NYSE:ASAN Asana Q2 2024 Earnings Report $15.70 +0.16 (+1.00%) Closing price 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$15.31 -0.40 (-2.52%) As of 07:52 PM Eastern Extended trading is trading that happens on electronic markets outside of regular trading hours. This is a fair market value extended hours price provided by Polygon.io. Learn more. Earnings HistoryForecast Asana EPS ResultsActual EPS-$0.04Consensus EPS -$0.11Beat/MissBeat by +$0.07One Year Ago EPS-$0.59Asana Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$162.46 millionExpected Revenue$157.91 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$4.55 millionYoY Revenue Growth+20.40%Asana Announcement DetailsQuarterQ2 2024Date9/5/2023TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateTuesday, September 5, 2023Conference Call Time4:30PM ETUpcoming EarningsAsana's Q1 2026 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 29, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 4:30 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptSlide DeckPress Release (8-K)Quarterly Report (10-Q)SEC FilingEarnings HistoryCompany ProfileSlide DeckFull Screen Slide DeckPowered by Asana Q2 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrSeptember 5, 2023 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:01Welcome to Asana's Second Quarter Fiscal Year 20 24 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker presentation, there will be a question and answer session. I would now like to hand the call over to Catherine Buan, Head of Investor Relations. Please Go ahead. Speaker 100:00:33Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us on today's conference call to discuss the financial results For Asana's Q2 fiscal year 2024. With me on today's call are Dustin Moskovitz, Asana's Co Founder and CEO Ann Remondi, our Chief Operating Officer and Head of Business and Tim Wan, our Chief Financial Officer. Today's call will include Forward looking statements, including statements regarding our expectations for free cash flow, our financial outlook, strategic plans, market position and growth opportunities. Looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause our actual results to be materially different from those expressed or implied by the forward looking statements. Please refer to our filings with the SEC, including our most recent Annual Report Form 10 ks and Quarterly Report on Form 10 Q for additional information on risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause actual results to differ materially from those set forth in such statements. Speaker 100:01:29In addition, during today's call, we will discuss non GAAP financial measures. These non GAAP financial measures are in addition to and not a substitute for or superior to measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliation between GAAP and non GAAP financial measures And a discussion of the limitations of using non GAAP measures versus their closest GAAP equivalents are available in our earnings release, which is posted on our Investor Relations webpage at investors. Asana.com. And with that, I'd like to turn the call over to Dustin. Speaker 200:01:59Thank you, Catherine, and thank you all for joining us on the call today. We reported Q2 results leading top and bottom line expectations. Q2 revenues grew 20% year over year as we continue to close large deals in the Enterprise segment. Non GAAP operating margins improved 40 percentage points year over year, While we attained positive free cash flow in the quarter at $14,600,000 Our growth continues to be fueled by some of the largest In Q2, we closed and expanded deals across industries such as manufacturing, professional services, Healthcare, logistics, media and financial services. Our most strategic customers are modernizing the way they work and returning to Asana for work management at scale. Speaker 200:02:45And as we look toward the next generation of work management and implement AI even further, These relationships will be increasingly valuable. Even with continued macro headwinds and heightened budget scrutiny in the enterprise, sentiment seems to be stabilizing. Customers are looking for ways to consolidate their vendors, getting more ROI out of everything they're doing, and they're turning to Asana. Asana can help to achieve their goals and objectives more efficiently and faster than ever before. In fact, we've seen an increase in multiyear commitments both year over year and sequentially in the quarter. Speaker 200:03:19In Q2, we made great progress on improving our non GAAP operating margins. We expect significant improvement in non GAAP operating margin year over year for the full year as we focus on operational efficiency and growth, which Tim will talk about more. In the first half of the year, we've been working through the macro headwinds and we continue to focus on our enterprise playbook, improving sales execution and building substantial enterprise leadership, most recently announcing the arrival of our new CRO, Ed McDonald. I'd be remiss to start with anything but artificial intelligence, Given the opportunity it presents for Asana and our customers. So let me jump right in. Speaker 200:03:55In short, I'm extremely excited. I've been deeply involved and passionate about AI for a very long time. Asana has the good fortune of sharing a backyard with many of the leaders in AI, including companies like Anthropic and OpenAI. And I personally have been embedded in this community and working with these companies since their founding days as an early supporter of both OpenAI and Anthropic. AI really entered the zeitgeist and captured people's imaginations in November of last year with the launch of Chat GPT. Speaker 200:04:22But as a novelty for some has worn out, so is their enthusiasm. My view is that people aren't thinking big enough, and they're underestimating how quickly the foundation models themselves will improve. I believe chatbots are just demos. They're not really the end game. And the real potential of AI is going to manifest when it gets deeply integrated into other software, making it possible for end users to get great results without themselves becoming prompt engineers and for developers to radically accelerate their productivity. Speaker 200:04:51There's also a lot of skepticism around AI that I understand and acknowledge. Many folks have rightly called out the hallucination or black box problems. Folks just don't trust that AI is providing accurate or useful guidance all of the time. They want to be able to trust that they're getting good recommendations, which means they need to understand the thinking process and assumptions that underlie them. Encountering the now infamous hallucinations, Rhodes Trust, especially when you can't trace how the AI came up with it in the first place. Speaker 200:05:20We've been architecting Asana's WorkGraph data model for over a decade, We believe it will become increasingly valuable in this AI powered future, thanks to what it allows us to achieve with Asana Intelligence. The work graph ensures that you have a single source of truth for work data, structured in a way that it's scalable and maps to how work actually gets done inside organizations. With the work graph, data is connected across the whole enterprise, work, functions, teams and people. And this data connection is powerful because it captures the sum and the parts. AI can use the underlying pieces of the work to more accurately draw conclusions at multiple levels of altitude. Speaker 200:05:57And with the Asana work graph, We believe we're best positioned in the work management category to solve the Black Box problem because we can show its work and unpack its assumptions from facts and analysis of the work across all teams at all levels of granularity. Here's a tangible example. Let's say a company is preparing for a global product launch and multiple teams across R and D, marketing, product marketing and sales are involved. Each have their own projects and work streams that support the overall launch effort And each lives in one portfolio of work in Asana. Asana Intelligence will be able to analyze all elements of the work supporting the product launch And flag key risks and bottlenecks using granular information from supporting tasks. Speaker 200:06:35Before, these hidden blockers would have been a blind spot for the organization and we've taken many conversations to uncover. But now with the work graph and AI, this can be surfaced immediately and Essanta Intelligence will help show its work by pointing how it came to that conclusion based on the work data and the work relationships at its disposal. Sana will highlight where and how This unseen but critical dependency will impact launch timelines visually. The Work Graph makes how work gets done in your organization highly legible to the AI, It's also going to make the AI's underlying assumptions to its conclusions legible to your organization and the people within it. This is critical for key enterprise requirements like permissions, The Sauna Intelligence powered by the work graph will serve as a shared map that helps align human intention with AI guidance as they work together to achieve a customer's goals. Speaker 200:07:27We believe Asana is the only work management platform built for enterprise scale with proven capabilities of scaling to 200,000 seats in company wide deployments and our enterprise customers agree. As Asana adoption grows across the enterprise, the value we provide increases. And the cross functional nature of the Workcraft data model is even more important with AI, because information silos isolate context that could otherwise be used. Even if you use AI to find the contacts in another silo, you have to infer how they're connected, whereas the relationship is explicit in the WorkGraph data model. AI gives us yet another way of giving customers increasing returns to scale in their Asana adoption. Speaker 200:08:06In sum, Asana will capitalize on an enterprise's work graph to deliver a more useful, accurate and insightful user experience at every level, especially the executive level. AI is the ultimate accelerant of 1 of Osana's core value propositions, which is to help companies thrive by connecting company wide goals to the strategic initiatives, departments, teams and work needed to achieve them. We see ourselves as creating entirely new software interfaces between teams of humans and working together and the powerful AI models that make getting their work done easier. This is the core of our innovation focus right now. We've already announced a slew of new AI features that are currently in beta that help individuals and teams improve their productivity, like writing assistant, instant summaries and work organizer. Speaker 200:08:51Other features in beta include health checks that drive greater clarity and accountability and ask Asana anything that maximizes impact. Further down the product roadmap, we're also planning features such as goal based resource management and AI assisted smart workflows, and we're just getting started. You'll see us unveil an exciting new lineup of innovation at our Work Innovation Summit on October 3 in New York City. This will be our most exciting customer event of the year with a visionary keynote, luminary speakers, industry leaders across operations, IT and marketing, as well as a special investor session to talk more about our product plans, We'll also be hosting customers at our Work Innovation Center, where we'll share their Work Innovation Score, a cutting edge benchmark developed by industry leading experts. This course powered by the WorkGraph and AI, designed to assess organizations' potential for innovation, both now and in the future. Speaker 200:09:45The Work Innovation Score highlights our customers' innovation potential, allowing them to clearly identify strengths and overcome obstacles. This is a unique offering in our market and it's only offered by Asana. It's extremely popular, especially with our largest and most strategic customers. So we're excited to include even more customers in the program. We look forward to seeing you in New York City on October 3. Speaker 200:10:08In closing, in spite of significant headwinds, we've made measurable progress in the first half of the fiscal year. We continue to see traction with some of the largest companies in the world and look forward to partnering with these companies as we look toward the future product roadmap. Now I'll turn it over to Anne. Speaker 300:10:22Thanks, Dustin. The story in Q2 was really about continued enterprise growth and building our enterprise leadership bench. We've talked about our strategy for moving upmarket and we are working and executing on this plan. That said, I know the macro situation is still top of mind, so let me adjust that upfront. Overall, the sentiment in our customer base has remained the same versus last quarter. Speaker 300:10:45While it hasn't yet improved, it also has not gotten worse. Budgets continue to be scrutinized, seats are being optimized and decisions for expansion are being pushed out. But as customers continue to optimize budgets, We are also getting positive competitive signals where customers are consolidating, removing incumbents and choosing Asana. I also want to talk about net retention rate trends. As the de facto choice for some of the largest tech companies in the world, Asana has likely seen disproportionate exposure to any pullback in that vertical, which is about 30% of our business. Speaker 300:11:20Importantly, much of this has been less seat expansion as opposed to anything else, and that remained a factor this quarter. For example, in some cases, even when a customer was choosing to expand into new use cases and departments, This is often offset by removing seats that were downsized as part of a budget pullback. Conversely, As we approach the anniversary at the beginning of this trend, we expect to benefit from any rebound in future quarters. Top of funnel demand was stable versus last quarter and our pipeline continues to build. The U. Speaker 300:11:53S. Grew 22% year over year, while international grew 18%. If I split off EMEA separately, EMEA had a particularly solid quarter, reporting the fastest growth across our major regions. Our new leadership and regional model in EMEA are in place, and we're getting increased traction. We closed several of our largest net new deals in EMEA as a result Growth in our business and enterprise tiers led overall growth at 32% year over year and represents 73% of our revenue. Speaker 300:12:26We believe this is a good proxy for our traction within larger customers. Asana goals, portfolios and reporting are key differentiators for us. Adoption has continued to be And these investments are leading to consolidation wins. Our top down use case and value selling is resonating, and it's allowing us to land large deals. Our enterprise customers representing organizations with over 2,000 employees continue to be our fastest growing customer segment, and this segment is further diversifying. Speaker 300:12:58Approximately 80% of the net new $100,000 plus customers in Q2 were in non tech sectors. Executives are planning long term about how to invest in work management capabilities, and this is driving multiyear commitments for us. And there's not a single enterprise customer that isn't asking us about AI and automations in Asana. We believe our AI roadmap will help to We are seeing new lands and expansions broadly across several diverse industries. First, we set a new record with our largest land deal in Asana history. Speaker 300:13:361 of the largest multinational cybersecurity companies Chose Asana in a multimillion dollar consolidation win. During the RFP process, they evaluated multiple work management apps that they were using across the company based on several factors. The company will be methodically ripping out legacy apps and replacing them with Asana across the organization over 3 phases. This is a very significant win on many fronts, In particular, how successfully we can execute on a top down value based sales motion. Also, I'm very excited about another net new customer, one of the largest professional services companies in the world based in the U. Speaker 300:14:16K. With over 12,000 employees worldwide. Their CMO was looking for a centralized global platform to ensure a consistent brand experience across markets and channels. It's a multiyear deployment that represents a great deal of potential. In addition, a large healthcare manufacturing company headquartered in Switzerland With over 9,000 employees is expanding with Asana and replacing a legacy incumbent. Speaker 300:14:41The company has grown significantly through acquisitions and will make Asana available to employees globally. This is another multiyear strategic deal. We signed several deals this quarter with manufacturing companies. One of the larger deals was with Fujitsu, one of the largest IT companies in the world. We're also seeing continued success in the financial services industry. Speaker 300:15:04We had a 6 figure early renewal and expansion with a large financial services firm in the consumer credit space after they saw significant value from Asana They're bringing more teams onto our enterprise platform to manage everything from OKRs to project plans, so they can make informed decisions about their strategic initiatives to improve goal attainment. We also had an expansion with a subsidiary of a major The company uses Asana to manage developing new products to enter new industries. Security and governance are very important to them, so Asana Enterprise capabilities were among the reasons we won. You may or may not know, but Asana is very, very popular in the sports business. We closed deals this quarter with 1 of the English Premier League's most highly decorated football clubs as well as with the New York Islanders and the NC2A. Speaker 300:16:00And importantly, we continue to win in the healthcare and biotech vertical as well, with 2 6 figure deals in the U. S. As you know, we announced HIPAA compliance about a year ago and have been gaining momentum in this vertical Supported by our compliance and security offerings. As you can see, we've already helped dozens of our largest customers with their digital transformation initiatives. We believe digital transformation is an enormous secular trend, but the intelligence transformation with AI has the potential to be an even larger opportunity for Asana. Speaker 300:16:33And we're preparing to be the leading platform for change in this new revolution of technology. In summary, we're seeing more multiyear deals, up both sequentially and year over year, winning on vendor consolidation decisions and are continuing to diversify our enterprise success across more and more industries. But we have more work to do. Looking to the second half and the beginning of next year, we continue to focus on improving expansion rates through customer success programs and initiatives, Deepening our partnerships with our strategic accounts, rolling out new packaging, which we will talk more about on October 3rd and enterprise leadership. We are thrilled to welcome Ed McDonald as our new Chief Revenue Officer. Speaker 300:17:17He is most recently from Salesforce and Spent 10 years there scaling the Marketing Cloud and multiple vertical businesses from $100,000,000 to a $3,500,000,000 business today. He also has experience from Eloqua, McGraw Financial and Thomson Reuters. He has a remarkable track record and deep With Ed, Shannon Duffy, our CMO And Neeracha Tejak Hootebud, our Chief Customer Officer and the rest of our go to market team, we are focused on elevating our sales motion for the next phase of growth. We are improving our sales enablement capabilities and lead generation initiatives targeted at enterprise accounts. We are creating a repeatable playbook to scale enterprise accounts to become over $100,000 customers and beyond. Speaker 300:18:08We're improving on our customer success strategy to scalably serve more customers. Importantly, we can focus on better serving our most strategic customers. These long term partnerships play a critical role in our product roadmap and our vision to strategically serve large scale customers, which we believe will help us further drive growth. And with that, I'll hand it over to Tim. Speaker 400:18:31Thank you, Ann. While I'm pleased with our high level results, Some of the underlying drivers were not as strong as we had hoped. We continue to see headwinds from a macro standpoint and in our technology segment, and you see that especially in our net dollar retention rate metrics. We also have more work to do as we develop our enterprise go to market muscle And continue transitioning up market. Meanwhile, the performance at the low end of the market is dragging down overall growth. Speaker 400:18:58On the other hand, I am really proud of the efforts the team put in to manage costs and improve efficiency. We have made substantial progress on improving our operating margin and delivered our 1st positive free cash flow quarter since going public. Onto our Q2 results. Q2 revenues came in at $162,500,000 up 20% year over year. Revenue from customers spending $5,000 or more on an annualized basis 24% year over year. Speaker 400:19:27This cohort represented 74% of our revenues in Q2, up from 72% in the year ago quarter. We have 20,782 customers spending 5,000 or more on an annualized basis. We have 553 customers spending $100,000 or more on an annualized basis, and this customer cohort grew at 20% year over year. As a reminder, we define these customer cohorts based on annualized GAAP revenues in a given quarter. Our dollar based net retention rates were lower, driven by lower expansion and downgrades. Speaker 400:20:01Our overall dollar based net retention rate was over 105%. Among customers spending $5,000 or more, our dollar based net retention rate was over 110%. And among customers spending $100,000 or more, our dollar based We continue to see stable logo churn rates overall and low churn in our largest accounts, demonstrating the value we deliver for our enterprise customers. Companies remain mindful of the near term economic challenges and we therefore expect our overall dollar based net retention rates to trend lower, particularly in the lower end of the market. I will speak specifically to the outlook in a moment. Speaker 400:20:48As I turn to expense items and profitability, I would like to point out that I will be discussing non GAAP results in the balance of my remarks. Keep in mind, non GAAP results exclude stock based compensation and non cash expenses related to impairment. Gross margins came in at 90.3%. Research and Development was $52,300,000 or 32 percent of revenue, an improvement from 37% a year ago. Sales and marketing were $79,600,000 or 49% of Revenue, an improvement from 70% a year ago. Speaker 400:21:21G and A was $25,100,000 or 15% of revenue, an improvement from 29% a year ago. Operating loss was $10,400,000 and our operating loss margin was 6%, representing a 40% point The margin improvement versus a year ago. The improvement in our operating margin demonstrates our ability to take a balanced approach to growth and profitability. Net loss was $8,400,000 and our net loss per share was $0.04 Moving on to the balance sheet and cash flow. Cash and marketable securities at the end of Q2 were approximately $537,500,000 Our remaining performance obligations or RPO was $333,400,000 up 27% from the year ago quarter. Speaker 400:22:0886% of our RPO will be recognized over the next 12 months. That current portion of RPO grew 26% from the year ago quarter. Our ending Q2 deferred revenue was 200 $61,100,000 up 24 percent year over year. Our free cash flow is defined as net cash from operating activities, Less cash used in property and equipment and capitalized software costs, excluding non recurring items such as costs related to restructuring. Q2 free cash flow was positive $14,600,000 or 9% on a margin basis, an improvement from negative 31% from the year ago quarter. Speaker 400:22:48Moving to guidance for Q3 fiscal 2024, we expect revenues of $163,500,000 to $164,500,000 representing growth of 16% year over year. We expect non GAAP loss from operations of $25,000,000 to $23,000,000 representing an operating margin of negative 15% at the midpoint of guidance, a measurable improvement from the same year ago period. And we expect net loss per share of $0.11 to 0 point 1 $0 Assuming basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 221,000,000. For the full fiscal year 2024, We expect revenue to be in the range of $642,000,000 to $648,000,000 representing a growth rate of 17% to 18% year over year. We expect non GAAP loss from operations of $93,000,000 to $85,000,000 representing an operating margin of negative 14% at the midpoint of guidance, down from negative 38% in fiscal 2023. Speaker 400:23:53And we expect net loss per share of $0.42 to $0.39 assuming basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 219,000,000. Our guidance assumes that there is no change in the current macroeconomic environment and that headwinds persist through the end of this year. We expect continued compression in our dollar based net retention rate, but we expect it will remain above 100%. We also have changes in leadership We are committed to maintaining a disciplined and balanced approach to optimizing costs and improving efficiency and profitability. We will continue to invest in future growth opportunities like AI, which we expect will drive long term value. Speaker 400:24:36While this quarter's free cash flow may not repeat next As we work towards reaching sustained free cash flow, we are encouraged by the progress we've made and I'm optimistic about our future. Over the next 18 months to 24 months, we anticipate incremental growth will be driven by 1st, economic recovery in the most impacted verticals such as the tech sector, paired with improved execution on our go to market initiatives under our new leadership team. 2nd, new capabilities driven by advances in AI. And third, our new packaging strategy, which we will talk more about on October 3rd. We look forward to seeing you all in New York on October 3rd, where we will dive deeper into these topics during the investor session. Speaker 400:25:23And with that, I'll turn it back to the operator for questions. Operator00:25:30Thank you. We also ask that you please limit yourself to 1 question and one follow-up and then return to the queue. Our first question comes from the line of Andrew De Gasperi of Berenberg. Speaker 500:26:09Thanks for taking my question. Maybe first on the largest land deal that you've won this Can you maybe elaborate what went in, what in terms of the discussions with that customer, what kind of stood out in terms of Asana and what they found important? And just generally, do you think this can replicate itself out going forward? Speaker 300:26:33Hi, Andrew. It's Anne. Thanks so much for your question. Yes, happy to share a little bit more insight on that deal. Really, the customer was Looking for an opportunity to grow, with one partner over multiple years. Speaker 300:26:48They cared a lot about Reducing tech sprawl, they wanted to replace at least 7 existing applications that they had seen used across Many of their departments, in particular, this company had acquired a lot of other companies. And so being able Consolidated all in one platform was really important. They're looking to increase collaboration and standardization and really ultimately deliver products faster. And so we're really excited to work with them and all the different departments that were part of the RFP process. Ultimately, our view on where AI is Going, how we can scale our security and the fact that we had already successfully deployed up to 200,000 employees in our largest account Really helped secure that. Speaker 300:27:36So we're looking forward to doing more of those, especially where CIOs are driving the decision making process across the organization. Speaker 500:27:45Thanks. And then maybe on EMEA, can you really lay out a little bit what wasn't working there, at least what Is working better right now? I mean, what changes did you implement besides obviously the new leadership there? And could you replicate that change to other regions as well? Speaker 300:28:01Yes. So we are really excited about the new leadership in EMEA. I think a few things, certainly with the leadership, there's also a focus on larger deals and really ensuring that we've got repeatability and discipline around the large deal pipeline and large deal close rates. And then we've aligned both our corporate and enterprise teams by region under the new leadership. So that was a change That was made. Speaker 300:28:30We had previously sort of centralized leadership around for our corporate segment, but now it's aligned by our largest markets. So we're excited to see that momentum. It certainly contributed to the 2 large lands, that I mentioned before, one with a professional services organization with 12,000 employees and one with a healthcare manufacturing firm with 9,000 employees. So excited to see more of that. And we do believe that is something that is replicable. Speaker 300:28:56We're seeing some great signs in Japan, which is another strategic market Operator00:29:16Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Steve Enders of Citi. Speaker 600:29:23Okay, great. Thanks for taking the questions here. I guess I do want to ask on the consolidation activity that You saw in a really good win there. I guess, how much of an increase have you seen in those Consolidation opportunities with maybe some of the choppy macro that you were that you've been calling out. And I guess as we think about Further large deal activity, how should we think about what the pipeline looks like for those opportunities going into the second half of the year? Speaker 300:29:58Yes. Thank you so much, Steve. What we are seeing in this environment As there's more scrutiny both by CIOs and CFOs on budget spend that the interest in opportunities To consolidate is increasing and we've seen that across the last several quarters. In particular, as they evaluate where they Have different investments already and where they can improve them going forward. And in particular for us, the ability to bring that all onto one platform and benefit from increased collaboration on the platform. Speaker 300:30:33That is what's driving the consolidation considerations. And then I do think the focus on security and scale is really important as CIOs in particular are looking to consolidate. So we are also seeing that, for some legacy applications that exist in customer accounts, there's active Evaluation of how those might be replaced by Asana. So definitely in our pipeline, we're seeing more opportunities that are Focus specifically on consolidation. Speaker 600:31:07Okay. That's helpful. And then maybe just on the outlook And I guess what you are seeing in the macro, I guess what part, I guess, changed versus maybe what you were seeing Last quarter, is it just things got a little bit worse on the tech side than maybe originally When you gave the guidance 90 days ago or just how should we think about what's incrementally changed in the outlook here? Yes. I would say a couple Speaker 200:31:39of things. I think Speaker 400:31:39we continue to see, 1, headwinds. And I think a lot of that headwinds does reside within our tech segment. And we have to work through, as you know, many of these tech companies Had layoffs and we do need to work through their renewals over the next 6 to 9 months. So I would say that's 1. 2, We have we also have sales leadership changes right now, and I want to just provide ample time and some air cover for the team to make the necessary changes to reaccelerate and build their team out. Speaker 400:32:13So I would say it's really those two things. And if Speaker 200:32:17I could just add on to that maybe. I think part of the way we think about it just in terms of how we're thinking 90 days ago, I think we knew there would be headwinds, particularly in the tech orgs and it hasn't improved yet, but we don't we're not saying it's gotten worse. We just see the sort of continuation of that budget scrutiny. Operator00:32:39Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of George Iwanyc of Oppenheimer. Speaker 700:32:48Thank you for taking my question. Maybe Dustin, You started off with AI and gave us some perspective on that and you may be digging deeper into the AI topic. How do you feel Asana can best differentiate with AI. And then when you look at rolling out the products, how should we think about the ability to monetize it? Speaker 200:33:12Yes, sure. Happy to talk about that. And, of course, I also want to remind everyone about the event that hosting in October where we'll go pretty deep on both of those topics. So, first of all, so how will we differentiate? So I think the thing that's really unique about is our WorkGraph data model. Speaker 200:33:29So we've always had an AI in mind as we architected that data model over the past decade, and we think it only becomes even more valuable in this AI powered future. So the work graph is really ensuring that you have a single source of truth for work data and it's structured in a way that's scalable and it maps to How work is actually organized inside our customers. And so with the Work Graph data is connected across the entire enterprise, work, functions, teams and people without having to duplicate pieces of information. And having that data connection is really powerful because it captures the sum and the parts. So AI can use the underlying pieces of the work to accurately draw conclusions at multiple levels of altitude. Speaker 200:34:09And so part of what that gives us is I think we're best positioned in the work management category To solve this kind of black box problem that you sometimes hear about with AI, because we can really show the work and unpack the assumptions from facts and analysis of the work across teams at all levels of granularity. And we've seen that reflected with our customers too when we show them the AI features in the beta. They say, hey, this is really bringing the work draft to life for me and really helping make it clear why all these connections are valuable. So we think that will be A virtuous cycle there in terms of our ability to differentiate the market, both with our core value proposition and sort of data model differentiation and to make the AI functionality itself better. So WorkGraph makes, how work is done in your organization legible to the AI, but it also makes the AI more legible to your organization. Speaker 200:35:02And so customers really love this idea of like the human and the AI are working together. There's always a human in the loop. In terms of monetization, no not a lot of specifics to give, But we are going to talk more about our packaging changes when we do the investor events in October. And A lot of that's about really accelerating the enterprise on ramp, but we've also been very thoughtful about how we organize AI within those packages. And I've said before that I don't think AI is really one thing. Speaker 200:35:35It's not just a single line item in those packages. There's some AI in each of them. And as the functionality gets more complex and as what we're the sort of computerized work we're doing under the hood, gets more expensive and complex, Those types of features show up in the higher enterprise packages. I know we've also had questions in the past too about an add on. There's I don't think the sort of initial launch is going to involve that, but it is something that we're thinking about, may show up in the future, certainly paying attention to how a lot of the other enterprise products Starting to monetize and we want to learn from what works and doesn't there. Speaker 200:36:12So in the short run, I think the main thing you'll see is that it's helping Up to your customers through the packages is the main monetization advantage, as well as highlighting the differentiation of Wassana in the first place that we win more deals. Speaker 700:36:26All right. And maybe just Tim, quickly following up on that. When you think about investing and hiring with The AI productization and ongoing enterprise investment, how should we Think about the near to moderate term plans. Speaker 400:36:44Yes. I mean, I think, We've made really substantial progress on our operating margin, but we're taking a very balanced approach in terms of how we're investing and How we're investing and how we're trying to get to profitability. So I think at a macro level, we're going to continue to invest in AI. That's 1. 2, and to the degree that we see, improvement in productivity and efficiency across our sales and marketing organizations, We'll be able we'll feel more confident pouring more investments in that area. Operator00:37:21Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jackson Ader of MoffettNathanson. Speaker 800:37:30Great. Thanks, guys. Thanks for taking our questions. Dustin, you mentioned earlier in the call some of the Other AI winners, they're kind of your neighbors in the Bay Area. And I think some of the early winners, at least from investor standpoint, Seem to be some of the largest technology and some of the largest software companies out there that are kind of publicly investable. Speaker 800:37:55And I'm curious how you see Asana fitting into the AI landscape among some of these Tech giants, I guess, for lack of a better term. Speaker 200:38:09Thanks. So I think there's Couple of different ways to think about that. So earlier, I was really talking about the foundation model builders primarily. So OpenAI and Anthropic and Our relationship to them is we're customers. So we're adding value on top of their underlying infrastructure. Speaker 200:38:27They're doing We're very grateful. They've made a huge CapEx investments that we get to leverage just in terms of marginal API fees. And so we're really building on their platform. And I guess I'm not totally sure who you mean by the Other large public companies and certainly NVIDIA is very different kind of company. And then it's very different. Speaker 200:38:54I think a lot of the Public stocks that have taken off, they're the cloud compute providers. So again, we're kind of customers in their stack. But I think that Asana will be part of a sort of second generation of value creation that's really figuring out how to Integrate those services into existing workflows, where I think they can be a lot more powerful. So, what people are familiar with right now is basically These open ended chat applications where you can kind of ask anything you want, and that's very powerful and very flexible, but most people in the world really want to be kind of shown what works best. And particularly in something like work management, we're finding that the kinds of requests we're making to the API are highly structured, highly templatized. Speaker 200:39:40We're also educating the user about what kind of questions work best. Often they sort of start with very generic, what should I know about this project or something very open ended. It's much better to get specific. And so the more we're able to Provide people with some templatized options and some multi step workflows that help lead them to the most powerful value, the more I think people actually be able to get value from those underlying platforms. So I think of us as sort of value creation on top of those underlying foundations. Speaker 800:40:15Okay. Okay, great. That's helpful. And then the follow-up is either for, I guess, Tim or Ann, whoever wants to take it. But The low end weakness, do you think it's maybe it's more to do with the fact that since Asanda is moving resources up market, that kind of competition is filling the void left behind? Speaker 800:40:40Or Is there something also happening in budgets or something on the macro sense in the low end that's not holding up as well as maybe some enterprise budgets? Thank Speaker 400:40:50you. No, great question. I think, one, I would say, I think the way you characterize that, we did redeploy a lot of our away from the lower end of the market and focus those investments towards the upper end is one of the reasons where Kind of like our less than 5 ks customer revenue from that customer cohort is growing slower than customers with more than 5 ks. So I would say that's 1. 2, obviously, I think the collaborative work management category is still very much greenfield and there's just a lot of runway. Speaker 400:41:25So, it's not necessarily winner take all across all of these segments. So to the degree that we move up market and other players end up Operator00:41:42Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Zukin of Wolfe Research. Speaker 900:41:53Thank you guys for taking the question. Maybe just the first one, Justin, for you. I'll ask it. It's kind of a similar question on the AI front. But I guess if we step back for a second and we think about where and how you think People, specifically customers are going to actively pay for the AI functionality that you're introducing for the way that you're positioned And how investors in Asana are going to benefit from the investments and the experience that you have, is it more And also in the context of like availability of GPUs, when you're launching the product functionality, when you expect Folks to actually be able to see the ROI from it like just conceptually what are people Willing to pay for, not willing to pay for, at least in the conversations introductory conversations you're having? Speaker 900:42:49And when would you expect Your ability to actually deliver this product to market in a way that Enables the ultimate monetization opportunity and also the impact on retention that's likely to have. Speaker 200:43:09Yes. Thanks for the question. I think it's a little difficult to answer because I don't really think of it as binary in that way. So It's not a feature we're launching and delivering, but a sort of unfolding of our roadmap. And in a lot of ways, it's already begun because we already have customers in the private beta. Speaker 200:43:26We'll be launching into a much more open beta alongside our events in October with some of the functionality. But we also have teams working on what's next and putting more customers into the beta features beyond that. And we're also talking about Our roadmap with customers when we're briefing them and it's part of the purchase decisions they're making, when they think about what partner they're going to want for the long run, A lot of it has to do with who can differentiate on that AI vision. And I think it's helping us now and it will continue to help us more. I think the October event is a particularly big moment for us to tell the story, especially in a visual way. Speaker 200:44:05It's hard to get across on these earnings calls. And so I think it will just like continue to build. Again, just in terms of like a packaging moment, I think it will present itself most in terms of customers up tiering to get the more advanced AI functionality. There may even be a benefit from free to premium. We've kind of debated that internally, but haven't really modeled anything. Speaker 200:44:30And so it will happen in pieces and get better and better rather than being a single moment where there's an inflection in the revenue. Speaker 300:44:41Okay. Sorry, you're asking about customer feedback as well. So I just wanted to add a couple of things in terms of what we're hearing from customers. In the conversations with CIOs at our largest customers, whether that's a global live events company or the leading vacation rental platform in the world, What they're telling us is, 1st and foremost, they're excited to have a strategic partner to help them build out their AI strategy because right now it does Feel overwhelming the number of choices out there. And so things that they care about are data specifically, where it comes from, how it's used. Speaker 300:45:15They care very much about security and they care a lot about transparency in how AI is deployed. And so for work management in particular, it's Very straightforward for them to see how AI will accelerate what they're already trying to do, whether that's in projects or portfolios or connecting that work to goals. And so more than anything, our conversations really are starting to be how we can help them really Figure out their AI strategy and then be able to deploy it in Asana. So we're really excited about the early feedback and the desire for customers to help us Speaker 900:45:57And then maybe, Tim, A really open ended question for you on the numbers. Again, if we look at some of the commentary, it suggests that multiyear deals were Strong enterprise tracking continues to be really positive. So I'm trying to square that with the forward looking metrics. Like if we look at billings, It's kind of in the low teens growth this quarter, CRPO bookings kind of similarly in that low teens kind of dimension. So is there anything that is kind of one time in nature Specifically, that we should be paying attention to, because your guidance for Q4 kind of implies you're exiting the year just over double digit growth. Speaker 900:46:42The Street has You're doing something a lot better than that for next year. So given the commentary you made around the 6 to 9 months Kind of still having that renewal headwind within these large tech companies. Like when should we see And if the turn happened, is that a Q1 phenomenon, Q2? Like how do we think about that? Speaker 400:47:03Yes. I think no, it's a great question, Alex. I think one, I Just for clarity, I just want to say, while we're encouraged by the number of multiyear deals, they do They are still a minority, a small percentage of our total billings. So that's 1. 2, I would say, certainly, I think We continue to see kind of the same environment that we're operating in, in the first half of the year and that The environment not getting materially better or worse right now. Speaker 400:47:35So to the degree that with our net expansion rate, I do think it's going to take another 2 to potentially 3 quarters for all the renewals to work themselves out so that we have an easier comp after that. And then I also Obviously, we have new sales leadership coming on and we want to just make sure that there's adequate room for the leaders to kind of make the necessary changes as we go up market. Operator00:48:06Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Josh Bair of Morgan Stanley. Speaker 500:48:15Great. Thank you for the question. I wanted to ask one on the net retention rates. And Tim, just kind of thinking to some of your comments on Some areas not as strong as they hoped and sort of taking another 2 to 3 quarters to get easier comps. Just wondering like what gives you confidence that retention rate can remain above 100% just kind of looking at some of The trend lines and deceleration that we've been seeing. Speaker 400:48:43Yes. So I would say, Josh, that the thing We looked at obviously is a combination of both the downgrades And the expansion and that's where most of the compression has really come from in our net expansion rates. That companies aren't expanding as fast as they had during, prior years And that companies that were planning to grow, ultimately ended up doing layoffs and having to readjust their renewals with us. So I do think like those things need to work themselves out and that over time. The one encouraging side I would say is that When we look at logo churn, especially on our large customers and across the base, essentially, those have remained unchanged. Speaker 400:49:28So the companies that are using us are staying with us while they are downgrading or expanding less right now. I do expect them to over time as the economy gets better to hire, deploy more seats and as we add more functionality into our different packages, have them kind of move up into these kind of More advanced packages that we'll be offering in this later this year. Speaker 500:49:54Okay, got it. And then kind of related since That's backwards looking. I was hoping you could give a little bit of color on the linearity through the quarter, but then also Into August as well on what you're seeing as far as demand trends? Speaker 400:50:12Yes. I mean, I think In terms of just kind of like how the quarter shook out this last quarter, I would say no different than what we saw in Q1 and The Q4 of last year that it's generally the 1st couple of months a little bit slower and then Kind of deals being somewhat in the most of the larger deals being somewhat in the last month of the quarter. And I think August traditionally for us, There's some seasonality primarily because EMEA is a slower month. They're generally on vacation. But I think When we look at the pipeline and when we look at how we enter the quarter, I think we feel pretty good about how the quarter is shaping up right now. Operator00:51:01Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of Robert Simmons of D. A. Davidson. Speaker 1000:51:10Hey, thanks for taking the question. I was was wondering if you can give a little more color on the net retention number. First, was it closer to 105 And then how did it trend over the quarter end so far in 3Q? Speaker 400:51:28I think what we yes, I think, what we disclosed is that it was over 105. Last quarter, I think I believe we said it was over 110. So you can imagine kind of the data point and the trend lines of that why we would change why we would drop the disclosure from 110 to 105. Speaker 1000:51:48Okay. And then I guess two things. I mean, have you seen any change So far in 3Q. And also could you give us some color on what you've seen on that number kind of inside and outside of tech? Speaker 400:52:00I think it's certainly stronger outside of tech. And I would say, similar to the commentary that we made about on the different segment. I would say the headwinds particular we've seen headwinds in obviously tech and non tech, but I would say It's more definitely more pronounced in the tech segment. Operator00:52:25Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Patrick Walravens of GMP Securities. Speaker 1100:52:36Great. Thank Dustin, I know it's kind of off message, but I was intrigued when you commented that The AI functionality might help with the free to premium conversion. So, you guys really haven't talked about that for a while. Remind us how many free users are there and what is the size of that opportunity? Speaker 200:53:03I don't have the free user base number off hand, but I don't want to over I know. I know. My expectations here. I think the opportunity is small. I just think it's a bit of a wildcard of like maybe it will show up. Speaker 200:53:17We've paid attention to Some other vendors that have more of like a prosumer market, and seeing that some of their customers are empirically willing Upgrade even for sort of single player usage. So most of our per user base is individuals, personal use cases, prosumer use cases. And so I think some of them might be more enticed by this than, some of the other functionality that was more oriented around Teams. I just think There's a little more that is valuable to specific individual end users even if they're not collaborating or if they're just collaborating a little bit. So that's the only reason I mentioned that, but I do think it's small. Speaker 200:53:57It could be nothing. I don't want that to end up in analyst models, to be honest. Speaker 1100:54:02Yes. Okay. A lot of us pay for ChachiPT, so it is kind of interesting. And then One for you, Tim, just how should we think about the shape of free cash flow margins in the second half? I mean, you said not to expect Not necessarily another $15,000,000 but how do we think about that? Speaker 400:54:19Yes. I think you should expect our free cash flow to be negative in the for both Q3 and Q4. But we'll make improvements on a year over year basis and that the margin Will improve from kind of Q1. I think Q2 was a quarter where we essentially had a large Invoice in Q1 with one of our largest customers. We collected that cash in Q2. Speaker 400:54:48That certainly helped with our free cash flow. We won't see that for another year, but it will improve on a year over year basis. Operator00:55:00Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of our final question Comes from the line of Brent Thill of Jefferies. Speaker 1200:55:11Dustin, impressive hire with Ed McDonald coming in as CRO from Salesforce. Maybe if you could talk through your top aspirations out of the gate for him. And If you could speak to also any time we see new CROs come in, there tends to be a little wake turbulence that's felt. Do you And Patfel, do you think that wake turbulence will be in the changes that you would like him to make? Speaker 200:55:41I'm sorry, that word was wait turbulence? Speaker 800:55:45Wait, wait. Speaker 1200:55:48Sorry for Getting the airplane chatter on you? Speaker 200:55:53Yes. Well, Ed is a really seasoned executive And he's built a number of teams over his career, and has seen where we're going. So he's come in and really demonstrated The ability to make decisions quickly, inspire the team, and just like get the lay of the land really quickly. I was actually really impressed even before he started. He went really deep on the company, did a ton of research, and really got to know us. Speaker 200:56:21So he's able to sort of onboard and hit the ground running and has just been sprinting ever since he got here and has already made a lot of progress. So I feel really good about it right now. We're So only, I think, 5th week, 1 month in. And so, there's still going to be a learning curve, but it's been really impressive so far. And Operator00:56:52Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference back to Kathryn Braun for closing remarks. Madam? Speaker 100:56:59Thank you again for joining us today and making the time to hear our earnings results. We look forward to seeing you in New York on October 3rd. Operator00:57:10This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may nowRead moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallAsana Q2 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsSlide DeckPress Release(8-K)Quarterly report(10-Q) Asana Earnings HeadlinesHelp your kids learn how to stay healthy with this guidebook's easy yoga asanasApril 15 at 3:58 AM | msn.comAsana CEO Moskovitz buys 75,493 class A sharesApril 15 at 3:58 AM | markets.businessinsider.comCrypto’s crashing…but we’re still profitingMost traders are panicking right now. Bitcoin’s dropping. Altcoins are bleeding. The stock market’s a mess. The news is screaming fear. But while most traders watch their portfolios tank…April 15, 2025 | Crypto Swap Profits (Ad)Over 20 pupils hospitalised in Prampram after drinking AsanaApril 14 at 12:55 PM | msn.comAsana CEO acquires shares worth ~$6.72MApril 11, 2025 | msn.comTilman Fertitta, Carl Icahn, and More Insiders Return to the Buy WindowApril 11, 2025 | 247wallst.comSee More Asana Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Asana? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Asana and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About AsanaAsana (NYSE:ASAN), together with its subsidiaries, operates a work management platform for individuals, team leads, and executives in the United States and internationally. Its platform helps organizations to orchestrate work from daily tasks to cross-functional strategic initiatives; manage work across a portfolio of projects or workflows, see progress against goals, identify bottlenecks, resource constraints, and milestones; and communicate company-wide goals, monitor status, and oversee work across projects and portfolios to gain real-time insights. The company serves customers in various industries, such as technology, retail, education, non-profit, government, healthcare, hospitality, media, manufacturing, professional services, and financial services. The company was formerly known as Smiley Abstractions, Inc. and changed its name to Asana, Inc. in July 2009. 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:01Welcome to Asana's Second Quarter Fiscal Year 20 24 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker presentation, there will be a question and answer session. I would now like to hand the call over to Catherine Buan, Head of Investor Relations. Please Go ahead. Speaker 100:00:33Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us on today's conference call to discuss the financial results For Asana's Q2 fiscal year 2024. With me on today's call are Dustin Moskovitz, Asana's Co Founder and CEO Ann Remondi, our Chief Operating Officer and Head of Business and Tim Wan, our Chief Financial Officer. Today's call will include Forward looking statements, including statements regarding our expectations for free cash flow, our financial outlook, strategic plans, market position and growth opportunities. Looking statements involve risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause our actual results to be materially different from those expressed or implied by the forward looking statements. Please refer to our filings with the SEC, including our most recent Annual Report Form 10 ks and Quarterly Report on Form 10 Q for additional information on risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause actual results to differ materially from those set forth in such statements. Speaker 100:01:29In addition, during today's call, we will discuss non GAAP financial measures. These non GAAP financial measures are in addition to and not a substitute for or superior to measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. Reconciliation between GAAP and non GAAP financial measures And a discussion of the limitations of using non GAAP measures versus their closest GAAP equivalents are available in our earnings release, which is posted on our Investor Relations webpage at investors. Asana.com. And with that, I'd like to turn the call over to Dustin. Speaker 200:01:59Thank you, Catherine, and thank you all for joining us on the call today. We reported Q2 results leading top and bottom line expectations. Q2 revenues grew 20% year over year as we continue to close large deals in the Enterprise segment. Non GAAP operating margins improved 40 percentage points year over year, While we attained positive free cash flow in the quarter at $14,600,000 Our growth continues to be fueled by some of the largest In Q2, we closed and expanded deals across industries such as manufacturing, professional services, Healthcare, logistics, media and financial services. Our most strategic customers are modernizing the way they work and returning to Asana for work management at scale. Speaker 200:02:45And as we look toward the next generation of work management and implement AI even further, These relationships will be increasingly valuable. Even with continued macro headwinds and heightened budget scrutiny in the enterprise, sentiment seems to be stabilizing. Customers are looking for ways to consolidate their vendors, getting more ROI out of everything they're doing, and they're turning to Asana. Asana can help to achieve their goals and objectives more efficiently and faster than ever before. In fact, we've seen an increase in multiyear commitments both year over year and sequentially in the quarter. Speaker 200:03:19In Q2, we made great progress on improving our non GAAP operating margins. We expect significant improvement in non GAAP operating margin year over year for the full year as we focus on operational efficiency and growth, which Tim will talk about more. In the first half of the year, we've been working through the macro headwinds and we continue to focus on our enterprise playbook, improving sales execution and building substantial enterprise leadership, most recently announcing the arrival of our new CRO, Ed McDonald. I'd be remiss to start with anything but artificial intelligence, Given the opportunity it presents for Asana and our customers. So let me jump right in. Speaker 200:03:55In short, I'm extremely excited. I've been deeply involved and passionate about AI for a very long time. Asana has the good fortune of sharing a backyard with many of the leaders in AI, including companies like Anthropic and OpenAI. And I personally have been embedded in this community and working with these companies since their founding days as an early supporter of both OpenAI and Anthropic. AI really entered the zeitgeist and captured people's imaginations in November of last year with the launch of Chat GPT. Speaker 200:04:22But as a novelty for some has worn out, so is their enthusiasm. My view is that people aren't thinking big enough, and they're underestimating how quickly the foundation models themselves will improve. I believe chatbots are just demos. They're not really the end game. And the real potential of AI is going to manifest when it gets deeply integrated into other software, making it possible for end users to get great results without themselves becoming prompt engineers and for developers to radically accelerate their productivity. Speaker 200:04:51There's also a lot of skepticism around AI that I understand and acknowledge. Many folks have rightly called out the hallucination or black box problems. Folks just don't trust that AI is providing accurate or useful guidance all of the time. They want to be able to trust that they're getting good recommendations, which means they need to understand the thinking process and assumptions that underlie them. Encountering the now infamous hallucinations, Rhodes Trust, especially when you can't trace how the AI came up with it in the first place. Speaker 200:05:20We've been architecting Asana's WorkGraph data model for over a decade, We believe it will become increasingly valuable in this AI powered future, thanks to what it allows us to achieve with Asana Intelligence. The work graph ensures that you have a single source of truth for work data, structured in a way that it's scalable and maps to how work actually gets done inside organizations. With the work graph, data is connected across the whole enterprise, work, functions, teams and people. And this data connection is powerful because it captures the sum and the parts. AI can use the underlying pieces of the work to more accurately draw conclusions at multiple levels of altitude. Speaker 200:05:57And with the Asana work graph, We believe we're best positioned in the work management category to solve the Black Box problem because we can show its work and unpack its assumptions from facts and analysis of the work across all teams at all levels of granularity. Here's a tangible example. Let's say a company is preparing for a global product launch and multiple teams across R and D, marketing, product marketing and sales are involved. Each have their own projects and work streams that support the overall launch effort And each lives in one portfolio of work in Asana. Asana Intelligence will be able to analyze all elements of the work supporting the product launch And flag key risks and bottlenecks using granular information from supporting tasks. Speaker 200:06:35Before, these hidden blockers would have been a blind spot for the organization and we've taken many conversations to uncover. But now with the work graph and AI, this can be surfaced immediately and Essanta Intelligence will help show its work by pointing how it came to that conclusion based on the work data and the work relationships at its disposal. Sana will highlight where and how This unseen but critical dependency will impact launch timelines visually. The Work Graph makes how work gets done in your organization highly legible to the AI, It's also going to make the AI's underlying assumptions to its conclusions legible to your organization and the people within it. This is critical for key enterprise requirements like permissions, The Sauna Intelligence powered by the work graph will serve as a shared map that helps align human intention with AI guidance as they work together to achieve a customer's goals. Speaker 200:07:27We believe Asana is the only work management platform built for enterprise scale with proven capabilities of scaling to 200,000 seats in company wide deployments and our enterprise customers agree. As Asana adoption grows across the enterprise, the value we provide increases. And the cross functional nature of the Workcraft data model is even more important with AI, because information silos isolate context that could otherwise be used. Even if you use AI to find the contacts in another silo, you have to infer how they're connected, whereas the relationship is explicit in the WorkGraph data model. AI gives us yet another way of giving customers increasing returns to scale in their Asana adoption. Speaker 200:08:06In sum, Asana will capitalize on an enterprise's work graph to deliver a more useful, accurate and insightful user experience at every level, especially the executive level. AI is the ultimate accelerant of 1 of Osana's core value propositions, which is to help companies thrive by connecting company wide goals to the strategic initiatives, departments, teams and work needed to achieve them. We see ourselves as creating entirely new software interfaces between teams of humans and working together and the powerful AI models that make getting their work done easier. This is the core of our innovation focus right now. We've already announced a slew of new AI features that are currently in beta that help individuals and teams improve their productivity, like writing assistant, instant summaries and work organizer. Speaker 200:08:51Other features in beta include health checks that drive greater clarity and accountability and ask Asana anything that maximizes impact. Further down the product roadmap, we're also planning features such as goal based resource management and AI assisted smart workflows, and we're just getting started. You'll see us unveil an exciting new lineup of innovation at our Work Innovation Summit on October 3 in New York City. This will be our most exciting customer event of the year with a visionary keynote, luminary speakers, industry leaders across operations, IT and marketing, as well as a special investor session to talk more about our product plans, We'll also be hosting customers at our Work Innovation Center, where we'll share their Work Innovation Score, a cutting edge benchmark developed by industry leading experts. This course powered by the WorkGraph and AI, designed to assess organizations' potential for innovation, both now and in the future. Speaker 200:09:45The Work Innovation Score highlights our customers' innovation potential, allowing them to clearly identify strengths and overcome obstacles. This is a unique offering in our market and it's only offered by Asana. It's extremely popular, especially with our largest and most strategic customers. So we're excited to include even more customers in the program. We look forward to seeing you in New York City on October 3. Speaker 200:10:08In closing, in spite of significant headwinds, we've made measurable progress in the first half of the fiscal year. We continue to see traction with some of the largest companies in the world and look forward to partnering with these companies as we look toward the future product roadmap. Now I'll turn it over to Anne. Speaker 300:10:22Thanks, Dustin. The story in Q2 was really about continued enterprise growth and building our enterprise leadership bench. We've talked about our strategy for moving upmarket and we are working and executing on this plan. That said, I know the macro situation is still top of mind, so let me adjust that upfront. Overall, the sentiment in our customer base has remained the same versus last quarter. Speaker 300:10:45While it hasn't yet improved, it also has not gotten worse. Budgets continue to be scrutinized, seats are being optimized and decisions for expansion are being pushed out. But as customers continue to optimize budgets, We are also getting positive competitive signals where customers are consolidating, removing incumbents and choosing Asana. I also want to talk about net retention rate trends. As the de facto choice for some of the largest tech companies in the world, Asana has likely seen disproportionate exposure to any pullback in that vertical, which is about 30% of our business. Speaker 300:11:20Importantly, much of this has been less seat expansion as opposed to anything else, and that remained a factor this quarter. For example, in some cases, even when a customer was choosing to expand into new use cases and departments, This is often offset by removing seats that were downsized as part of a budget pullback. Conversely, As we approach the anniversary at the beginning of this trend, we expect to benefit from any rebound in future quarters. Top of funnel demand was stable versus last quarter and our pipeline continues to build. The U. Speaker 300:11:53S. Grew 22% year over year, while international grew 18%. If I split off EMEA separately, EMEA had a particularly solid quarter, reporting the fastest growth across our major regions. Our new leadership and regional model in EMEA are in place, and we're getting increased traction. We closed several of our largest net new deals in EMEA as a result Growth in our business and enterprise tiers led overall growth at 32% year over year and represents 73% of our revenue. Speaker 300:12:26We believe this is a good proxy for our traction within larger customers. Asana goals, portfolios and reporting are key differentiators for us. Adoption has continued to be And these investments are leading to consolidation wins. Our top down use case and value selling is resonating, and it's allowing us to land large deals. Our enterprise customers representing organizations with over 2,000 employees continue to be our fastest growing customer segment, and this segment is further diversifying. Speaker 300:12:58Approximately 80% of the net new $100,000 plus customers in Q2 were in non tech sectors. Executives are planning long term about how to invest in work management capabilities, and this is driving multiyear commitments for us. And there's not a single enterprise customer that isn't asking us about AI and automations in Asana. We believe our AI roadmap will help to We are seeing new lands and expansions broadly across several diverse industries. First, we set a new record with our largest land deal in Asana history. Speaker 300:13:361 of the largest multinational cybersecurity companies Chose Asana in a multimillion dollar consolidation win. During the RFP process, they evaluated multiple work management apps that they were using across the company based on several factors. The company will be methodically ripping out legacy apps and replacing them with Asana across the organization over 3 phases. This is a very significant win on many fronts, In particular, how successfully we can execute on a top down value based sales motion. Also, I'm very excited about another net new customer, one of the largest professional services companies in the world based in the U. Speaker 300:14:16K. With over 12,000 employees worldwide. Their CMO was looking for a centralized global platform to ensure a consistent brand experience across markets and channels. It's a multiyear deployment that represents a great deal of potential. In addition, a large healthcare manufacturing company headquartered in Switzerland With over 9,000 employees is expanding with Asana and replacing a legacy incumbent. Speaker 300:14:41The company has grown significantly through acquisitions and will make Asana available to employees globally. This is another multiyear strategic deal. We signed several deals this quarter with manufacturing companies. One of the larger deals was with Fujitsu, one of the largest IT companies in the world. We're also seeing continued success in the financial services industry. Speaker 300:15:04We had a 6 figure early renewal and expansion with a large financial services firm in the consumer credit space after they saw significant value from Asana They're bringing more teams onto our enterprise platform to manage everything from OKRs to project plans, so they can make informed decisions about their strategic initiatives to improve goal attainment. We also had an expansion with a subsidiary of a major The company uses Asana to manage developing new products to enter new industries. Security and governance are very important to them, so Asana Enterprise capabilities were among the reasons we won. You may or may not know, but Asana is very, very popular in the sports business. We closed deals this quarter with 1 of the English Premier League's most highly decorated football clubs as well as with the New York Islanders and the NC2A. Speaker 300:16:00And importantly, we continue to win in the healthcare and biotech vertical as well, with 2 6 figure deals in the U. S. As you know, we announced HIPAA compliance about a year ago and have been gaining momentum in this vertical Supported by our compliance and security offerings. As you can see, we've already helped dozens of our largest customers with their digital transformation initiatives. We believe digital transformation is an enormous secular trend, but the intelligence transformation with AI has the potential to be an even larger opportunity for Asana. Speaker 300:16:33And we're preparing to be the leading platform for change in this new revolution of technology. In summary, we're seeing more multiyear deals, up both sequentially and year over year, winning on vendor consolidation decisions and are continuing to diversify our enterprise success across more and more industries. But we have more work to do. Looking to the second half and the beginning of next year, we continue to focus on improving expansion rates through customer success programs and initiatives, Deepening our partnerships with our strategic accounts, rolling out new packaging, which we will talk more about on October 3rd and enterprise leadership. We are thrilled to welcome Ed McDonald as our new Chief Revenue Officer. Speaker 300:17:17He is most recently from Salesforce and Spent 10 years there scaling the Marketing Cloud and multiple vertical businesses from $100,000,000 to a $3,500,000,000 business today. He also has experience from Eloqua, McGraw Financial and Thomson Reuters. He has a remarkable track record and deep With Ed, Shannon Duffy, our CMO And Neeracha Tejak Hootebud, our Chief Customer Officer and the rest of our go to market team, we are focused on elevating our sales motion for the next phase of growth. We are improving our sales enablement capabilities and lead generation initiatives targeted at enterprise accounts. We are creating a repeatable playbook to scale enterprise accounts to become over $100,000 customers and beyond. Speaker 300:18:08We're improving on our customer success strategy to scalably serve more customers. Importantly, we can focus on better serving our most strategic customers. These long term partnerships play a critical role in our product roadmap and our vision to strategically serve large scale customers, which we believe will help us further drive growth. And with that, I'll hand it over to Tim. Speaker 400:18:31Thank you, Ann. While I'm pleased with our high level results, Some of the underlying drivers were not as strong as we had hoped. We continue to see headwinds from a macro standpoint and in our technology segment, and you see that especially in our net dollar retention rate metrics. We also have more work to do as we develop our enterprise go to market muscle And continue transitioning up market. Meanwhile, the performance at the low end of the market is dragging down overall growth. Speaker 400:18:58On the other hand, I am really proud of the efforts the team put in to manage costs and improve efficiency. We have made substantial progress on improving our operating margin and delivered our 1st positive free cash flow quarter since going public. Onto our Q2 results. Q2 revenues came in at $162,500,000 up 20% year over year. Revenue from customers spending $5,000 or more on an annualized basis 24% year over year. Speaker 400:19:27This cohort represented 74% of our revenues in Q2, up from 72% in the year ago quarter. We have 20,782 customers spending 5,000 or more on an annualized basis. We have 553 customers spending $100,000 or more on an annualized basis, and this customer cohort grew at 20% year over year. As a reminder, we define these customer cohorts based on annualized GAAP revenues in a given quarter. Our dollar based net retention rates were lower, driven by lower expansion and downgrades. Speaker 400:20:01Our overall dollar based net retention rate was over 105%. Among customers spending $5,000 or more, our dollar based net retention rate was over 110%. And among customers spending $100,000 or more, our dollar based We continue to see stable logo churn rates overall and low churn in our largest accounts, demonstrating the value we deliver for our enterprise customers. Companies remain mindful of the near term economic challenges and we therefore expect our overall dollar based net retention rates to trend lower, particularly in the lower end of the market. I will speak specifically to the outlook in a moment. Speaker 400:20:48As I turn to expense items and profitability, I would like to point out that I will be discussing non GAAP results in the balance of my remarks. Keep in mind, non GAAP results exclude stock based compensation and non cash expenses related to impairment. Gross margins came in at 90.3%. Research and Development was $52,300,000 or 32 percent of revenue, an improvement from 37% a year ago. Sales and marketing were $79,600,000 or 49% of Revenue, an improvement from 70% a year ago. Speaker 400:21:21G and A was $25,100,000 or 15% of revenue, an improvement from 29% a year ago. Operating loss was $10,400,000 and our operating loss margin was 6%, representing a 40% point The margin improvement versus a year ago. The improvement in our operating margin demonstrates our ability to take a balanced approach to growth and profitability. Net loss was $8,400,000 and our net loss per share was $0.04 Moving on to the balance sheet and cash flow. Cash and marketable securities at the end of Q2 were approximately $537,500,000 Our remaining performance obligations or RPO was $333,400,000 up 27% from the year ago quarter. Speaker 400:22:0886% of our RPO will be recognized over the next 12 months. That current portion of RPO grew 26% from the year ago quarter. Our ending Q2 deferred revenue was 200 $61,100,000 up 24 percent year over year. Our free cash flow is defined as net cash from operating activities, Less cash used in property and equipment and capitalized software costs, excluding non recurring items such as costs related to restructuring. Q2 free cash flow was positive $14,600,000 or 9% on a margin basis, an improvement from negative 31% from the year ago quarter. Speaker 400:22:48Moving to guidance for Q3 fiscal 2024, we expect revenues of $163,500,000 to $164,500,000 representing growth of 16% year over year. We expect non GAAP loss from operations of $25,000,000 to $23,000,000 representing an operating margin of negative 15% at the midpoint of guidance, a measurable improvement from the same year ago period. And we expect net loss per share of $0.11 to 0 point 1 $0 Assuming basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 221,000,000. For the full fiscal year 2024, We expect revenue to be in the range of $642,000,000 to $648,000,000 representing a growth rate of 17% to 18% year over year. We expect non GAAP loss from operations of $93,000,000 to $85,000,000 representing an operating margin of negative 14% at the midpoint of guidance, down from negative 38% in fiscal 2023. Speaker 400:23:53And we expect net loss per share of $0.42 to $0.39 assuming basic and diluted weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 219,000,000. Our guidance assumes that there is no change in the current macroeconomic environment and that headwinds persist through the end of this year. We expect continued compression in our dollar based net retention rate, but we expect it will remain above 100%. We also have changes in leadership We are committed to maintaining a disciplined and balanced approach to optimizing costs and improving efficiency and profitability. We will continue to invest in future growth opportunities like AI, which we expect will drive long term value. Speaker 400:24:36While this quarter's free cash flow may not repeat next As we work towards reaching sustained free cash flow, we are encouraged by the progress we've made and I'm optimistic about our future. Over the next 18 months to 24 months, we anticipate incremental growth will be driven by 1st, economic recovery in the most impacted verticals such as the tech sector, paired with improved execution on our go to market initiatives under our new leadership team. 2nd, new capabilities driven by advances in AI. And third, our new packaging strategy, which we will talk more about on October 3rd. We look forward to seeing you all in New York on October 3rd, where we will dive deeper into these topics during the investor session. Speaker 400:25:23And with that, I'll turn it back to the operator for questions. Operator00:25:30Thank you. We also ask that you please limit yourself to 1 question and one follow-up and then return to the queue. Our first question comes from the line of Andrew De Gasperi of Berenberg. Speaker 500:26:09Thanks for taking my question. Maybe first on the largest land deal that you've won this Can you maybe elaborate what went in, what in terms of the discussions with that customer, what kind of stood out in terms of Asana and what they found important? And just generally, do you think this can replicate itself out going forward? Speaker 300:26:33Hi, Andrew. It's Anne. Thanks so much for your question. Yes, happy to share a little bit more insight on that deal. Really, the customer was Looking for an opportunity to grow, with one partner over multiple years. Speaker 300:26:48They cared a lot about Reducing tech sprawl, they wanted to replace at least 7 existing applications that they had seen used across Many of their departments, in particular, this company had acquired a lot of other companies. And so being able Consolidated all in one platform was really important. They're looking to increase collaboration and standardization and really ultimately deliver products faster. And so we're really excited to work with them and all the different departments that were part of the RFP process. Ultimately, our view on where AI is Going, how we can scale our security and the fact that we had already successfully deployed up to 200,000 employees in our largest account Really helped secure that. Speaker 300:27:36So we're looking forward to doing more of those, especially where CIOs are driving the decision making process across the organization. Speaker 500:27:45Thanks. And then maybe on EMEA, can you really lay out a little bit what wasn't working there, at least what Is working better right now? I mean, what changes did you implement besides obviously the new leadership there? And could you replicate that change to other regions as well? Speaker 300:28:01Yes. So we are really excited about the new leadership in EMEA. I think a few things, certainly with the leadership, there's also a focus on larger deals and really ensuring that we've got repeatability and discipline around the large deal pipeline and large deal close rates. And then we've aligned both our corporate and enterprise teams by region under the new leadership. So that was a change That was made. Speaker 300:28:30We had previously sort of centralized leadership around for our corporate segment, but now it's aligned by our largest markets. So we're excited to see that momentum. It certainly contributed to the 2 large lands, that I mentioned before, one with a professional services organization with 12,000 employees and one with a healthcare manufacturing firm with 9,000 employees. So excited to see more of that. And we do believe that is something that is replicable. Speaker 300:28:56We're seeing some great signs in Japan, which is another strategic market Operator00:29:16Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Steve Enders of Citi. Speaker 600:29:23Okay, great. Thanks for taking the questions here. I guess I do want to ask on the consolidation activity that You saw in a really good win there. I guess, how much of an increase have you seen in those Consolidation opportunities with maybe some of the choppy macro that you were that you've been calling out. And I guess as we think about Further large deal activity, how should we think about what the pipeline looks like for those opportunities going into the second half of the year? Speaker 300:29:58Yes. Thank you so much, Steve. What we are seeing in this environment As there's more scrutiny both by CIOs and CFOs on budget spend that the interest in opportunities To consolidate is increasing and we've seen that across the last several quarters. In particular, as they evaluate where they Have different investments already and where they can improve them going forward. And in particular for us, the ability to bring that all onto one platform and benefit from increased collaboration on the platform. Speaker 300:30:33That is what's driving the consolidation considerations. And then I do think the focus on security and scale is really important as CIOs in particular are looking to consolidate. So we are also seeing that, for some legacy applications that exist in customer accounts, there's active Evaluation of how those might be replaced by Asana. So definitely in our pipeline, we're seeing more opportunities that are Focus specifically on consolidation. Speaker 600:31:07Okay. That's helpful. And then maybe just on the outlook And I guess what you are seeing in the macro, I guess what part, I guess, changed versus maybe what you were seeing Last quarter, is it just things got a little bit worse on the tech side than maybe originally When you gave the guidance 90 days ago or just how should we think about what's incrementally changed in the outlook here? Yes. I would say a couple Speaker 200:31:39of things. I think Speaker 400:31:39we continue to see, 1, headwinds. And I think a lot of that headwinds does reside within our tech segment. And we have to work through, as you know, many of these tech companies Had layoffs and we do need to work through their renewals over the next 6 to 9 months. So I would say that's 1. 2, We have we also have sales leadership changes right now, and I want to just provide ample time and some air cover for the team to make the necessary changes to reaccelerate and build their team out. Speaker 400:32:13So I would say it's really those two things. And if Speaker 200:32:17I could just add on to that maybe. I think part of the way we think about it just in terms of how we're thinking 90 days ago, I think we knew there would be headwinds, particularly in the tech orgs and it hasn't improved yet, but we don't we're not saying it's gotten worse. We just see the sort of continuation of that budget scrutiny. Operator00:32:39Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of George Iwanyc of Oppenheimer. Speaker 700:32:48Thank you for taking my question. Maybe Dustin, You started off with AI and gave us some perspective on that and you may be digging deeper into the AI topic. How do you feel Asana can best differentiate with AI. And then when you look at rolling out the products, how should we think about the ability to monetize it? Speaker 200:33:12Yes, sure. Happy to talk about that. And, of course, I also want to remind everyone about the event that hosting in October where we'll go pretty deep on both of those topics. So, first of all, so how will we differentiate? So I think the thing that's really unique about is our WorkGraph data model. Speaker 200:33:29So we've always had an AI in mind as we architected that data model over the past decade, and we think it only becomes even more valuable in this AI powered future. So the work graph is really ensuring that you have a single source of truth for work data and it's structured in a way that's scalable and it maps to How work is actually organized inside our customers. And so with the Work Graph data is connected across the entire enterprise, work, functions, teams and people without having to duplicate pieces of information. And having that data connection is really powerful because it captures the sum and the parts. So AI can use the underlying pieces of the work to accurately draw conclusions at multiple levels of altitude. Speaker 200:34:09And so part of what that gives us is I think we're best positioned in the work management category To solve this kind of black box problem that you sometimes hear about with AI, because we can really show the work and unpack the assumptions from facts and analysis of the work across teams at all levels of granularity. And we've seen that reflected with our customers too when we show them the AI features in the beta. They say, hey, this is really bringing the work draft to life for me and really helping make it clear why all these connections are valuable. So we think that will be A virtuous cycle there in terms of our ability to differentiate the market, both with our core value proposition and sort of data model differentiation and to make the AI functionality itself better. So WorkGraph makes, how work is done in your organization legible to the AI, but it also makes the AI more legible to your organization. Speaker 200:35:02And so customers really love this idea of like the human and the AI are working together. There's always a human in the loop. In terms of monetization, no not a lot of specifics to give, But we are going to talk more about our packaging changes when we do the investor events in October. And A lot of that's about really accelerating the enterprise on ramp, but we've also been very thoughtful about how we organize AI within those packages. And I've said before that I don't think AI is really one thing. Speaker 200:35:35It's not just a single line item in those packages. There's some AI in each of them. And as the functionality gets more complex and as what we're the sort of computerized work we're doing under the hood, gets more expensive and complex, Those types of features show up in the higher enterprise packages. I know we've also had questions in the past too about an add on. There's I don't think the sort of initial launch is going to involve that, but it is something that we're thinking about, may show up in the future, certainly paying attention to how a lot of the other enterprise products Starting to monetize and we want to learn from what works and doesn't there. Speaker 200:36:12So in the short run, I think the main thing you'll see is that it's helping Up to your customers through the packages is the main monetization advantage, as well as highlighting the differentiation of Wassana in the first place that we win more deals. Speaker 700:36:26All right. And maybe just Tim, quickly following up on that. When you think about investing and hiring with The AI productization and ongoing enterprise investment, how should we Think about the near to moderate term plans. Speaker 400:36:44Yes. I mean, I think, We've made really substantial progress on our operating margin, but we're taking a very balanced approach in terms of how we're investing and How we're investing and how we're trying to get to profitability. So I think at a macro level, we're going to continue to invest in AI. That's 1. 2, and to the degree that we see, improvement in productivity and efficiency across our sales and marketing organizations, We'll be able we'll feel more confident pouring more investments in that area. Operator00:37:21Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jackson Ader of MoffettNathanson. Speaker 800:37:30Great. Thanks, guys. Thanks for taking our questions. Dustin, you mentioned earlier in the call some of the Other AI winners, they're kind of your neighbors in the Bay Area. And I think some of the early winners, at least from investor standpoint, Seem to be some of the largest technology and some of the largest software companies out there that are kind of publicly investable. Speaker 800:37:55And I'm curious how you see Asana fitting into the AI landscape among some of these Tech giants, I guess, for lack of a better term. Speaker 200:38:09Thanks. So I think there's Couple of different ways to think about that. So earlier, I was really talking about the foundation model builders primarily. So OpenAI and Anthropic and Our relationship to them is we're customers. So we're adding value on top of their underlying infrastructure. Speaker 200:38:27They're doing We're very grateful. They've made a huge CapEx investments that we get to leverage just in terms of marginal API fees. And so we're really building on their platform. And I guess I'm not totally sure who you mean by the Other large public companies and certainly NVIDIA is very different kind of company. And then it's very different. Speaker 200:38:54I think a lot of the Public stocks that have taken off, they're the cloud compute providers. So again, we're kind of customers in their stack. But I think that Asana will be part of a sort of second generation of value creation that's really figuring out how to Integrate those services into existing workflows, where I think they can be a lot more powerful. So, what people are familiar with right now is basically These open ended chat applications where you can kind of ask anything you want, and that's very powerful and very flexible, but most people in the world really want to be kind of shown what works best. And particularly in something like work management, we're finding that the kinds of requests we're making to the API are highly structured, highly templatized. Speaker 200:39:40We're also educating the user about what kind of questions work best. Often they sort of start with very generic, what should I know about this project or something very open ended. It's much better to get specific. And so the more we're able to Provide people with some templatized options and some multi step workflows that help lead them to the most powerful value, the more I think people actually be able to get value from those underlying platforms. So I think of us as sort of value creation on top of those underlying foundations. Speaker 800:40:15Okay. Okay, great. That's helpful. And then the follow-up is either for, I guess, Tim or Ann, whoever wants to take it. But The low end weakness, do you think it's maybe it's more to do with the fact that since Asanda is moving resources up market, that kind of competition is filling the void left behind? Speaker 800:40:40Or Is there something also happening in budgets or something on the macro sense in the low end that's not holding up as well as maybe some enterprise budgets? Thank Speaker 400:40:50you. No, great question. I think, one, I would say, I think the way you characterize that, we did redeploy a lot of our away from the lower end of the market and focus those investments towards the upper end is one of the reasons where Kind of like our less than 5 ks customer revenue from that customer cohort is growing slower than customers with more than 5 ks. So I would say that's 1. 2, obviously, I think the collaborative work management category is still very much greenfield and there's just a lot of runway. Speaker 400:41:25So, it's not necessarily winner take all across all of these segments. So to the degree that we move up market and other players end up Operator00:41:42Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Alex Zukin of Wolfe Research. Speaker 900:41:53Thank you guys for taking the question. Maybe just the first one, Justin, for you. I'll ask it. It's kind of a similar question on the AI front. But I guess if we step back for a second and we think about where and how you think People, specifically customers are going to actively pay for the AI functionality that you're introducing for the way that you're positioned And how investors in Asana are going to benefit from the investments and the experience that you have, is it more And also in the context of like availability of GPUs, when you're launching the product functionality, when you expect Folks to actually be able to see the ROI from it like just conceptually what are people Willing to pay for, not willing to pay for, at least in the conversations introductory conversations you're having? Speaker 900:42:49And when would you expect Your ability to actually deliver this product to market in a way that Enables the ultimate monetization opportunity and also the impact on retention that's likely to have. Speaker 200:43:09Yes. Thanks for the question. I think it's a little difficult to answer because I don't really think of it as binary in that way. So It's not a feature we're launching and delivering, but a sort of unfolding of our roadmap. And in a lot of ways, it's already begun because we already have customers in the private beta. Speaker 200:43:26We'll be launching into a much more open beta alongside our events in October with some of the functionality. But we also have teams working on what's next and putting more customers into the beta features beyond that. And we're also talking about Our roadmap with customers when we're briefing them and it's part of the purchase decisions they're making, when they think about what partner they're going to want for the long run, A lot of it has to do with who can differentiate on that AI vision. And I think it's helping us now and it will continue to help us more. I think the October event is a particularly big moment for us to tell the story, especially in a visual way. Speaker 200:44:05It's hard to get across on these earnings calls. And so I think it will just like continue to build. Again, just in terms of like a packaging moment, I think it will present itself most in terms of customers up tiering to get the more advanced AI functionality. There may even be a benefit from free to premium. We've kind of debated that internally, but haven't really modeled anything. Speaker 200:44:30And so it will happen in pieces and get better and better rather than being a single moment where there's an inflection in the revenue. Speaker 300:44:41Okay. Sorry, you're asking about customer feedback as well. So I just wanted to add a couple of things in terms of what we're hearing from customers. In the conversations with CIOs at our largest customers, whether that's a global live events company or the leading vacation rental platform in the world, What they're telling us is, 1st and foremost, they're excited to have a strategic partner to help them build out their AI strategy because right now it does Feel overwhelming the number of choices out there. And so things that they care about are data specifically, where it comes from, how it's used. Speaker 300:45:15They care very much about security and they care a lot about transparency in how AI is deployed. And so for work management in particular, it's Very straightforward for them to see how AI will accelerate what they're already trying to do, whether that's in projects or portfolios or connecting that work to goals. And so more than anything, our conversations really are starting to be how we can help them really Figure out their AI strategy and then be able to deploy it in Asana. So we're really excited about the early feedback and the desire for customers to help us Speaker 900:45:57And then maybe, Tim, A really open ended question for you on the numbers. Again, if we look at some of the commentary, it suggests that multiyear deals were Strong enterprise tracking continues to be really positive. So I'm trying to square that with the forward looking metrics. Like if we look at billings, It's kind of in the low teens growth this quarter, CRPO bookings kind of similarly in that low teens kind of dimension. So is there anything that is kind of one time in nature Specifically, that we should be paying attention to, because your guidance for Q4 kind of implies you're exiting the year just over double digit growth. Speaker 900:46:42The Street has You're doing something a lot better than that for next year. So given the commentary you made around the 6 to 9 months Kind of still having that renewal headwind within these large tech companies. Like when should we see And if the turn happened, is that a Q1 phenomenon, Q2? Like how do we think about that? Speaker 400:47:03Yes. I think no, it's a great question, Alex. I think one, I Just for clarity, I just want to say, while we're encouraged by the number of multiyear deals, they do They are still a minority, a small percentage of our total billings. So that's 1. 2, I would say, certainly, I think We continue to see kind of the same environment that we're operating in, in the first half of the year and that The environment not getting materially better or worse right now. Speaker 400:47:35So to the degree that with our net expansion rate, I do think it's going to take another 2 to potentially 3 quarters for all the renewals to work themselves out so that we have an easier comp after that. And then I also Obviously, we have new sales leadership coming on and we want to just make sure that there's adequate room for the leaders to kind of make the necessary changes as we go up market. Operator00:48:06Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Josh Bair of Morgan Stanley. Speaker 500:48:15Great. Thank you for the question. I wanted to ask one on the net retention rates. And Tim, just kind of thinking to some of your comments on Some areas not as strong as they hoped and sort of taking another 2 to 3 quarters to get easier comps. Just wondering like what gives you confidence that retention rate can remain above 100% just kind of looking at some of The trend lines and deceleration that we've been seeing. Speaker 400:48:43Yes. So I would say, Josh, that the thing We looked at obviously is a combination of both the downgrades And the expansion and that's where most of the compression has really come from in our net expansion rates. That companies aren't expanding as fast as they had during, prior years And that companies that were planning to grow, ultimately ended up doing layoffs and having to readjust their renewals with us. So I do think like those things need to work themselves out and that over time. The one encouraging side I would say is that When we look at logo churn, especially on our large customers and across the base, essentially, those have remained unchanged. Speaker 400:49:28So the companies that are using us are staying with us while they are downgrading or expanding less right now. I do expect them to over time as the economy gets better to hire, deploy more seats and as we add more functionality into our different packages, have them kind of move up into these kind of More advanced packages that we'll be offering in this later this year. Speaker 500:49:54Okay, got it. And then kind of related since That's backwards looking. I was hoping you could give a little bit of color on the linearity through the quarter, but then also Into August as well on what you're seeing as far as demand trends? Speaker 400:50:12Yes. I mean, I think In terms of just kind of like how the quarter shook out this last quarter, I would say no different than what we saw in Q1 and The Q4 of last year that it's generally the 1st couple of months a little bit slower and then Kind of deals being somewhat in the most of the larger deals being somewhat in the last month of the quarter. And I think August traditionally for us, There's some seasonality primarily because EMEA is a slower month. They're generally on vacation. But I think When we look at the pipeline and when we look at how we enter the quarter, I think we feel pretty good about how the quarter is shaping up right now. Operator00:51:01Thank you. Our next question Comes from the line of Robert Simmons of D. A. Davidson. Speaker 1000:51:10Hey, thanks for taking the question. I was was wondering if you can give a little more color on the net retention number. First, was it closer to 105 And then how did it trend over the quarter end so far in 3Q? Speaker 400:51:28I think what we yes, I think, what we disclosed is that it was over 105. Last quarter, I think I believe we said it was over 110. So you can imagine kind of the data point and the trend lines of that why we would change why we would drop the disclosure from 110 to 105. Speaker 1000:51:48Okay. And then I guess two things. I mean, have you seen any change So far in 3Q. And also could you give us some color on what you've seen on that number kind of inside and outside of tech? Speaker 400:52:00I think it's certainly stronger outside of tech. And I would say, similar to the commentary that we made about on the different segment. I would say the headwinds particular we've seen headwinds in obviously tech and non tech, but I would say It's more definitely more pronounced in the tech segment. Operator00:52:25Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Patrick Walravens of GMP Securities. Speaker 1100:52:36Great. Thank Dustin, I know it's kind of off message, but I was intrigued when you commented that The AI functionality might help with the free to premium conversion. So, you guys really haven't talked about that for a while. Remind us how many free users are there and what is the size of that opportunity? Speaker 200:53:03I don't have the free user base number off hand, but I don't want to over I know. I know. My expectations here. I think the opportunity is small. I just think it's a bit of a wildcard of like maybe it will show up. Speaker 200:53:17We've paid attention to Some other vendors that have more of like a prosumer market, and seeing that some of their customers are empirically willing Upgrade even for sort of single player usage. So most of our per user base is individuals, personal use cases, prosumer use cases. And so I think some of them might be more enticed by this than, some of the other functionality that was more oriented around Teams. I just think There's a little more that is valuable to specific individual end users even if they're not collaborating or if they're just collaborating a little bit. So that's the only reason I mentioned that, but I do think it's small. Speaker 200:53:57It could be nothing. I don't want that to end up in analyst models, to be honest. Speaker 1100:54:02Yes. Okay. A lot of us pay for ChachiPT, so it is kind of interesting. And then One for you, Tim, just how should we think about the shape of free cash flow margins in the second half? I mean, you said not to expect Not necessarily another $15,000,000 but how do we think about that? Speaker 400:54:19Yes. I think you should expect our free cash flow to be negative in the for both Q3 and Q4. But we'll make improvements on a year over year basis and that the margin Will improve from kind of Q1. I think Q2 was a quarter where we essentially had a large Invoice in Q1 with one of our largest customers. We collected that cash in Q2. Speaker 400:54:48That certainly helped with our free cash flow. We won't see that for another year, but it will improve on a year over year basis. Operator00:55:00Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of our final question Comes from the line of Brent Thill of Jefferies. Speaker 1200:55:11Dustin, impressive hire with Ed McDonald coming in as CRO from Salesforce. Maybe if you could talk through your top aspirations out of the gate for him. And If you could speak to also any time we see new CROs come in, there tends to be a little wake turbulence that's felt. Do you And Patfel, do you think that wake turbulence will be in the changes that you would like him to make? Speaker 200:55:41I'm sorry, that word was wait turbulence? Speaker 800:55:45Wait, wait. Speaker 1200:55:48Sorry for Getting the airplane chatter on you? Speaker 200:55:53Yes. Well, Ed is a really seasoned executive And he's built a number of teams over his career, and has seen where we're going. So he's come in and really demonstrated The ability to make decisions quickly, inspire the team, and just like get the lay of the land really quickly. I was actually really impressed even before he started. He went really deep on the company, did a ton of research, and really got to know us. Speaker 200:56:21So he's able to sort of onboard and hit the ground running and has just been sprinting ever since he got here and has already made a lot of progress. So I feel really good about it right now. We're So only, I think, 5th week, 1 month in. And so, there's still going to be a learning curve, but it's been really impressive so far. And Operator00:56:52Thank you. I would now like to turn the conference back to Kathryn Braun for closing remarks. Madam? Speaker 100:56:59Thank you again for joining us today and making the time to hear our earnings results. We look forward to seeing you in New York on October 3rd. Operator00:57:10This concludes today's conference call. 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