focus continues to be making our four company priorities successful: Yahoo, Performance Advertising, eCommerce and Bidding, each representing billions of dollars opportunity for us. Let’s take a closer look at how each is progressing. First, let’s talk about Yahoo. As a reminder, we are well underway on executing on our 30-year partnership with Yahoo, which will see us power recommendations on their massive footprint of some of the most iconic publishers in the world, as well as integrating our data to come up with contextual segments advertisers can use, and migrating native advertisers to Taboola’s technology. We’ve been developing the technical infrastructure to allow Yahoo native advertisers through Taboola’s platform, as well as Taboola’s advertisers on Yahoo.
You will hear me talk a lot about advertisers migration which is an area we are spending a lot of our energy on. There is a huge opportunity for both Yahoo and Taboola here to bring both companies’ advertisers into the mix, make them even more successful and drive yield expansion over time. Some Yahoo international markets are now live with Taboola. This is part of us testing and evaluating advertisers’ performance in preparation for the U.S. market ramping in 2024. We expect to go into our next phase with Yahoo, gradually transitioning ad spend and supply to Taboola in the second half of 2023. Let’s get into our second priority as a company, performance advertising. One of the things that is special about Taboola, which is similar to Meta and Google is that the vast majority of our revenues come from advertisers who buy from Taboola directly, using our own AI called SmartBid.
About 10% of our revenues come from programmatic partners such as Google, The TradeDesk, Criteo, Amazon, and others. Our two main objectives are to get new advertisers to be successful when they try Taboola, and to get existing advertisers to stay with us and spend more as measured by net dollar retention. Nearly half our R&D is working on making advertisers successful. We think there is a huge upside for us and the industry by building the first “must buy” company, enabling advertisers to scale in the open web with Taboola like they do with Google on search, and Meta for social. Our engineering team is focused on the tech behind our bidding strategies, which is how we can better help new and existing advertisers succeed even more with us, using automated, algorithmic based, buying methods.
I talked in the previous quarter about Target-CPA, which allows advertisers to set a goal for how much a conversion, such as a lead, a purchase, and app install, is worth to them and how Taboola would look for users who meet that threshold. We are progressing further here, with a new bidding strategy called maximize conversions. It’s the default bidding strategy for companies like Google or Meta and it allows an advertiser to evolve from placing a CPC, price per click, and sharing their acquisition goals. Put simply, an advertiser can give Taboola a budget, and let us try to get as many consumers as we can to convert at the most affordable acquisition price. Then, once the advertiser sees how many conversions we can get, and at what price, they can establish a Target-CPA, and scale as much as possible with us.
This was tested by dozens of advertisers during the second quarter, we’ve seen encouraging results and I’m excited to share that Max Conversion as well as Target CPA went to general availability this week. I anticipate that more than 50% of our revenue in 2024 will be using maximize conversions, Target-CPA as a bidding strategy. Imagine a future where advertisers buying from Taboola don’t need to guess a CPC, but rather just share their goal and our AI will do the rest. We are not stopping here. Early 2024 we aim to bring to market Target ROAS and Max revenue bidding strategy, that will take into consideration not only the likelihood for a conversion, but also the expected ROI for the advertiser. And lastly on performance advertising, I’m very excited about our investment in Generative AI.
I think it will impact many industries, and we are deep investing into how it can affect advertisers’ success. Brands all over the world have used our technology to generate content and copy for ad creative, such as titles and images. The biggest benefits for them have been reducing their time spent on generating ad creative and producing high performing creative assets for their campaigns. Of the brands using our Generative AI technology, 80% ran multiple campaigns, and we are seeing brands doubling the click through rate when measured against evergreen campaigns. Now let’s go to our third priority, eCommerce. Our investments into growing our eCommerce offerings via technology and through Connexity and Skimlinks are paying off. I’m happy to report that eCommerce is now nearly 20% of our ex-TAC, and we beat our budget again in Q2 as we did in Q1.
We see outstanding merchant retention and increasing budgets, validating the value clients get when buying from Taboola. Connexity is also starting to pick up momentum in Europe, which we are encouraged by. We previously announced the introduction of Taboola Turnkey Commerce, an eCommerce in a box solution for publishers and we’ve already seen great partners like Time and Advance Local adopt it. Taboola is doing all of the work for the publishers here. We are using our data to know which content makes sense for us to write on behalf of the publisher. We are driving traffic to those articles. And of course, we are monetizing it with relationships with merchants and service providers. Taboola Turnkey Commerce is meant to connect publishers’ expertise with consumers, to drive monetization and we are seeing clear signs that it’s working.
A simple Google search for Best Checking Accounts in 2023 leads consumers directly to Taboola’s Turnkey Commerce activation on Time.com. It’s the 1st organic result. Consumers who search for this phrase are clearly invested in opening a checking account, and when they arrive at Time.com page, they can compare options. If and when they click on one of Time’s editorial suggestions, both Time and Taboola benefit. Our revenue model here is the same as the rest of our business, every time revenue is being made, we share it with the publisher. Finally, let’s review where we are with our bidder. We estimate that the 8,000 plus publishers in our core business generate display revenues of $20 billion, $25 billion a year. We think that we can access our publishers’ display inventory with our header bidder solution, and win about 5% to 10% of the auctions given our advantage in our AI, first party data and technology.
This will make us even more valuable partners for our publishers, increasing our share of wallet, while providing our advertisers with even more scale. Our strategy here is especially effective as cookies on Chrome are about to be deprecated, and based on our experience with Apple ITP, we anticipate this to be a source of strength for our bidder given our hard coded integration on publishers sites and access to first party data. We have mainly two areas where we bid these days: Microsoft’s MSN, which launched in April of last year, and our publishers where we have first party data advantage. We believe that as Yahoo launches, we will be able to also partner them on bidding strategy as well. We are seeing encouraging signs here as well. Microsoft’s Q2 of 2023 was higher than Q2 of 2022 and we expect Microsoft Q3 to be meaningfully bigger than Q3 of 2022.
As we said in April last year, we expect that moving to bidding with Microsoft, who helped us design this product initially, will make our partnership a growing one, and it’s happening. In Q2, we doubled down on our efforts and are now live on over 100 sites across our global network of publisher partners. As we continue to scale, we are laser focused on fine tuning our technology and algorithms, leveraging our ongoing investment in R&D and operations of our bidder platform. Now as I wrap my part, I’m bullish about our future, and our position in the industry. We are focused on the right tech investments that will continue to fuel our profitable growth as a company, and position us as the very first must buy company in the open web for advertisers, and partner of choice for publishers for the next many, many decades to drive revenue, engagement and audience.
Personally, I also think Taboola is on the right side of history, driving growth to the open web and journalism, in times where advertisers don’t have a lot of options outside of search and social, and none of us wants their kids to discover things that matter like science or health care or politics on TikTok. The open web is critical. We know what we need to do, and we are executing on it. Thank you all for joining us today, we look forward to interacting with many of you over the next few weeks. I will now pass it over to Steve, our CFO, to talk more about our financials.
Stephen Walker: Thanks Adam and good morning, everyone. As Adam noted, our Q2 results beat the high-end of our guidance on all metrics. We are also raising the midpoint of our full year 2023 guidance and reiterating our 2024 expectations of over $200 million in adjusted EBITDA and over $100 million of free cash flow. Let me talk now about our Q2 results, which exceeded the high-end of our guidance on all metrics. For Q2, revenues were $332 million versus the midpoint of our guidance of $309 million; gross profit of $97.1 million versus the midpoint of $83 million; ex-TAC gross profit of $123.1 million versus the midpoint of $110 million; adjusted EBITDA of $15.7 million versus the midpoint of $1 million; and non-GAAP net loss of $6.4 million versus the midpoint of a loss of $21 million.
We generated positive free cash flow of $7.8 million. I will note that Q1 and Q2 growth rates suffer from difficult comparables in 2022 before the digital advertising market weakness. We expect to return to positive revenue growth in the second half of 2023. Relative to our guidance, we saw over-performance in eCommerce, Taboola News and in our bidding offerings. eCommerce continues to impress, taking the momentum of the back half of 2022 through the first half of the year. The U.S. business has had strong retention and increasing budgets from our advertisers, or merchants as we tend to call eCommerce advertisers. In addition, the merchants or advertiser business in Europe has momentum due to our Google PLA campaign management, and there are positive supply side drivers with new partnerships in the buy now pay later space.
Taboola News will approach $100 million in revenues this year versus over $50 million in revenues in 2022. Finally, our bidding offerings continue to gain momentum. Microsoft is expected to have strong double-digit ex-TAC growth in the second half of 2023 and we have more than doubled the number of other publishers on which we are now bidding. Our teams have achieved this strong revenue in ex-TAC performance while improving cost efficiency, indicated by our adjusted EBITDA margin in Q2 exceeding the margin that was implied by the midpoint of our Q2 guidance. Operating expenses were $122.1 million in the quarter, down $3.9 million year-over-year. This decrease was primarily the result of our focus on cost reductions that we announced in Q3 of last year.
For the full year, we expect to show lower expenses as a percentage of revenue year-over-year in 2023. Our headcount is down approximately 8% from its peak in July of 2022. GAAP net loss for the quarter of $31.3 million included amortization of intangibles of $16.0 million, Share-based compensation expenses of $13.9 million and holdback compensation expenses related to the Connexity acquisition of $2.6 million, which were excluded from non-GAAP net income. Our non-GAAP net loss of approximately $1.4 million was above the high-end of our guidance range. In terms of cash generation, we had approximately $11.6 million in operating cash flow in Q2, with free cash flow of around $7.8 million. If you removed the impact of net publisher prepayments, which were a source of cash this quarter of $6.9 million, and interest payments on our long-term debt, which were a use of cash of $4.7 million, our free cash flow would have been $5.6 million.
It is interesting to note that net publisher prepayments were a source of cash this quarter. This was due to the fact that new prepayments were lower than the quarterly amortization of historical prepayments. While we still expect net publisher prepayments to be a use of cash in 2023, it does show how they can become neutral to a source of cash in the future. Q2 has historically been a soft quarter in terms of free cash flow, but in Q2 2023, we benefited from our stronger-than-projected operating performance, as well as from a net cash benefit from publisher prepayments and some capital expenditures that were deferred from Q2 to Q3. Let’s turn to the balance sheet. Cash and cash equivalents plus our short-term investments decreased from $274.4 million at the end of Q1 to $246.9 million at the end of Q2 2023, and remains above our debt principal balance of $203.5 million.
The decrease in our cash and cash equivalents balance was driven by the repayment of $30 million of our long-term debt in April. You can see that our net cash balance remains healthy. I also want to update on both the share buyback and debt repayment programs that we announced last quarter. As you probably recall, we announced that we would buy back up to $40 million of shares in 2023 and that we intended to repay up to an additional $50 million of our long-term debt in the second half of the year. The share buyback program was initiated on June 1 and we repurchased a total of approximately 1.4 million shares in the month of June at an average share price of $3.02. We continued to repurchase shares in Q3 and, as of Friday, August 4, we had repurchased a total of approximately 2.9 million shares at an average share price of $3.17.
Note that this includes the shares that we repurchased in June. In addition to the $30 million of our long-term debt we repaid in Q2, our intention remains to repay up to another $50 million of our long-term debt in 2023 assuming the availability of sufficient working capital. In terms of timing, we expect that this will not occur until Q4 due to the need to access certain cash balances in a tax efficient manner. Now let me shift to our forward looking guidance. For the full year 2023, we are raising the midpoint of our guidance. We expect revenues of $1,438 million to $1,469 million, gross profit of $420 million to $436 million, ex-TAC gross profit of $531 million to $546 million, adjusted EBITDA of $73 million to $80 million, and non-GAAP net income of $5 million to $10 million.
Adam mentioned earlier that we are now live in some smaller markets with Yahoo. Our full year guidance factors in a small amount of revenue from Yahoo in those markets. It also factors in the cost of investing in the partnership so we can capture the full revenue from the partnership. We still expect the revenue to start ramping in the second half of 2023 and to reach full run rate by the middle of 2024. Despite being a year of strategic investment in Yahoo and in our growth initiatives, we expect to generate positive free cash flow in 2023 for the full year. We anticipate free cash flow to turn negative in Q3 due to investments related to the Yahoo partnership, with significantly positive cash generation in Q4, due to normal seasonality. Finally, we are issuing Q3 guidance.
For Q3 2023, we expect revenues to be between $331 million and $357 million, gross profit between $83 million and $95 million, ex-TAC gross profit of $112 million and $124 million, adjusted EBITDA between negative $2 million and positive $10 million and non-GAAP net income of negative $20 million to negative $8 million. Let me finish by saying that we are happy with our second quarter performance and to be able to raise the midpoint of our guidance for the full year. We are also excited about the step change we are expecting in our business, as reflected by our 2024 targets of at least $200 million of adjusted EBITDA and at least $100 million of free cash flow. Perhaps most importantly, though, we are excited about the momentum we are building in our business, especially the additional scale that Yahoo will bring and the progress we are making towards becoming a must buy for advertisers looking to reach consumers in the open web.
With that, let’s open it up to questions.
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Q&A Session
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Operator: [Operator Instructions] The first question comes from Andrew Boone from JMP Securities. Please go ahead.
Andrew Boone: Good morning and thanks much for taking my questions. I wanted to go to the ’23 guide. You guys beat 2Q gross profit ex-TAC by $13 million, but are raising the midpoint of 2023 guidance by $6 million. So I guess the question is, is there some incremental weakness or something else you guys are seeing as we entering 3Q? Or is that just conservatism? And then, Adam, great to see the progress in terms of improving yield via tools. Can you talk about Max Conversion and Target-CPA benefits? And what that is helping to a mark in terms of budgets? Thanks so much.
Stephen Walker: Thanks, Andrew. Good to hear from you. So I’ll address the first one. So in terms of the full year guide, we obviously had a big beat in Q2, where we beat the high-end of our guidance by $8 million on ex-TAC, and almost $10 million on adjusted EBITDA. We want to be conservative though. So we don’t want to count on that level of outperformance kind of continuing throughout the year in Q3 and Q4. Hence, the fact that we kept the high-end of our guidance the same, while raising obviously the bottom end, lower expectations are off the table at this point. So we raise the lower end. So it’s really as you said, it’s conservatism, it’s wanting to not count on that level of over performance throughout the year, even though we’re obviously very happy that we did have that level of beat in Q2.
Adam Singolda: Hi, Andrew. So on the — based on the bidding strategy, so just to level set, we — about half Taboola’s R&D is working on performance advertising. And the reason is that we think that there’s a huge upside for Taboola to basically make advertisers successful, especially as we want to become the master [ph] by open web company, we now have about 18,000 advertisers, Google has 10 million. So there’s a huge range of how much we can capture more advertisers big and small. But to do that, you have to make it easier for advertisers to be successful when they try to work with you. And then once they’re successful, you want to help them spend more and that’s more of an NDR kind of dimension. If you look at Taboola, over the last many years, we built an amazing business where advertisers bid on Taboola using CPC.
So they had to guess what is a click is worth, were by the way they think about their business is how much does the client worth. So if your flower — my wife has a flower shop, so she knows how much a client is worth to her as a business. But if she was to work with Taboola, she would have to guess a CPC. Right now, all she has to do is to say, well, this is how much a client is worth, or here’s $5,000 budget with Max Conversion, you go Taboola and help me get as many clients as I want and tell me what is the most affordable price a client could worth as it comes from Taboola. This is the beginning of a revolution from my perspective, because that means that we can migrate tens of thousands of advertisers over time to work with Taboola and only focus on their own business objective.
Their client acquisition cost, their budget and — so that’s I’m happy to say that we all raise the toast at Taboola this week, because Max Conversion and Target-CPA is now general availability. So it’s not available to any advertisers, self service or enterprise accounts. I suspect, in 2024, more than 50% of our revenue and that’s going to be a fairly large amount, especially as Yahoo is ramping up, we’ll be using advanced bidding strategies in AI such as Max Conversion. The next in line, by the way, after that is Max revenue. And Max ROAS where advertisers could basically — advertisers could tell us, we have more than one product we’re selling through Taboola, here’s the price of each one and maximize not only the conversions but just make us more money.
That is the next in line from product roadmap. So over time, CPCs will be completely part of our past. So I’m very excited about it. And we’re putting half of our deck energy on that. Thank you.
Andrew Boone: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from James Kopelman from TD Cowen. Please go ahead.
James Kopelman: Thank you. Good morning. With eCommerce outperforming, does this change at all your view of how big a percentage of the overall business eCom will be once we get past the near-term macro that’s created these unusual comps for coordinated advertising? In other words, how should we think about the mix of eCommerce versus core going forward? And is there anything particular you would call out in the second quarter — with the third quarter as being kind of the key one or two drivers of eCommerce growth? And then I have a follow-up for Steve.
Adam Singolda: I can start. Steve, feel free to jump in and good morning, James. So one, it’s really exciting to see eCommerce, something we got into about 3 years ago with the acquisition of Connexity, really paying off as it relates to the synergy with our business. We are seeing on the one side, just you know, great market fit, advertisers buying from Connexity and Skimlinks are getting amazing value. And especially now when advertisers want to be close to the acquisition, the one distribution to be simple, they want to know that they’re putting $1 and they can make more than they spent. This is just a very profitable channel for them. It’s works. And the more we’re adding new advertisers within Taboola sales team, the more we see this business grown.
So that’s just a fundamental part of that business. On top of that, if you add turnkey, which you may have seen in my letter, I put a screenshot, we’re seeing a phenomenal growth of essentially — this is a great one of those. There’s more demand and supply. There are more publishers who want to pull us to turnkey, which means for us to write the eCommerce content for them using our data, and then to drive traffic to it, and then monetize it. If you go to Time.com Stamped, which is the eCommerce website that Taboola and Time.com partnered on. It’s beautiful. It’s ranked at the top of Google search. If you — if you’re searching for things like which check-in account should I open or best smartphones of 2023, were the top results on search engine, the pages, it looks beautiful, and it drives very high yield.
To the point and I think over time, this might be even bigger than our core business for publishers, because some of them, so this is a great momentum. We’re still early on turnkey, but I think this has big potential of becoming a big portion of our business over time. I think publishers eCommerce, they all want it. And I think it might be a third of their business over time. So the way I think about it is, if you’re not offering eCommerce to publishers, you may have nothing to offer over time, because that’s going to be a big portion of what they see as a growth engine.
James Kopelman: Great. And then a quick follow-up for Steve. We’ve been hearing other companies describe somewhat of a stabilization in the digital ad environment over the last couple of months. How would you guys characterize what you’re hearing in conversations with advertisers both in the U.S and internationally? For example, have you seen any change in the video advertising trends, which I think were somewhat soft earlier in the year? Thanks a lot.
Stephen Walker: Yes. So thanks for the questions, James. So yes, we would say that what we’re seeing in the digital advertising environment right now is stability. So in fact, ever since about Q3 last year, we’ve seen relative stability compared to obviously the first or the second and third quarter of last year. So we see relatively normal seasonality, we’re seeing relative stability of budgets, et cetera. And I think most advertisers that we talked to, what they’re basically saying is, they’re still watching the macro a bit. They’re probably getting a bit more bullish, like a lot of people are about the potential for a soft landing and not a recession. But I think they’re still cautious, but stable, their spend is stable, they’re still spending kind of as they were.
Now we are seeing ups and downs in different portions of our business, for instance, eCommerce has been particularly strong. Bottom of funnel, things where you’re helping to convert directly into revenue have been particularly strong. Top of funnel video still remain soft relative to historical norms. So we haven’t seen a further softening of it, but it’s definitely soft relative to historic — history. And I think that’s consistent with what we’ve said in the past, which is, the further down the funnel you go, the more stability you get, and the more strength you get. And the further towards the top of the funnel you are, the softer things are. So generally, that’s consistent with what we’re seeing. So we’ve seen pretty much relative stability since the end of Q3 of last year, and nothing has changed dramatically on that.
James Kopelman: Great. Thanks, guys.
Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Laura Martin from Needham. Please go ahead.
Laura Martin: Good morning. Staying on the eCommerce spin, Adam, I’m interested in whether you have channel conflict because of these new companies where you’re doing content, doesn’t that threaten the actual companies that are in your core business where their core business is doing content? Why is this a channel conflict for you guys?
Adam Singolda: So, hey, Laura. Good morning. It’s — [indiscernible] we’re working together, so the editorial team of the publisher works very closely with the editorial team that we’ve built to — to create that content. So this is not sort of like a vendor ship type of relationship. It’s very much a partnership that is deep. And in fact, what I like about is that I think publishers in general, want to work with companies that are more partner type. CPM and being ad tech is just part of the past, it sounds good enough. So you need to be able to build relationship that is driven by trust with the editorial team, the subscription team, the audience team, the commerce team. So all of those people on the publisher side take part in deciding who they’re going to work with side by side to the revenue person.
So [indiscernible] this is very much a trust oriented relationship. And two, it’s very different type of writing, right? So when you cover the news or entertainment or things of that nature, it’s very different than covering things, like products or covering things such as financial services. And also there’s a data element of what do users want to read to begin with. So we’ve been doing this with Time.com, as an example, for almost 6 months now, and it’s a huge success. I mean we’re — we will keep expanding how we’re promoting that content on the homepage of Time.com. Our teams are spending so much time together. I just hope we can do 100x more Time.com from our perspective, because it’s really encouraging beginning.
Laura Martin: Great. And then my second one was, in your press release, you said that you started to roll out some of the Yahoo inventory offshore, where there’s a fewer number of advertisers. Can you talk about what kind of — how is the inventory different in Yahoo? And what are you seeing — what are your early takes on the bigger Yahoo integration that you’ve learned for actually rolling out some of these offshore markets so far?
Adam Singolda: Sure. If you remember, when we announced the Yahoo, 30-year strategic partnership, one of the things that I said is that — and this was, as an outsider, because we were not on Yahoo at the time, I said, from what we know and what — we are talking to industry executive, working with Yahoo as an advertiser, it’s a huge opportunity, because the users are very engaged. It’s almost 900 million people a month, who love Yahoo, the iconic brand that have been around for 30 years. So between the mail, Yahoo finance, sports, news, users are super engaged. And advertisers are capturing this engagement in the form of conversions and growth to them. So it’s a very loyal advertiser base that loves Yahoo, as much as consumers love them.
This was then when I talked about it, just by talking to people in the industry and of course, talking to Yahoo. Now we’re live on the international market. This is a smaller portion of Yahoo. Yahoo, obviously, the U.S is the bigger portion. But what’s really encouraging me and us is that now that we’re able to bring some Taboola advertisers onto Yahoo international markets, we’ve kind of validated this very important assumption that Yahoo is awesome. That is — that an advertiser spending on Yahoo is able to get great conversions. And what we hope is that as we’re now moving to the next stage, really the rest of the year, migrating advertisers on both sides, and bringing that into one holistic mix, this will be a great opportunity for advertisers on both sides.
And we can continue to improve advertiser success, as you know, is our number one priority as a company. So what we know now is that it’s awesome, it’s small. But we’re very excited to kind of continue to the next stage into the U.S., and ramping that up in 2024.
Laura Martin: Thank you.
Adam Singolda: Thanks, Laura.
Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Dan Day from B. Riley Securities. Please go ahead.
Daniel Day: Yes, good morning, guys. Appreciate you taking the questions. So, just first one for Steve, just looking at the guidance and backing into the cash operating costs, and I’m thinking about that really is the delta between gross profit and adjusted EBITDA. I think the back half implies around $65 million or so per quarter. That had been more like $55 million a quarter. I understand that’s mostly due to these Yahoo integration expenses really starting to hit the income statement. But can you just talk about how much of that incremental OpEx in the next couple of quarters is kind of stickier in nature? And how much of it sort of one-time in nature?
Stephen Walker: Good to hear for you, Dan. So you’re correct. Almost all of that uptick in the second half comes from two areas. One is investment in Yahoo. So we will be doing incremental hiring to basically support the ramping of Yahoo that will, as Adam said, start in the second half, and then continue through the middle of next year. Those costs — so there’s two types of costs within that. So one is their sales people and account managers to manage the revenue. Those are permanent. So we will always need those people to manage the revenue coming from the relationship. And in fact, we think we’ll be able to grow the relationship over time. So we may even grow the number of headcount that supporting that has the revenue growth, because we typically see that our sales and account management headcount tends to grow roughly in line with revenue.
We gained some efficiencies over time, but it grows roughly in line with revenue. So those will be permanent. The tech resources that we’ll be bringing on to help with the transition, those we will be able to cycle off of the project, once we get fully ramped for the most part. There’s really nothing that is dramatically special about the Yahoo setup that will require permanent people on that. So we’ll be able to cycle them off. So we’ll probably move them to other projects at the end of the ramp, so by middle of next year. So that gives you an idea on the Yahoo. The second area that we will be doing some incremental hiring here is actually in eCommerce since it’s growing so well. We’ve identified a number of growth initiatives with eCommerce that we think would be — would benefit from incremental hiring would help us grow those faster.
So we will be doing some incremental hiring there. I think we have enough initiatives there that those are effectively permanent. I mean, we’re going to keep them on, they’ll start doing new initiatives over time. But they will be effectively permanent, but they’ll obviously come with a step up in our revenue there. So I hope that helps in terms of understanding kind of the cost base.
Daniel Day: Yes, that was great, Steve. Thanks. Follow-up, probably for Adam. You talked about your response to the last question, wanting to do 100 of these timestamp, like deals with turnkey commerce. Just maybe talk about the pipeline to get new publishers up and running there? How hard is that like to — can get this started with new publisher partners? Just generally, where you stand in terms of bringing on more partners for the turnkey commerce initiatives?
Adam Singolda: Sure, and thanks for the question. So let me start with the demand for the product. So I can tell you, we have a lot of publishers who want to launch it. In fact, we have some publishers who offer to pay for the service, because this is a [indiscernible] reminder, but just is there any way to get priority to get onto platform, given the success and how — and people can check it out on their own, they don’t even need to ask us, you just search things and you see that, the results are coming up high. So the demand for the product is, it’s great. It feels like a new iPhone and everybody wants it and there’s a long line. Where we are in terms of providing that to many, many publishers, we’re still — we want to make sure that we’re doing a good job.
So we’re very focused on our existing partners, advanced media, and Time.com. There’s a another big one that we will hopefully be able to share over the next quarter. And we’re probably going to focus on those three for the rest of 2023. And then 2024, we’ll figure out to what how much we want to expand that. So the good news is that you always want to be in a position where you have more people who want it, then you can give it. And what we’re trying to do right now is focus on our early adopters, want to make sure that they’re very happy and we’re seeing success, because that’s a priority for us. They took a chance on us. So we want to focus. But we’re hopefully moving to more of a scale approach in 2024.
Daniel Day: Great. Thanks for taking the questions.
Operator: Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Stephen Jue from Credit Susie. Please go ahead.
Stephen Jue: Okay, great. Thank you. So you’ve announced some nice publisher wins this quarter. Now understandably, Yahoo is the one that everybody is focused on right now. But can you talk about what you’re hearing from everybody else? And when potentially some of the larger publishers may be coming up for RFP? Thank you.
Adam Singolda: Sure. Good morning, Steve. So we — and I mentioned it a little bit also on my letter, we’re investing a lot in technology to make sure that when publishers either think about who to work with or to renew, they get to really take a holistic view about who can help them drive audience growth, engagement growth, and revenue diversification. And it’s so great to see that our investments are panning [ph] out. So I’ll give you one example homepage for you, which is a way to render using AI the entire homepage, so personalize it’s completely to consumers. It’s like one homepage turns into a 1,000 homepages. And that gets a lot of adoption. It’s now we have self service options for networks of sites. And you’re hearing a lot more publishers adopting it.
So this is — it’s in GA, and it’s widely required by publishers. And this is something that we’ve been working on alongside newsroom for 7 years or so. So it’s a huge investment. It’s a company on its own, and it’s something publishers want as well as helping them get subscription and audience distribution with Taboola News. If you think about Generative AI, and the risk of search traffic going down, publishers are asking themselves which partner is going to help me get more audience. So with Taboola News now approaching $100 million in revenue this year, it means that we’re just going to continue to stand more and more people to high quality journalism and open web. So not only Taboola is the highest or among the highest revenue source, not only we’re getting publishers to eCommerce, we’re empowering hundreds of editorial staff with homepage personalization.
We help them diversify the revenue with subscription, all those things in time of them wanting deep, deep partners. So, you’re seeing great names like Barstool and Nexstar, which is these are huge wins. Geo Media Express and more in the same dynamics all over the world. This is a global phenomena of publishers looking for tech providers that can do those things. Taboola is very special. We invest more in technology than others. So, hopefully, we’re right. It’s that — this is where the industry is going. We think we’re right. And in terms of others that are in the pipeline, they’re great names that are out there that are thinking about who to work with, and I hope to win them all.
Stephen Jue: Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. [Operator Instructions] I am showing no further questions at this time. I would like to turn the conference back over to Adam Singolda for closing remarks.
Adam Singolda: Thanks, everyone, for joining us today. I’m very excited as you can tell about where we are and the momentum within our business. We’re winning publisher as in our core market, thanks to our technology investments, empowering editorial teams, helping publishers get subscribers launching their eCommerce, business and a lot more. I think publishers want less and less vendors, and more strategic partners for 5, for 10, for 30 years. Publishers want companies who invest in technology, and can do more than just paying CPM. We’re also bidding our expectation on eCommerce, which is nearly 20% of our ex-TAC. And I believe eCommerce will be a big part of publishers revenue in the open web. We’re bidding our expectation also on Taboola News, which is our version of Apple News for Android devices, with partners like Samsung and Xiaomi.
And this business is approaching $100 million in revenue this year, from $50 million last year. Yahoo is now live on international markets. And we’ve validated, it’s an amazing place for advertisers to beat. Our relationship with Yahoo leadership is just stronger than ever. And lastly, we expect to grow more than 10% in revenue in the second half of 2023 and in Q4 I expect us to grow more than 20% versus last quarter last year. These are exciting times for us at Taboola and also for the industry. I’m convinced there needs to be a Google type company dedicated to the open web and journalism that can be a must buy, so advertisers can for the first time ever rely on that company. And we have a real shot at [indiscernible] one. Thanks again, everyone for joining us today, and we look forward to talking to many of you over the next few weeks.
Operator: This concludes today’s conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.