NYSE:FVRR Fiverr International Q4 2023 Earnings Report $26.90 +0.26 (+0.98%) Closing price 04/25/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$26.42 -0.48 (-1.78%) As of 04/25/2025 07:42 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 Fiverr International EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.56Consensus EPS $0.52Beat/MissBeat by +$0.04One Year Ago EPS-$0.19Fiverr International Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$91.50 millionExpected Revenue$97.00 millionBeat/MissMissed by -$5.50 millionYoY Revenue Growth+10.10%Fiverr International Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2023Date2/22/2024TimeBefore Market OpensConference Call DateThursday, February 22, 2024Conference Call Time8:30AM ETUpcoming EarningsFiverr International's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Wednesday, May 7, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 8:30 AM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (20-F)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Fiverr International Q4 2023 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 22, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Fiverr Q4 and Full Year 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Jingjing Tian, EVP, Strategic Finance. Operator00:00:39Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:46Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us on Fiverr's earnings conference call for the Q4 that ended December 31, 2023. Joining me on the call today are Micha Kaufman, Founder and CEO and Ofer Katz, President and CFO. Before we start, I'd like to remind you that during this call, we may make forward looking statements and that these statements are based on our current expectations and assumptions as of today, and fiber assumes no obligation to update or revise them. A discussion of some of the important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from any forward looking statements can be found under the Risk Factors section in fiber's most recent Form 20 F and other filings with the SEC. Speaker 100:01:35During this call, we will be referring to some key performance metrics and non GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin. Further explanation and a reconciliation of each of the non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is provided in the earnings release we issued today in our shareholder letter, each of which is available on our website at investors. Fiverr.com. And now, I'll turn the call over to Micha. Speaker 200:02:06Thank you, Jinxin. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We entered 2023 with a backdrop of challenging macroeconomic environment, weak SMB sentiments and waves of layoffs and hiring freezes across industries. It was also a year of increasing geopolitical uncertainties with the ongoing war in Ukraine and the onset of war in the Middle East. The entire fiber team showed extraordinary resilience against these tough conditions and delivered strong execution towards the strategic priorities set at the beginning of the year. Speaker 200:02:44For 2023, revenue grew 7% to $361,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA was $59,000,000 representing adjusted EBITDA margin of 16%, both ahead of the targets we set at the beginning of the year. Fiverr continues to operate one of the best in class business models and expands its market share in freelancer industry. Overall, GMV on the platform grew 1% year over year at a time when U. S. Job openings are down 19% and professional staffing is down 6% year over year. Speaker 200:03:24We continue to focus on upmarket initiatives in both acquisition and product, resulting in 4% year over year growth in buyers with over $500 annual spend and 6% year over year growth in overall spend per buyer. We also expanded our take rate by 160 basis points, reaching an overall take rate of 31.8% as both seller monetization programs experienced significant growth. Our strategy of going up market, investing in AI and complex services and expanding value added products really paid off and helped us drive growth in this macro environment. 2023 was also an exciting year as Gen AI pushed artificial intelligence to new fronts. Early in January last year, we were the first in the market to launch a dedicated AI services vertical, creating a hub of businesses to hire AI talent. Speaker 200:04:32Throughout the year, we continue to see tremendous demand for those services with searches that contain AI related keywords in our market base growing 7 fold in 2023 compared to 2022. Overall, we estimate AI created a net positive impact of 4% to our business in 2023 as we see a category mix shift from simple services such as translation and voiceover to more complex services such as mobile app development, e commerce management or financial consulting. In 2023, complex services represented nearly 1 third of our market base, a significant step up from 2022. Moreover, they are typically larger projects in longer duration with an average transaction size 30% higher than those of simple services. Double clicking on these numbers, we believe that the opportunities created by emerging technologies far outweigh the jobs they replace. Speaker 200:05:45Human talent continues to be an essential part of unlocking the potential of new technologies. We're also seeing a shift into more sophisticated, highly skilled and longer duration categories with bigger addressable market. As the data shows, our market base is built to benefit from these technologies and labor market changes. Unlike single vertical solutions with higher exposure to disruptive technologies and trend changes, fiber has developed a proprietary horizontal platform with hundreds of verticals quickly leaning into the ever changing industry demand needs and trends. All in all, we believe AI will be a multiyear tailwind for us to drive growth and innovation. Speaker 200:06:38AI that drove improvements in our overall platform. We optimize our product and R and D organization and change to a biannual product release cycle in order to significantly accelerate product velocity and focus on strategic priorities rather than incremental features. Our recent winter product release in January culminated these efforts in the second half of twenty twenty three and revamped almost every part of our platform with an AI first approach from search to personalization, from supply quality to seller engagement. We believe these projects not only helped us drive growth last year, but also laid the foundation for future growth. As we enter 2024, we will build upon the progress we have made in 2023 and focus on investing in driving growth acceleration of the underlying business. Speaker 200:07:42The strategic priorities for 2024 are: 1st, continue growing our market share into complex service categories. In 2023, complex services were growing at 29% year over year, significantly faster than the overall market and a big acceleration from 12% in 2022. This year, we are doubling down on this opportunity and have identified a number of verticals with high growth potential. We will build experiences tailored to these verticals and deploy more targeted go to market strategies for them. The second priority is to continue pushing up market by further expanding offerings in fiber business solutions. Speaker 200:08:35On Fiber Pro, our flagship business product, we are opening ways for clients to match with talent whether it's through high touch point of contact from a customer success manager or AI assisted brief and match functionality or managed services through initiatives such as project partner. For fiber enterprise, we have redesigned our pricing and go to market strategy to drive more talent sourcing and engagement volume. We believe helping businesses with skill gaps and their hiring needs is a much stronger value proposition and creates more durable longer term relationships than the talent management software alone. Early signals in December January already show encouraging logo acquisitions and we are aggressively working to complete onboarding and ramp up usage. Last but not least, fiber certified now has dozens of partners and we are working closely with them to integrate our solutions into their client flows. Speaker 200:09:46While the fiber market base is built as a standardized catalog business to drive speed and cost efficiency, fiber business solutions is built as a suite of offerings to meet any needs of large customers. We believe this 2 pronged approach gives us tremendous competitive leverage in growing market share across the spectrum of the addressable market. Our 3rd strategic priority is to continue developing proprietary AI applications unique to our market base to enhance the overall customer experience. The winter product release we discussed just now gives you a flavor of that, but there is so much more to do. We are barely scratching the surface here and the beauty is that all three priorities will drive a positive flywheel among each other to propel our business into the future. Speaker 200:10:46I'm very excited about our 2024 roadmap and firmly believe there's a significant growth runway ahead of us. With that, I'll turn the call to Ofer, who will walk you through some financial highlights. Speaker 300:11:02Thank you, Micha, and good morning, everyone. We finished the year with a strong execution as we strengthened our marketplace and invested heavily into AI and moving up market, while successfully maintaining our operational excellence. Revenue for the Q4 of 2023 was $91,500,000 representing a year over year growth of 10.1%. Adjusted EBITDA was $16,100,000 or 17.6 percent in adjusted EBITDA margin. Both were in line with our expectation. Speaker 300:11:42For the full year, our revenue increased 7.1 percent to $361,400,000 We also doubled our adjusted EBITDA to $59,200,000 or 16.4 percent in adjusted EBITDA margin, and we are pleased to have achieved annual GAAP profitability for the first time in the company's history. Our strong free cash flow generation, together with a healthy balance sheet, puts us in a great financial strength to navigate this macro environment, continue pursuing growth and maximize long term shareholders value. Our annual active buyers were at $4,100,000 and spend per buyer improved to 278, up 6% year over year as we ramped up our marketing efforts on targeting higher value buyers and accelerating our upmarket investment. We continue to make significant progress this quarter in our fiber business solution as we added new features to fiber pro, sign up several new partners to our fiber certified solution and onboarded over a dozen new clients to fiber enterprise. We saw the effort we made last year pay off as the average spend per buyer for 2023 cohort was 13% higher than the 2022 cohort in its 1st year. Speaker 300:13:14Our unit economics remained strong as DROI for performance marketing was slightly over 3 months, while our 3 year lifetime value to CAC exceeded over 3x. We expect to maintain strong market efficiency as we focus on investing in higher value buyers with large spend capacity. Take rate for the Q4 was 31.8%, representing a year over year expansion up 160 basis points driven by significant growth in our seller monetization programs, Promoted Gigs and Seller Plus. Our expansion effort in this program have led revenue from Promoted Gigs to increase 80% year over year and revenue from Seller Plus to climb over 2.5x in 2023 compared to 2022. We believe both programs have plenty of growth runways ahead. Speaker 300:14:19Now on to guidance. For the full year of 2024, we expect revenue to be in the range of $379,000,000 to 387,000,000 dollars representing year over year growth of 5% to 7%. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $65,000,000 to $73,000,000 representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 18% at the midpoint. For the Q1 of 2024, revenue is expected to be $91,500,000 to $93,500,000 representing year over year growth of 4% to 6%. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be $12,500,000 to $14,500,000 representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 15% at the midpoint. Speaker 300:15:13I'd like to provide some additional color and context behind this guide for Q1 and for the full year. Untacking the revenue guidance, we expect the revenue growth in 2024 will be driven by accelerating GMV growth, accompanied by a moderate expansion at take rate. GMV is expected to accelerate by 1% to 2% in 20 24 compared to 2023, primarily driven by market share expansion in complex services, growing up market and investment in AI. We also expect our center buyers to accelerate, while active buyers to continue similar trend as in 2023. We will take a balanced approach in driving profitable growth and expect adjusted EBITDA to continue progress toward our long term target of 25%. Speaker 300:16:11It is important to note that revenue growth remains our top priority. At the same time, we expect to make steady measurable annual growth in driving adjusted EBITDA expansion for the next several years. We remain confident in our strategic priority and financial fortitude. The best market opportunity ahead fuels our optimism, and we are primed to emerge from this challenging economic period as an even stronger and more profitable company. With that, we will now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator00:16:53Thank you. And our first question will come from Eric Sheridan from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 400:17:18Thanks so much for taking the question. Maybe if I could just ask one big picture one. Obviously, very clear on the current macro environment. Talk a little bit about how you plan on balancing incremental profitability and managing through this macro environment in the short term, but not sort of missing the longer term dynamic of wanting to capture growth and being ready to pivot and capitalize on the opportunity when and if the macro environment does get better. So just better color on sort of striking that balance in terms of the way you frame this year and the way you're executing in the early part of 2024? Speaker 400:17:54Thanks so much, guys. Speaker 200:17:58Yes. Good morning, Eric. Thanks for the question. So yes, growth does remain a top priority for us. And I think that what we've been demonstrating is that when macro is challenging, we're able to continue growing while optimizing our efficiency and create a very strong cash position and being remaining very opportunistic about the possibility of growth in the future. Speaker 200:18:29So doubling down on those opportunities is also is always something that we do. It is important to say as well that we're investing and acquiring high value buyers. Those buyers spend more with us and remain longer with us and support the expansion in categories, what we call the more complex categories that are outgrowing the more simpler categories. And I think that when the market rebounds and you're going to see more engagement also coming from lower market segment like micro businesses, we'll be there to capitalize on that growth and be able to double down and grow faster on them. In the meantime, we're improving every aspect of our business throughout. Speaker 200:19:26And I think that we've demonstrated that we've been doing that very steadily. Great. Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:19:39Thank you. And our next question will come from Ron Josey from Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 500:19:46Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Maybe to build off of Eric's questions, Micha, we definitely saw relatively stable cohort behavior, I think, from existing buyers in 2023 and certainly strength in more complex projects and AI is a tailwind. Maybe dig down a little bit more on just that top line growth. I understand you balance top line with profitability, but would love to hear more about your plans around verticals and products just to grow newer cohort spend and to build up that upmarket sort of muscle based on all these new products that are being launched. Speaker 500:20:18And then Ofer, I did have a question. With guidance calling for just continued strong margins, talk just about how you view fiber's balance sheet here? Any update on capital allocation plans? Thank you. Speaker 200:20:31Thanks so much, Ron. Just a quick note on Ofarada, an unplanned dental treatment this morning. So we had him for the opening comments, but I think I'll spare him from having to talk further. We obviously have Jinjin with me to answer with the question. So for your first question on cohort. Speaker 200:21:02So as we said in the opening comments, we are seeing a mix shift on simple categories, where there is more impact of macro coming from less spend from smaller businesses and slightly impact from technological shifts and automations, while at the same time, we have cohorts that are coming to us for the more complex categories that are spending significantly more and are engaging more with us. So we do see some softness in cohorts that we called out as of the second half of twenty twenty two and that lasted throughout 2023 and actually macro isn't changing. So we're not calling any change to macro. At the same time, we have identified a number of categories that are growing much, much faster. And therefore, we're doubling down on these categories. Speaker 200:22:15And that with the focus on high value buyers, those who have the spend capacity and are interested in our onboarding into fiber into these categories allows us to actually improve cohort behavior. And you see that from the numbers, the 13% increase in spend in the last year by these cohorts. As to your second question, on capital allocation, look, we've generated over $80,000,000 of free cash flow this year. And obviously, we have a very strong balance sheet. So financially, we are in a very well positioned. Speaker 200:23:01As we continue to generate free cash flow and increase cash on our balance sheet, we are having active discussions with the board on our capital allocation, including the use of excess cash for equity buybacks. It is worth reiterating that growth continues to be a top priority for us and we see opportunities for both organic and inorganic. And our top of mind is to be very disciplined in making these decisions and really focus on delivering returns to our shareholders and maximizing long term shareholder value. Speaker 500:23:39Great. Thank you, Micha. Speaker 200:23:40Thank you, Ron. Operator00:23:43Thank you. And our next question will come from Doug Anmuth from JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 600:23:53Great. Thanks for taking the question. It's Tuves on for Doug. It's good to see AI already contributing to growth even though it's really early. You mentioned just kind of scratching the surface. Speaker 200:24:03Just kind of where do you see some Speaker 600:24:05of the longer term opportunities or maybe places in the business you can really lean in a lot further with AI and drive positive impacts? Speaker 200:24:16Hey, good morning. Thanks for the question. So as we made clear both in the shareholder letter and in our opening comments, AI is a net positive for us. And I think that what we've identified is there is a difference between what we call simple categories or tasks and more complex ones. And in the complex group, it's really those categories that require human intervention and human input in order to produce a satisfactory result for the customer. Speaker 200:24:55And in these categories, we're seeing growth that goes well beyond the overall growth that we're seeing. And really the simple ones are such where technology can actually do pretty much the entire work, which in those cases they're usually associated with lower prices and shorter term engagements. So essentially, we're really focusing on these more complex services, doubling down on these categories. And we think that these categories have the potential of driving very nice growth. And the larger they become, the more growth they'll push. Speaker 200:25:46At the same time, we're using AI across the entire market base, the entire experience. The searching experience, matching, personalization, the way our customers are doing briefing, the way our sellers are attending to customer needs. So essentially powering every aspect of the experience and making it better and more efficient. And what we've done with the winter product release is just a first step. It's a big step, but it's a first step in pretty much integrating AI in every aspect of the experience in the product. Speaker 200:26:31And we'll continue doing so throughout the year and probably in the next years to come. Again, it is presenting with some superpowers that didn't exist before and allow us to really turbocharge the experience. And so I think that both from a product standpoint, but also from a market based standpoint, AI is going to be a multiyear tailwind for us. Speaker 600:27:06Great. Thanks so much. Operator00:27:10Thank you. And our next question will come from Andrew Boone from JMP Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 600:27:18Thanks so much for taking my questions. I wanted to ask specifically about the Simple Services GMV and the fact that it was down 28% in 2023. Can we tie that into the 2024 guide and just talk about your expectation for these simpler services and the ability for them to stay on the platform? Speaker 200:27:41Hi, Andrew. Thanks for the question. So just as a correction, the simple services are down in teens, not 28%. So it's it is smaller than you indicated. Everything that we've put in the model is tied into the guidance. Speaker 200:28:10So whatever we see including those that decrease in simple services is definitely in. There's a mix shift, right? And so as we've demonstrated, the increase in the complex categories far outweigh the decrease in simple services. And so as we think about the guidance and as we think about AI becoming a multiyear tailwind, all of that is being tied into the guidance. Speaker 600:28:59Sorry about that. I misread it. Apologies. And then I wanted to ask about the changes in enterprise that you're making. How is the change in enterprise changing how you interact with business? Speaker 600:29:13And how is that relating back to increased usage of the platform? Thanks so Speaker 200:29:20much. Thank you. So essentially what we've done with enterprises, we've created a new pricing package that really emphasizes the value we provide on talent sourcing and are built for encouraging long term engagements. So under this new pricing package, clients do not pay additional fees to have access to talent management system if they source and hire a certain number of freelancers. If they don't use enough, then the minimum fee will kick in. Speaker 200:29:57So these changes have allowed us to really expand and onboard more customers into it. That's a much quicker onboarding time. Speaker 500:30:13Thank you. Operator00:30:16Thank you. And our next question will come from Matt Farrell from Piper Sandler. Your line is open. Speaker 700:30:25Hey, guys. Thanks for letting me ask a question. My first one is a bit more near term. Q1 here is a little softer compared to normal seasonality, but you called out the macro really not changing in any material way. Would love just to hear kind of what's been going on in Q1 from a puts and takes perspective that kind of drove the initial guide for the quarter? Speaker 100:30:53Hey, Matt, this is Jingjing. I'll take this question. Yes, so nothing specific to call out for Q1. Like we mentioned earlier, we have not really seen a rebound in the macro. That said, we do believe that we can drive growth even under this macro. Speaker 100:31:13This is why for you seeing for the full year guidance, we are expecting to accelerate our GMV growth this year. And Micha has talked, when you look at the strategic priorities we set for 2024, we noticed a few big areas and that is really going to help us drive GMV acceleration. And on the take rate side, we already command over 30% take rate, which is really industry leading and speaks to the unique value proposition we provide. For 2024, we expect to continue expanding take rate, but at a more moderate pace compared to 2023. Mainly due to 2023, we had a pretty substantial expansion for the 2 monetization programs. Speaker 100:32:09So for 2024, we expect to continue grow take rate, but could be more moderated. So these two pieces kind of go together into kind of the guide for Q1 and 2024. Speaker 700:32:24Thanks. And then you hit on kind of continuing to be on path for that long term 25% adjusted EBITDA margin. Obviously, kind of optimizing here in the near term, but would love just any more insight as we maybe is that a couple more year timeline? How should we be thinking that? And what are the major levers from here from the 2024 guide to get to that 25% number? Speaker 700:32:53Thanks. Speaker 100:32:55Yes. So I think we for us growth continues to be the priority. So we are going to continue to drive growth while managing expense very diligently and making very steady and consistent progress towards this long term. So we're not giving a specific timeline for reaching 25% at this time. But as you can see, we're not far away from it and we are going to continue making steady annual progress towards it. Speaker 700:33:38Thanks. Operator00:33:41Thank you. And our next question will come from Jason Helfstein from Oppenheimer and Co. Your line is open. Speaker 800:33:50Thanks. It's kind of like a 2 part question, but on the same theme. So you've given us data showing that TROI marketing efficiency still remains healthy. When we look at the cohort data, just maybe help us how do you think about it? How much is we're looking at like obviously it's the visual, right? Speaker 800:34:07But the kind of cohort change from kind of running off the COVID benefit to just general weak macro weakness among certain customers? And then as you're thinking about the guide, I think most of us see here and say, okay, a good a large percent of your business is smaller businesses that are interest rate sensitive. As interest rates come down, they should be willing to spend more. Like how do you just think about that dynamic as you're thinking about your guide relative to the other things that are in your control, right, moving on market, new products, take rate, etcetera. So just maybe unpack that, so kind of the burn off of the COVID benefit and then kind of how you're thinking about particularly small business smaller business customers who are probably more directly impacted by changing interest rates? Speaker 800:35:00Thanks. Speaker 200:35:02Thanks Jason. Good morning. So essentially, I think we mentioned this a few times. Right now, we're not seeing any macro change. And obviously, when it does change, there is going to be an upside and we're going to be there to capture it. Speaker 200:35:20And the incredibly powerful marketing machine that we've developed over the years is ready and fire up. So capturing that opportunity is not going to be an issue. That said, since we're not seeing any of these changes as of now and we'll be super happy to share it with all of you once we do see it. We're focusing on the things that we can control, which is why we've been focusing more on high value buyers, those who spend more on spend per buyer in general, knowing that in active buyers is an example, not going to see the same type of growth. In an easier macro environment, usually if you look historically, what you see is you see a more balanced growth between active buyer and spend provider because we're able to grow both of them. Speaker 200:36:24Right now, we're obviously focusing on the things that we can control, which is really focusing on the more complex services, the higher value customers and optimizing to acquire as effective as possible in those areas. I think again from a brand perspective, fiber is the leading brand in the world in this space. So once the sentiment is going to change, I think that there is this is just going to add to the great tailwind that we're experiencing from AI right now. Speaker 800:37:06And just to be clear, your guidance assumes no pickup in macro through the entire year or is there some pickup at some point? Speaker 200:37:13No, no, no. Correct. It does not factor in any hopefulness around the macro rebound. Speaker 800:37:22Thank you. Speaker 200:37:23Thank you. Operator00:37:26Thank you. Our next question will come from Kunal Badroukar from UBS. Your line is Speaker 300:37:35open. Hi, thank you for taking my questions. A couple if Speaker 900:37:39I could. 1 on the complex services side, wanted to understand buyer behavior and seller behavior in terms of repeats and where you're seeing the demand from? And are the sellers that are supplying the complex services, are these new to the platform? Are they people that have retooled their skill set and are now supplying complex services. And then on the take rate side for these complex services, with the ASP kind of increasing, you're probably going up more head to head with Upwork. Speaker 900:38:18So can you talk about take rate trends and pricing? Thank you. Speaker 200:38:27Yes. Thanks for the questions. So first of all, to touch on complex services, complex services are really categorized where human skills are essential to deliver a satisfactory outcome. Even when AI can be used to improve the efficiency of some aspects of these projects, right? So essentially, what we're seeing there is by definition, the buyers who come to purchase these customers have a typically longer duration of projects. Speaker 200:39:08So in essence, the type of relationship that they develop with our platform is longer. And that also influenced their repeat and their retention over time. Now as to the sellers, a lot of them are existing. Some are new. I mean, we're adding tremendous amount of talent to our platform every month, every quarter. Speaker 200:39:37But as you can imagine, these sellers are mostly relevant for higher quality. So you can see segments like pro sellers. So I think that this is really helpful for these sellers to really expand their earnings on fiber, which also creates retention of talent as well and their engagement. So I think that from those two aspects, it's definitely a move into the right direction. Speaker 1000:40:18Listen, I think Speaker 200:40:21the way we look at competition is really that most of the competition is offline. We're not focusing on any specific company And each company in the space has its own way and its way of doing business. Ours is really to try to do more of the transformation from the offline activity, the work that companies are doing with talent, with agencies and really transform it to the online. And we're really confident with the approach of tackle the entire addressable market with both the market base and the fiber business solution. Thanks for the question. Operator00:41:18Thank you. And our next question will come from Brad Erickson from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:41:28Hey guys, thanks. I guess first, you mentioned your outperformance relative to like job openings and staffing and stuff like that. Maybe just remind us if you could, what are the kind of key types of capacity you think fiber is really replacing here augmenting or supplementing when you think about the secular aspect of the digital freelancer opportunity? And I guess like what should investors focus on as kind of the more acute drivers, whether it's like business formation, just kind of general health of the SMB, job openings, etcetera? That's the first one. Speaker 1100:42:03And then second, just a housekeeping for Jin Ji, sorry about Ofer's teeth. Just stock based comp, what's embedded in the guidance? And just generally how to think about stock based comp, I guess, maybe as like a percentage of revenue, for example, going forward? Thanks. Speaker 200:42:21Good morning, Brad. Thanks for the question. So, as for the first I think so first what we're really optimizing for is this offline to online, right. So freelancers in general are addressing things like skill gaps, cost efficiency, issues of scaling, scaling up or down very rapidly without the complexities of that comes with full time hiring. And what we're doing is we're really doing this, but in a hyper efficient model online. Speaker 200:43:07So we make the actual process that is taking on average many, many weeks for companies or changing that to a really simple interaction that takes minutes. So I think that by really covering this entire spectrum from the small needs of micro businesses to very sophisticated needs for more sophisticated and large customers, we're actually helping to transform this offline to online. Now in terms of what investors should focus on, we're trying to ourselves to look for proxies. And one of the interesting things that we saw that is that there is it is hard to find a proxy other than the actual numbers that we're seeing on our platform. Meaning new business formation is not necessarily an indication that those businesses have the spend capacity. Speaker 200:44:17Sometimes new business formation is tied with job cuts or people that need to replace or create new businesses, it doesn't mean that this is going to immediately lead to more spending. I think that if anything, cost of borrow is probably a decent proxy Because when you think about that, smaller businesses who need to borrow money to invest in growth have a harder time in this economy. And if you're a business that is already generating capital, then you can reinvest without borrowing money. So this is why I think we called out pretty much in the past year and a half, the fact that we're seeing parity between midsizelargesizeenterprise business and small and micro businesses. And the lower those lower cohorts of smaller businesses have a harder time than the large one. Speaker 200:45:25As we've demonstrated, the fact that there is a pretty massive decrease in job openings doesn't mean that we're not growing. So we're seeing and we're showing we're demonstrating an opposite trend. So it's really hard to find these proxy. Jing Jin, do you want to take the? Speaker 100:45:46Yes. So SBC, we our SBC is an elevated level as we mentioned before because of the accounting treatments that is booked at cost and is tied with the high stock price during COVID. And so from a modeling perspective, this is going to take 4 years to vest those RSUs and options. And so for modeling this year, it'll be similar to last year's level from a dollar perspective. So as a percentage of revenue, it will come down slightly. Speaker 100:46:23And as we finish the full year vesting, we do expect that percentage of revenue will more substantially stepping down. Speaker 1000:46:34Great. Thank you. Operator00:46:38Thank you. And our next question will come from Bernie MacTernan from Needham and Company. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:46:49Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Really appreciate all the color and data on the complex versus simple declines or growth. Want to follow-up on it. Just what was the shape of complex growth and simple declines throughout the year? Speaker 1200:47:05Just wanted to get a sense in terms of if trends were stabilizing or accelerating in any direction just as we use that to forecast 2024. And then on the 3rd bucket, the neutral, any specific examples you could provide in terms of what those gigs are predominantly? And over time, do you think the growth will move more like simple or complex or really stay kind of flat? Speaker 200:47:34Thanks, Bernie. Nothing really specific to comment on shape, right? We're not we can't call any difference across the year and it seems to be steady. We have a full year of analysis that is showing that. Obviously we'll need to see how the future shapes up, but this is what we can call for now. Speaker 200:48:09In terms of the neutral bucket, essentially, these are categories that are not being affected. So essentially their trends have nothing to do with the AI impact. So we don't see any material trend changes due to AI, whether because AI is not involved in it or because it's not just not impacting it. Yes. So as to your second part of the question, will growth move to simple or complex? Speaker 200:48:55I think that at some point, every transformation, every technological transformation may plateau at some point, but we don't think that this is going to happen anytime soon. So our assumption is that some of the simple tasks are going to be continued to be automated, which by the way is nothing new. I mean, it's happened before even before AI, automation has been a part of our lives. And definitely the more complex services is where I think the growth potential definitely lies. This is why we called out the fact that we're going to double down on these categories and services. Speaker 500:49:47Understood. Thank you. Operator00:49:51Thank you. And our next Speaker 1000:50:03So 2 for me. So first, just on enterprise. Great to see adding over a dozen clients there. Just be interested if there was any additional color you could add about the pipeline that you see for this cohort? And can you speak to any what's kind of the size of the clients that are adopting this? Speaker 1000:50:25Are they 500 plus employees or 1,000 plus employee kind of organizations, the very large organizations? And then second question, just more of a housekeeping question, but love to see the disclosure about AI being 4% of TMP. But just curious if since AI didn't really manifest itself until sort of, let's call it, May or June, Was the percentage in the back half of the year actually higher? And or maybe could kind of speak to Q4, what was the impact just in that quarter? Just trying to get a sense of maybe what we're seeing currently. Speaker 1000:51:10So thanks a lot. Speaker 200:51:14Thanks for the questions. So on the first one, on the dozen clients we've added to enterprise. So in Q4, we acquired 3 multinational enterprise clients, including 2 in the tech space and 1 in the manufacturing industry. And we also added about 10 midsized enterprises, including a few media companies. And just to give you a color on size, when we talk about large versus midsize, we categorize it below or above 3,000 employees. Speaker 200:52:01That hopefully is giving you color. On the second part of your question, well, we've been responding to the changes or the announcements of AI. I mean, Chargebee was announced November of 2022. So as far as we've seen the impact have started at the back end of 2022. In the beginning of 2023, we were already with about 20 or 30 categories that we're dealing with AI related services. Speaker 200:52:51So for us, it's really a full year effect. That said, obviously, categories are very dynamic on the market base and outside of the market base, the demand for those and they've been developing throughout the year. But we've been we have been talking about the net positive impact of AI throughout the year. And this is just our opportunity to wrap up on 2023 from a full year perspective and really calling and putting an actual number on it. Speaker 1000:53:32Okay, that's fair. Thanks so much, Neha. Appreciate it. Thanks, everyone. Speaker 200:53:37Thank you. Operator00:53:39Thank you. And our next question will come from Rohit Kulkarni from ROTH MKM. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:53:52Hey, thank you. Thank you for the extra color on GMV growth and the underlying layers. I guess just on metrics and how they affect your guidance for GMV. Anything you could provide to unpack a little bit more with regards to kind of trend in active buyers and spend per buyer as we think ahead, how that stacks up to help you accelerate GMV? Speaker 200:54:25Yes. Thanks for the question. So essentially, I think as to active buyers, what we're seeing is what we've seen so far, meaning because of macro, there isn't any noticeable improvement in terms of our ability to increase those numbers in terms of quantity. And therefore, we are focused on the quality of those active buyers, which is everything we said about the high value buyers. And obviously, if you continue to track those numbers, you see that the percentage that they contribute continues to increase steadily. Speaker 200:55:16So active buyer is going to be similar trends as in 2023 and spend per buyer will accelerate in year over year growth in comparison to 2023. So our really our focus on it is going to continue. If you're just calling out the contribution of higher value buyers, those who spend more than $500 with us, that cohort grew 4% year over year in 2023, which is significantly higher than the overall active buyer growth. Yes, so that's how we view 2023 2024, sorry. Speaker 1300:56:09Okay. Okay. That's very helpful color. Thank you very much. And then I guess I know there were a bunch of questions on this new disclosure around simple versus complex versus marketplace mix that you have. Speaker 1300:56:23I think just on that, probably like as far as the mix going forward, anything noteworthy that you are assuming with regards to complex services that probably could be a bigger proportion of GMV going forward? And as a sub question to that would be, are there any pricing or take rate differences, as in material differences across those three categories of GMV? Speaker 100:57:01Hey, Rohit. This is Jing Jing. Yes, so I think definitely, I think we mentioned in the shareholder letter as well, complex services in 2023 is already almost a third of our marketplace in terms of GMV contribution and much higher than the simple services, which is around 23%. And yes, given the growth rate, right, 29% year over year growth, it is a big step up in terms of the overall percentage of GMV coming from those complex services. And we do expect that contribution continue to grow in the coming years. Speaker 1300:57:48And any noticeable differences in take rate, Jin Ji, or anything? Speaker 100:57:54Yes. So take rate, nothing really are different. We our entire marketplace takes very consistent like just uniform take rates across the board. So yes, so 20% from the seller side and then 5.5% from the buyer side. There's no difference in terms of the transaction. Speaker 1300:58:21Okay. Thank you very much. Operator00:58:25Thank you. And I am showing no further questions from our phone lines. I'd now like to turn the conference back over to Micha Kaufman for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:58:35Thank you, Crystal, and thank you everyone for joining us today. We look forward to an exciting and successful year and hope to see you in person soon. Thank you. Have a great day. Operator00:58:47Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect. Everyone have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallFiverr International Q4 202300:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Annual report(20-F) Fiverr International Earnings HeadlinesImplied Volatility Surging for Fiverr International Stock OptionsApril 22, 2025 | msn.comFiverr: The Bottom Is Near, But Longer-Term Risks Remain Cloudy (Rating Upgrade)April 18, 2025 | seekingalpha.comHere’s How to Claim Your Stake in Elon’s Private Company, xAIElon Musk has done it again. He’s developed a powerful new AI model that’s already turning heads — and turning the industry upside down. Some say it could threaten Google’s search engine dominance. Others believe it could mark the beginning of the end for ChatGPT.April 26, 2025 | Brownstone Research (Ad)Stranger Things Have Happened: Brett Gelman gets a creative makeover in a new Fiverr ad campaign debuting todayApril 15, 2025 | globenewswire.comFiverr to Release First Quarter 2025 Results on May 7, 2025April 9, 2025 | globenewswire.comFiverr price target lowered to $27 from $33 at JPMorganApril 9, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Fiverr International Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Fiverr International? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Fiverr International and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Fiverr InternationalFiverr International (NYSE:FVRR) operates an online marketplace worldwide. Its platform enables sellers to sell their services and buyers to buy them. The company's platform includes various categories in ten verticals, including graphic and design, digital marketing, writing and translation, video and animation, music and audio, programming and tech, business, data, lifestyle, and photography. It also offers value-added products, including subscription-based content marketing, back-office, learning and development offerings, creative talent, and freelancer management platforms. In addition, the company provides a suite of professional solutions that enable businesses to engage with freelancers; Fiverr Pro, a marketplace; Fiverr Certified, a storefront to access certified experts for partner vendors; Fiverr Enterprise, a gateway to source and manage on-demand and long-term freelancers. Further, it offers various value-added products, including Promoted Gigs which allows sellers to advertise their services on the platform; and Seller Plus, a subscription program that equips sellers with advanced tools. The company's buyers include businesses of various sizes, as well as sellers comprise a group of freelancers and agencies. 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There are 14 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Fiverr Q4 and Full Year 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question and answer Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker today, Jingjing Tian, EVP, Strategic Finance. Operator00:00:39Please go ahead. Speaker 100:00:46Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. Thank you for joining us on Fiverr's earnings conference call for the Q4 that ended December 31, 2023. Joining me on the call today are Micha Kaufman, Founder and CEO and Ofer Katz, President and CFO. Before we start, I'd like to remind you that during this call, we may make forward looking statements and that these statements are based on our current expectations and assumptions as of today, and fiber assumes no obligation to update or revise them. A discussion of some of the important risk factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from any forward looking statements can be found under the Risk Factors section in fiber's most recent Form 20 F and other filings with the SEC. Speaker 100:01:35During this call, we will be referring to some key performance metrics and non GAAP financial measures, including adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin. Further explanation and a reconciliation of each of the non GAAP financial measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measures is provided in the earnings release we issued today in our shareholder letter, each of which is available on our website at investors. Fiverr.com. And now, I'll turn the call over to Micha. Speaker 200:02:06Thank you, Jinxin. Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. We entered 2023 with a backdrop of challenging macroeconomic environment, weak SMB sentiments and waves of layoffs and hiring freezes across industries. It was also a year of increasing geopolitical uncertainties with the ongoing war in Ukraine and the onset of war in the Middle East. The entire fiber team showed extraordinary resilience against these tough conditions and delivered strong execution towards the strategic priorities set at the beginning of the year. Speaker 200:02:44For 2023, revenue grew 7% to $361,000,000 and adjusted EBITDA was $59,000,000 representing adjusted EBITDA margin of 16%, both ahead of the targets we set at the beginning of the year. Fiverr continues to operate one of the best in class business models and expands its market share in freelancer industry. Overall, GMV on the platform grew 1% year over year at a time when U. S. Job openings are down 19% and professional staffing is down 6% year over year. Speaker 200:03:24We continue to focus on upmarket initiatives in both acquisition and product, resulting in 4% year over year growth in buyers with over $500 annual spend and 6% year over year growth in overall spend per buyer. We also expanded our take rate by 160 basis points, reaching an overall take rate of 31.8% as both seller monetization programs experienced significant growth. Our strategy of going up market, investing in AI and complex services and expanding value added products really paid off and helped us drive growth in this macro environment. 2023 was also an exciting year as Gen AI pushed artificial intelligence to new fronts. Early in January last year, we were the first in the market to launch a dedicated AI services vertical, creating a hub of businesses to hire AI talent. Speaker 200:04:32Throughout the year, we continue to see tremendous demand for those services with searches that contain AI related keywords in our market base growing 7 fold in 2023 compared to 2022. Overall, we estimate AI created a net positive impact of 4% to our business in 2023 as we see a category mix shift from simple services such as translation and voiceover to more complex services such as mobile app development, e commerce management or financial consulting. In 2023, complex services represented nearly 1 third of our market base, a significant step up from 2022. Moreover, they are typically larger projects in longer duration with an average transaction size 30% higher than those of simple services. Double clicking on these numbers, we believe that the opportunities created by emerging technologies far outweigh the jobs they replace. Speaker 200:05:45Human talent continues to be an essential part of unlocking the potential of new technologies. We're also seeing a shift into more sophisticated, highly skilled and longer duration categories with bigger addressable market. As the data shows, our market base is built to benefit from these technologies and labor market changes. Unlike single vertical solutions with higher exposure to disruptive technologies and trend changes, fiber has developed a proprietary horizontal platform with hundreds of verticals quickly leaning into the ever changing industry demand needs and trends. All in all, we believe AI will be a multiyear tailwind for us to drive growth and innovation. Speaker 200:06:38AI that drove improvements in our overall platform. We optimize our product and R and D organization and change to a biannual product release cycle in order to significantly accelerate product velocity and focus on strategic priorities rather than incremental features. Our recent winter product release in January culminated these efforts in the second half of twenty twenty three and revamped almost every part of our platform with an AI first approach from search to personalization, from supply quality to seller engagement. We believe these projects not only helped us drive growth last year, but also laid the foundation for future growth. As we enter 2024, we will build upon the progress we have made in 2023 and focus on investing in driving growth acceleration of the underlying business. Speaker 200:07:42The strategic priorities for 2024 are: 1st, continue growing our market share into complex service categories. In 2023, complex services were growing at 29% year over year, significantly faster than the overall market and a big acceleration from 12% in 2022. This year, we are doubling down on this opportunity and have identified a number of verticals with high growth potential. We will build experiences tailored to these verticals and deploy more targeted go to market strategies for them. The second priority is to continue pushing up market by further expanding offerings in fiber business solutions. Speaker 200:08:35On Fiber Pro, our flagship business product, we are opening ways for clients to match with talent whether it's through high touch point of contact from a customer success manager or AI assisted brief and match functionality or managed services through initiatives such as project partner. For fiber enterprise, we have redesigned our pricing and go to market strategy to drive more talent sourcing and engagement volume. We believe helping businesses with skill gaps and their hiring needs is a much stronger value proposition and creates more durable longer term relationships than the talent management software alone. Early signals in December January already show encouraging logo acquisitions and we are aggressively working to complete onboarding and ramp up usage. Last but not least, fiber certified now has dozens of partners and we are working closely with them to integrate our solutions into their client flows. Speaker 200:09:46While the fiber market base is built as a standardized catalog business to drive speed and cost efficiency, fiber business solutions is built as a suite of offerings to meet any needs of large customers. We believe this 2 pronged approach gives us tremendous competitive leverage in growing market share across the spectrum of the addressable market. Our 3rd strategic priority is to continue developing proprietary AI applications unique to our market base to enhance the overall customer experience. The winter product release we discussed just now gives you a flavor of that, but there is so much more to do. We are barely scratching the surface here and the beauty is that all three priorities will drive a positive flywheel among each other to propel our business into the future. Speaker 200:10:46I'm very excited about our 2024 roadmap and firmly believe there's a significant growth runway ahead of us. With that, I'll turn the call to Ofer, who will walk you through some financial highlights. Speaker 300:11:02Thank you, Micha, and good morning, everyone. We finished the year with a strong execution as we strengthened our marketplace and invested heavily into AI and moving up market, while successfully maintaining our operational excellence. Revenue for the Q4 of 2023 was $91,500,000 representing a year over year growth of 10.1%. Adjusted EBITDA was $16,100,000 or 17.6 percent in adjusted EBITDA margin. Both were in line with our expectation. Speaker 300:11:42For the full year, our revenue increased 7.1 percent to $361,400,000 We also doubled our adjusted EBITDA to $59,200,000 or 16.4 percent in adjusted EBITDA margin, and we are pleased to have achieved annual GAAP profitability for the first time in the company's history. Our strong free cash flow generation, together with a healthy balance sheet, puts us in a great financial strength to navigate this macro environment, continue pursuing growth and maximize long term shareholders value. Our annual active buyers were at $4,100,000 and spend per buyer improved to 278, up 6% year over year as we ramped up our marketing efforts on targeting higher value buyers and accelerating our upmarket investment. We continue to make significant progress this quarter in our fiber business solution as we added new features to fiber pro, sign up several new partners to our fiber certified solution and onboarded over a dozen new clients to fiber enterprise. We saw the effort we made last year pay off as the average spend per buyer for 2023 cohort was 13% higher than the 2022 cohort in its 1st year. Speaker 300:13:14Our unit economics remained strong as DROI for performance marketing was slightly over 3 months, while our 3 year lifetime value to CAC exceeded over 3x. We expect to maintain strong market efficiency as we focus on investing in higher value buyers with large spend capacity. Take rate for the Q4 was 31.8%, representing a year over year expansion up 160 basis points driven by significant growth in our seller monetization programs, Promoted Gigs and Seller Plus. Our expansion effort in this program have led revenue from Promoted Gigs to increase 80% year over year and revenue from Seller Plus to climb over 2.5x in 2023 compared to 2022. We believe both programs have plenty of growth runways ahead. Speaker 300:14:19Now on to guidance. For the full year of 2024, we expect revenue to be in the range of $379,000,000 to 387,000,000 dollars representing year over year growth of 5% to 7%. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be in the range of $65,000,000 to $73,000,000 representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 18% at the midpoint. For the Q1 of 2024, revenue is expected to be $91,500,000 to $93,500,000 representing year over year growth of 4% to 6%. Adjusted EBITDA is expected to be $12,500,000 to $14,500,000 representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 15% at the midpoint. Speaker 300:15:13I'd like to provide some additional color and context behind this guide for Q1 and for the full year. Untacking the revenue guidance, we expect the revenue growth in 2024 will be driven by accelerating GMV growth, accompanied by a moderate expansion at take rate. GMV is expected to accelerate by 1% to 2% in 20 24 compared to 2023, primarily driven by market share expansion in complex services, growing up market and investment in AI. We also expect our center buyers to accelerate, while active buyers to continue similar trend as in 2023. We will take a balanced approach in driving profitable growth and expect adjusted EBITDA to continue progress toward our long term target of 25%. Speaker 300:16:11It is important to note that revenue growth remains our top priority. At the same time, we expect to make steady measurable annual growth in driving adjusted EBITDA expansion for the next several years. We remain confident in our strategic priority and financial fortitude. The best market opportunity ahead fuels our optimism, and we are primed to emerge from this challenging economic period as an even stronger and more profitable company. With that, we will now turn the call over to the operator for questions. Operator00:16:53Thank you. And our first question will come from Eric Sheridan from Goldman Sachs. Your line is open. Speaker 400:17:18Thanks so much for taking the question. Maybe if I could just ask one big picture one. Obviously, very clear on the current macro environment. Talk a little bit about how you plan on balancing incremental profitability and managing through this macro environment in the short term, but not sort of missing the longer term dynamic of wanting to capture growth and being ready to pivot and capitalize on the opportunity when and if the macro environment does get better. So just better color on sort of striking that balance in terms of the way you frame this year and the way you're executing in the early part of 2024? Speaker 400:17:54Thanks so much, guys. Speaker 200:17:58Yes. Good morning, Eric. Thanks for the question. So yes, growth does remain a top priority for us. And I think that what we've been demonstrating is that when macro is challenging, we're able to continue growing while optimizing our efficiency and create a very strong cash position and being remaining very opportunistic about the possibility of growth in the future. Speaker 200:18:29So doubling down on those opportunities is also is always something that we do. It is important to say as well that we're investing and acquiring high value buyers. Those buyers spend more with us and remain longer with us and support the expansion in categories, what we call the more complex categories that are outgrowing the more simpler categories. And I think that when the market rebounds and you're going to see more engagement also coming from lower market segment like micro businesses, we'll be there to capitalize on that growth and be able to double down and grow faster on them. In the meantime, we're improving every aspect of our business throughout. Speaker 200:19:26And I think that we've demonstrated that we've been doing that very steadily. Great. Thank you. Thank you. Operator00:19:39Thank you. And our next question will come from Ron Josey from Citi. Your line is open. Speaker 500:19:46Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Maybe to build off of Eric's questions, Micha, we definitely saw relatively stable cohort behavior, I think, from existing buyers in 2023 and certainly strength in more complex projects and AI is a tailwind. Maybe dig down a little bit more on just that top line growth. I understand you balance top line with profitability, but would love to hear more about your plans around verticals and products just to grow newer cohort spend and to build up that upmarket sort of muscle based on all these new products that are being launched. Speaker 500:20:18And then Ofer, I did have a question. With guidance calling for just continued strong margins, talk just about how you view fiber's balance sheet here? Any update on capital allocation plans? Thank you. Speaker 200:20:31Thanks so much, Ron. Just a quick note on Ofarada, an unplanned dental treatment this morning. So we had him for the opening comments, but I think I'll spare him from having to talk further. We obviously have Jinjin with me to answer with the question. So for your first question on cohort. Speaker 200:21:02So as we said in the opening comments, we are seeing a mix shift on simple categories, where there is more impact of macro coming from less spend from smaller businesses and slightly impact from technological shifts and automations, while at the same time, we have cohorts that are coming to us for the more complex categories that are spending significantly more and are engaging more with us. So we do see some softness in cohorts that we called out as of the second half of twenty twenty two and that lasted throughout 2023 and actually macro isn't changing. So we're not calling any change to macro. At the same time, we have identified a number of categories that are growing much, much faster. And therefore, we're doubling down on these categories. Speaker 200:22:15And that with the focus on high value buyers, those who have the spend capacity and are interested in our onboarding into fiber into these categories allows us to actually improve cohort behavior. And you see that from the numbers, the 13% increase in spend in the last year by these cohorts. As to your second question, on capital allocation, look, we've generated over $80,000,000 of free cash flow this year. And obviously, we have a very strong balance sheet. So financially, we are in a very well positioned. Speaker 200:23:01As we continue to generate free cash flow and increase cash on our balance sheet, we are having active discussions with the board on our capital allocation, including the use of excess cash for equity buybacks. It is worth reiterating that growth continues to be a top priority for us and we see opportunities for both organic and inorganic. And our top of mind is to be very disciplined in making these decisions and really focus on delivering returns to our shareholders and maximizing long term shareholder value. Speaker 500:23:39Great. Thank you, Micha. Speaker 200:23:40Thank you, Ron. Operator00:23:43Thank you. And our next question will come from Doug Anmuth from JPMorgan. Your line is open. Speaker 600:23:53Great. Thanks for taking the question. It's Tuves on for Doug. It's good to see AI already contributing to growth even though it's really early. You mentioned just kind of scratching the surface. Speaker 200:24:03Just kind of where do you see some Speaker 600:24:05of the longer term opportunities or maybe places in the business you can really lean in a lot further with AI and drive positive impacts? Speaker 200:24:16Hey, good morning. Thanks for the question. So as we made clear both in the shareholder letter and in our opening comments, AI is a net positive for us. And I think that what we've identified is there is a difference between what we call simple categories or tasks and more complex ones. And in the complex group, it's really those categories that require human intervention and human input in order to produce a satisfactory result for the customer. Speaker 200:24:55And in these categories, we're seeing growth that goes well beyond the overall growth that we're seeing. And really the simple ones are such where technology can actually do pretty much the entire work, which in those cases they're usually associated with lower prices and shorter term engagements. So essentially, we're really focusing on these more complex services, doubling down on these categories. And we think that these categories have the potential of driving very nice growth. And the larger they become, the more growth they'll push. Speaker 200:25:46At the same time, we're using AI across the entire market base, the entire experience. The searching experience, matching, personalization, the way our customers are doing briefing, the way our sellers are attending to customer needs. So essentially powering every aspect of the experience and making it better and more efficient. And what we've done with the winter product release is just a first step. It's a big step, but it's a first step in pretty much integrating AI in every aspect of the experience in the product. Speaker 200:26:31And we'll continue doing so throughout the year and probably in the next years to come. Again, it is presenting with some superpowers that didn't exist before and allow us to really turbocharge the experience. And so I think that both from a product standpoint, but also from a market based standpoint, AI is going to be a multiyear tailwind for us. Speaker 600:27:06Great. Thanks so much. Operator00:27:10Thank you. And our next question will come from Andrew Boone from JMP Securities. Your line is open. Speaker 600:27:18Thanks so much for taking my questions. I wanted to ask specifically about the Simple Services GMV and the fact that it was down 28% in 2023. Can we tie that into the 2024 guide and just talk about your expectation for these simpler services and the ability for them to stay on the platform? Speaker 200:27:41Hi, Andrew. Thanks for the question. So just as a correction, the simple services are down in teens, not 28%. So it's it is smaller than you indicated. Everything that we've put in the model is tied into the guidance. Speaker 200:28:10So whatever we see including those that decrease in simple services is definitely in. There's a mix shift, right? And so as we've demonstrated, the increase in the complex categories far outweigh the decrease in simple services. And so as we think about the guidance and as we think about AI becoming a multiyear tailwind, all of that is being tied into the guidance. Speaker 600:28:59Sorry about that. I misread it. Apologies. And then I wanted to ask about the changes in enterprise that you're making. How is the change in enterprise changing how you interact with business? Speaker 600:29:13And how is that relating back to increased usage of the platform? Thanks so Speaker 200:29:20much. Thank you. So essentially what we've done with enterprises, we've created a new pricing package that really emphasizes the value we provide on talent sourcing and are built for encouraging long term engagements. So under this new pricing package, clients do not pay additional fees to have access to talent management system if they source and hire a certain number of freelancers. If they don't use enough, then the minimum fee will kick in. Speaker 200:29:57So these changes have allowed us to really expand and onboard more customers into it. That's a much quicker onboarding time. Speaker 500:30:13Thank you. Operator00:30:16Thank you. And our next question will come from Matt Farrell from Piper Sandler. Your line is open. Speaker 700:30:25Hey, guys. Thanks for letting me ask a question. My first one is a bit more near term. Q1 here is a little softer compared to normal seasonality, but you called out the macro really not changing in any material way. Would love just to hear kind of what's been going on in Q1 from a puts and takes perspective that kind of drove the initial guide for the quarter? Speaker 100:30:53Hey, Matt, this is Jingjing. I'll take this question. Yes, so nothing specific to call out for Q1. Like we mentioned earlier, we have not really seen a rebound in the macro. That said, we do believe that we can drive growth even under this macro. Speaker 100:31:13This is why for you seeing for the full year guidance, we are expecting to accelerate our GMV growth this year. And Micha has talked, when you look at the strategic priorities we set for 2024, we noticed a few big areas and that is really going to help us drive GMV acceleration. And on the take rate side, we already command over 30% take rate, which is really industry leading and speaks to the unique value proposition we provide. For 2024, we expect to continue expanding take rate, but at a more moderate pace compared to 2023. Mainly due to 2023, we had a pretty substantial expansion for the 2 monetization programs. Speaker 100:32:09So for 2024, we expect to continue grow take rate, but could be more moderated. So these two pieces kind of go together into kind of the guide for Q1 and 2024. Speaker 700:32:24Thanks. And then you hit on kind of continuing to be on path for that long term 25% adjusted EBITDA margin. Obviously, kind of optimizing here in the near term, but would love just any more insight as we maybe is that a couple more year timeline? How should we be thinking that? And what are the major levers from here from the 2024 guide to get to that 25% number? Speaker 700:32:53Thanks. Speaker 100:32:55Yes. So I think we for us growth continues to be the priority. So we are going to continue to drive growth while managing expense very diligently and making very steady and consistent progress towards this long term. So we're not giving a specific timeline for reaching 25% at this time. But as you can see, we're not far away from it and we are going to continue making steady annual progress towards it. Speaker 700:33:38Thanks. Operator00:33:41Thank you. And our next question will come from Jason Helfstein from Oppenheimer and Co. Your line is open. Speaker 800:33:50Thanks. It's kind of like a 2 part question, but on the same theme. So you've given us data showing that TROI marketing efficiency still remains healthy. When we look at the cohort data, just maybe help us how do you think about it? How much is we're looking at like obviously it's the visual, right? Speaker 800:34:07But the kind of cohort change from kind of running off the COVID benefit to just general weak macro weakness among certain customers? And then as you're thinking about the guide, I think most of us see here and say, okay, a good a large percent of your business is smaller businesses that are interest rate sensitive. As interest rates come down, they should be willing to spend more. Like how do you just think about that dynamic as you're thinking about your guide relative to the other things that are in your control, right, moving on market, new products, take rate, etcetera. So just maybe unpack that, so kind of the burn off of the COVID benefit and then kind of how you're thinking about particularly small business smaller business customers who are probably more directly impacted by changing interest rates? Speaker 800:35:00Thanks. Speaker 200:35:02Thanks Jason. Good morning. So essentially, I think we mentioned this a few times. Right now, we're not seeing any macro change. And obviously, when it does change, there is going to be an upside and we're going to be there to capture it. Speaker 200:35:20And the incredibly powerful marketing machine that we've developed over the years is ready and fire up. So capturing that opportunity is not going to be an issue. That said, since we're not seeing any of these changes as of now and we'll be super happy to share it with all of you once we do see it. We're focusing on the things that we can control, which is why we've been focusing more on high value buyers, those who spend more on spend per buyer in general, knowing that in active buyers is an example, not going to see the same type of growth. In an easier macro environment, usually if you look historically, what you see is you see a more balanced growth between active buyer and spend provider because we're able to grow both of them. Speaker 200:36:24Right now, we're obviously focusing on the things that we can control, which is really focusing on the more complex services, the higher value customers and optimizing to acquire as effective as possible in those areas. I think again from a brand perspective, fiber is the leading brand in the world in this space. So once the sentiment is going to change, I think that there is this is just going to add to the great tailwind that we're experiencing from AI right now. Speaker 800:37:06And just to be clear, your guidance assumes no pickup in macro through the entire year or is there some pickup at some point? Speaker 200:37:13No, no, no. Correct. It does not factor in any hopefulness around the macro rebound. Speaker 800:37:22Thank you. Speaker 200:37:23Thank you. Operator00:37:26Thank you. Our next question will come from Kunal Badroukar from UBS. Your line is Speaker 300:37:35open. Hi, thank you for taking my questions. A couple if Speaker 900:37:39I could. 1 on the complex services side, wanted to understand buyer behavior and seller behavior in terms of repeats and where you're seeing the demand from? And are the sellers that are supplying the complex services, are these new to the platform? Are they people that have retooled their skill set and are now supplying complex services. And then on the take rate side for these complex services, with the ASP kind of increasing, you're probably going up more head to head with Upwork. Speaker 900:38:18So can you talk about take rate trends and pricing? Thank you. Speaker 200:38:27Yes. Thanks for the questions. So first of all, to touch on complex services, complex services are really categorized where human skills are essential to deliver a satisfactory outcome. Even when AI can be used to improve the efficiency of some aspects of these projects, right? So essentially, what we're seeing there is by definition, the buyers who come to purchase these customers have a typically longer duration of projects. Speaker 200:39:08So in essence, the type of relationship that they develop with our platform is longer. And that also influenced their repeat and their retention over time. Now as to the sellers, a lot of them are existing. Some are new. I mean, we're adding tremendous amount of talent to our platform every month, every quarter. Speaker 200:39:37But as you can imagine, these sellers are mostly relevant for higher quality. So you can see segments like pro sellers. So I think that this is really helpful for these sellers to really expand their earnings on fiber, which also creates retention of talent as well and their engagement. So I think that from those two aspects, it's definitely a move into the right direction. Speaker 1000:40:18Listen, I think Speaker 200:40:21the way we look at competition is really that most of the competition is offline. We're not focusing on any specific company And each company in the space has its own way and its way of doing business. Ours is really to try to do more of the transformation from the offline activity, the work that companies are doing with talent, with agencies and really transform it to the online. And we're really confident with the approach of tackle the entire addressable market with both the market base and the fiber business solution. Thanks for the question. Operator00:41:18Thank you. And our next question will come from Brad Erickson from RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open. Speaker 1100:41:28Hey guys, thanks. I guess first, you mentioned your outperformance relative to like job openings and staffing and stuff like that. Maybe just remind us if you could, what are the kind of key types of capacity you think fiber is really replacing here augmenting or supplementing when you think about the secular aspect of the digital freelancer opportunity? And I guess like what should investors focus on as kind of the more acute drivers, whether it's like business formation, just kind of general health of the SMB, job openings, etcetera? That's the first one. Speaker 1100:42:03And then second, just a housekeeping for Jin Ji, sorry about Ofer's teeth. Just stock based comp, what's embedded in the guidance? And just generally how to think about stock based comp, I guess, maybe as like a percentage of revenue, for example, going forward? Thanks. Speaker 200:42:21Good morning, Brad. Thanks for the question. So, as for the first I think so first what we're really optimizing for is this offline to online, right. So freelancers in general are addressing things like skill gaps, cost efficiency, issues of scaling, scaling up or down very rapidly without the complexities of that comes with full time hiring. And what we're doing is we're really doing this, but in a hyper efficient model online. Speaker 200:43:07So we make the actual process that is taking on average many, many weeks for companies or changing that to a really simple interaction that takes minutes. So I think that by really covering this entire spectrum from the small needs of micro businesses to very sophisticated needs for more sophisticated and large customers, we're actually helping to transform this offline to online. Now in terms of what investors should focus on, we're trying to ourselves to look for proxies. And one of the interesting things that we saw that is that there is it is hard to find a proxy other than the actual numbers that we're seeing on our platform. Meaning new business formation is not necessarily an indication that those businesses have the spend capacity. Speaker 200:44:17Sometimes new business formation is tied with job cuts or people that need to replace or create new businesses, it doesn't mean that this is going to immediately lead to more spending. I think that if anything, cost of borrow is probably a decent proxy Because when you think about that, smaller businesses who need to borrow money to invest in growth have a harder time in this economy. And if you're a business that is already generating capital, then you can reinvest without borrowing money. So this is why I think we called out pretty much in the past year and a half, the fact that we're seeing parity between midsizelargesizeenterprise business and small and micro businesses. And the lower those lower cohorts of smaller businesses have a harder time than the large one. Speaker 200:45:25As we've demonstrated, the fact that there is a pretty massive decrease in job openings doesn't mean that we're not growing. So we're seeing and we're showing we're demonstrating an opposite trend. So it's really hard to find these proxy. Jing Jin, do you want to take the? Speaker 100:45:46Yes. So SBC, we our SBC is an elevated level as we mentioned before because of the accounting treatments that is booked at cost and is tied with the high stock price during COVID. And so from a modeling perspective, this is going to take 4 years to vest those RSUs and options. And so for modeling this year, it'll be similar to last year's level from a dollar perspective. So as a percentage of revenue, it will come down slightly. Speaker 100:46:23And as we finish the full year vesting, we do expect that percentage of revenue will more substantially stepping down. Speaker 1000:46:34Great. Thank you. Operator00:46:38Thank you. And our next question will come from Bernie MacTernan from Needham and Company. Your line is open. Speaker 1200:46:49Great. Thanks for taking the questions. Really appreciate all the color and data on the complex versus simple declines or growth. Want to follow-up on it. Just what was the shape of complex growth and simple declines throughout the year? Speaker 1200:47:05Just wanted to get a sense in terms of if trends were stabilizing or accelerating in any direction just as we use that to forecast 2024. And then on the 3rd bucket, the neutral, any specific examples you could provide in terms of what those gigs are predominantly? And over time, do you think the growth will move more like simple or complex or really stay kind of flat? Speaker 200:47:34Thanks, Bernie. Nothing really specific to comment on shape, right? We're not we can't call any difference across the year and it seems to be steady. We have a full year of analysis that is showing that. Obviously we'll need to see how the future shapes up, but this is what we can call for now. Speaker 200:48:09In terms of the neutral bucket, essentially, these are categories that are not being affected. So essentially their trends have nothing to do with the AI impact. So we don't see any material trend changes due to AI, whether because AI is not involved in it or because it's not just not impacting it. Yes. So as to your second part of the question, will growth move to simple or complex? Speaker 200:48:55I think that at some point, every transformation, every technological transformation may plateau at some point, but we don't think that this is going to happen anytime soon. So our assumption is that some of the simple tasks are going to be continued to be automated, which by the way is nothing new. I mean, it's happened before even before AI, automation has been a part of our lives. And definitely the more complex services is where I think the growth potential definitely lies. This is why we called out the fact that we're going to double down on these categories and services. Speaker 500:49:47Understood. Thank you. Operator00:49:51Thank you. And our next Speaker 1000:50:03So 2 for me. So first, just on enterprise. Great to see adding over a dozen clients there. Just be interested if there was any additional color you could add about the pipeline that you see for this cohort? And can you speak to any what's kind of the size of the clients that are adopting this? Speaker 1000:50:25Are they 500 plus employees or 1,000 plus employee kind of organizations, the very large organizations? And then second question, just more of a housekeeping question, but love to see the disclosure about AI being 4% of TMP. But just curious if since AI didn't really manifest itself until sort of, let's call it, May or June, Was the percentage in the back half of the year actually higher? And or maybe could kind of speak to Q4, what was the impact just in that quarter? Just trying to get a sense of maybe what we're seeing currently. Speaker 1000:51:10So thanks a lot. Speaker 200:51:14Thanks for the questions. So on the first one, on the dozen clients we've added to enterprise. So in Q4, we acquired 3 multinational enterprise clients, including 2 in the tech space and 1 in the manufacturing industry. And we also added about 10 midsized enterprises, including a few media companies. And just to give you a color on size, when we talk about large versus midsize, we categorize it below or above 3,000 employees. Speaker 200:52:01That hopefully is giving you color. On the second part of your question, well, we've been responding to the changes or the announcements of AI. I mean, Chargebee was announced November of 2022. So as far as we've seen the impact have started at the back end of 2022. In the beginning of 2023, we were already with about 20 or 30 categories that we're dealing with AI related services. Speaker 200:52:51So for us, it's really a full year effect. That said, obviously, categories are very dynamic on the market base and outside of the market base, the demand for those and they've been developing throughout the year. But we've been we have been talking about the net positive impact of AI throughout the year. And this is just our opportunity to wrap up on 2023 from a full year perspective and really calling and putting an actual number on it. Speaker 1000:53:32Okay, that's fair. Thanks so much, Neha. Appreciate it. Thanks, everyone. Speaker 200:53:37Thank you. Operator00:53:39Thank you. And our next question will come from Rohit Kulkarni from ROTH MKM. Your line is open. Speaker 1300:53:52Hey, thank you. Thank you for the extra color on GMV growth and the underlying layers. I guess just on metrics and how they affect your guidance for GMV. Anything you could provide to unpack a little bit more with regards to kind of trend in active buyers and spend per buyer as we think ahead, how that stacks up to help you accelerate GMV? Speaker 200:54:25Yes. Thanks for the question. So essentially, I think as to active buyers, what we're seeing is what we've seen so far, meaning because of macro, there isn't any noticeable improvement in terms of our ability to increase those numbers in terms of quantity. And therefore, we are focused on the quality of those active buyers, which is everything we said about the high value buyers. And obviously, if you continue to track those numbers, you see that the percentage that they contribute continues to increase steadily. Speaker 200:55:16So active buyer is going to be similar trends as in 2023 and spend per buyer will accelerate in year over year growth in comparison to 2023. So our really our focus on it is going to continue. If you're just calling out the contribution of higher value buyers, those who spend more than $500 with us, that cohort grew 4% year over year in 2023, which is significantly higher than the overall active buyer growth. Yes, so that's how we view 2023 2024, sorry. Speaker 1300:56:09Okay. Okay. That's very helpful color. Thank you very much. And then I guess I know there were a bunch of questions on this new disclosure around simple versus complex versus marketplace mix that you have. Speaker 1300:56:23I think just on that, probably like as far as the mix going forward, anything noteworthy that you are assuming with regards to complex services that probably could be a bigger proportion of GMV going forward? And as a sub question to that would be, are there any pricing or take rate differences, as in material differences across those three categories of GMV? Speaker 100:57:01Hey, Rohit. This is Jing Jing. Yes, so I think definitely, I think we mentioned in the shareholder letter as well, complex services in 2023 is already almost a third of our marketplace in terms of GMV contribution and much higher than the simple services, which is around 23%. And yes, given the growth rate, right, 29% year over year growth, it is a big step up in terms of the overall percentage of GMV coming from those complex services. And we do expect that contribution continue to grow in the coming years. Speaker 1300:57:48And any noticeable differences in take rate, Jin Ji, or anything? Speaker 100:57:54Yes. So take rate, nothing really are different. We our entire marketplace takes very consistent like just uniform take rates across the board. So yes, so 20% from the seller side and then 5.5% from the buyer side. There's no difference in terms of the transaction. Speaker 1300:58:21Okay. Thank you very much. Operator00:58:25Thank you. And I am showing no further questions from our phone lines. I'd now like to turn the conference back over to Micha Kaufman for any closing remarks. Speaker 200:58:35Thank you, Crystal, and thank you everyone for joining us today. We look forward to an exciting and successful year and hope to see you in person soon. Thank you. Have a great day. Operator00:58:47Thank you. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect. Everyone have a wonderful day.Read morePowered by