NYSE:GWRE Guidewire Software Q4 2024 Earnings Report $193.88 +1.71 (+0.89%) Closing price 04/15/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$193.00 -0.88 (-0.45%) As of 04/15/2025 04:20 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 Guidewire Software EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.62Consensus EPS $0.54Beat/MissBeat by +$0.08One Year Ago EPS$0.30Guidewire Software Revenue ResultsActual Revenue$291.50 millionExpected Revenue$283.84 millionBeat/MissBeat by +$7.66 millionYoY Revenue Growth+8.00%Guidewire Software Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2024Date9/5/2024TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateThursday, September 5, 2024Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsGuidewire Software's Q3 2025 earnings is scheduled for Tuesday, June 3, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Conference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Guidewire Software Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrSeptember 5, 2024 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Guidewire 4th Quarter and Full Year Fiscal 20 24 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Alex Hughes, Vice President of Investor Relations. Operator00:00:26Thank you, Alex. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:29Thanks, Paul. I'm Alex Hughes, Vice President of Investor Relations. And with me today is Mike Rosenbaum, Chief Executive Officer Jeff Cooper, Chief Financial Officer and John Mullen, President and Chief Revenue Officer, who has joined us to provide a year end recap of adoption activity. A complete disclosure of our results can be found in our press release issued today as well as in our related Form 8 ks furnished Speaker 200:00:50to the SEC, both of Speaker 100:00:51which are available on the Investor Relations section of our website. Today's call is being recorded and a replay will be available following the conclusion of the call. Statements made on this call include forward looking ones regarding our financial results, outlook and targets, our future business momentum relating to our products, cloud deals, customer demand, operations, the impact of local, national and geopolitical events on our business, our associate business plan and strategy, among other matters. These statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions and are based on management's current expectations as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any subsequent date. Please refer to our press release and risk factors and documents we file with the SEC including our most recent quarterly reports on Form 10 Q and our prior and forthcoming annual report on Form 10 ks filed and to be filed with the SEC for information on risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause actual results to differ materially from those set forth in such statements. Speaker 100:01:49We also will refer to non GAAP financial measures to provide additional information to investors. All commentary on margins, profitability and expenses are on a non GAAP basis unless stated otherwise. A reconciliation of non GAAP to GAAP measures is provided in our press release. Reconciliations and additional data are also posted in a supplement on our IR website. And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Mike. Speaker 300:02:12Thank you, Alex. Good afternoon, and thanks, everyone, for joining today. I'm thrilled to have the opportunity to report stellar 4th quarter results, capping off what was an incredible year for Guidewire and our community of customers and partners. This quarter marked 5 years at Guidewire for me, and the results in the quarter and fiscal year feel like a clear validation of the hard work and determination everyone here has contributed to our cloud transformation. We have now established a consistent track record of customer program success with our cloud applications, and we are seeing the maturity and reliability of our cloud platform continue to drive demand from new and existing customers. Speaker 300:02:53The referenceability of customers choosing Guidewire cloud platform continues to grow and that reputation continues to drive demand, new sales and adoption and ultimately customer program success and the associated insurance outcomes the P and C industry demands. The market momentum we've established is clearly reflected in strong ARR and fully ramped ARR growth. ARR was up 14% on the year, while fully ramped ARR accelerated to 19% as we continue to sign larger deals with more significant fully ramped value. We closed 16 cloud deals in the quarter and 42 for the year. John Mullen, our President, will go into more detail on cloud adoption, but I'll just say that the strength across these metrics is a result of the combined efforts of every single member of our global organization. Speaker 300:03:46The results this quarter and this year position us well to achieve our $1,000,000,000 ARR target this fiscal year. As we continue to drive cloud adoption, we are also seeing greater leverage in our cloud model. Guidewire cloud platform is demonstrating greater scale and efficiency with subscription and support gross margins increasing 10 points to over 65% for the year. We feel very confident in our objective to achieve our long term margin targets as we continue to scale the platform. We are also continually driving better overall company operational discipline and efficiency, generating non GAAP operating profit of nearly $100,000,000 and operating cash flow of nearly $200,000,000 We also expect to be GAAP profitable in fiscal 2025. Speaker 300:04:37These outcomes clearly demonstrate the power of the software as a service business model we have created here. Looking forward, we are excited to enter the new fiscal year with momentum. We continue to see acceleration in the number of conversations around cloud transitions and modernizations. Customers realize that they need greater agility in their core operations and based on our track record of references to success stories, we are distancing ourselves from alternatives. As a result, our pipeline continues to build and is very healthy going into the year. Speaker 300:05:17In November, we will be back in Nashville to hold our annual customer conference Connections, which is attended by 3,000 members of the broader Guidewire community. This will give us another valuable opportunity to showcase the latest innovation on our platform Speaker 400:05:33and highlight samples of customer success. Speaker 300:05:39I'll finish by saying that this past year and these last 5 years sometimes seem like a remarkable achievement. We have taken a market defining on premise vertical software leader and re platformed it to become a vertical software as a service leader. I have spoken to many people in the past few months, this achievement and our success was somewhat surprising. But looking back now, it all looks pretty logical to me. We made a straightforward plan that made sense, required nothing miraculous and focused on execution, all the while ensuring that every single customer who chose to trust us never doubted their decision. Speaker 300:06:17We are not and will never be perfect, but we will continue to prioritize our customers and the programs they run on our platform. We will continue to optimize our technical decisions for the long term and we will strive every day to earn the trust our customers place in us. We are right now very well aligned with our customers and in a unique position to help shape the future of the industry we serve. We continue to execute in the fashion we have demonstrated over the past few years and I'm confident we will continue to hit the forward looking objectives we set for ourselves. With that, I'll hand it over to John to provide a year end perspective on the insurance industry and discuss in more detail around customer adoption and success on the Guidewire cloud platform. Speaker 400:06:59Thanks, Mike. Good afternoon, everyone. It's been a very successful year at Guidewire. We have the pleasure of serving a customer base that is both critical and resilient. This year, we saw property and casualty insurance navigate convergence of pressures and continue to evolve with both the agility and precision with which they respond to inflation, the evolution of risk in the world, and the increased expectation of consumers and businesses. Speaker 400:07:25We remain very confident in the durability of our relationship with the market and optimistic regarding the pace of change that we Speaker 500:07:31can help drive with and for the Speaker 400:07:32P and C industry. Reflecting on the 42 cloud deals we did for the year, we closed 13 InsuranceSuite cloud deals in Q4, bringing our total InsuranceSuite cloud deals for the year to 37. We also closed 3 InsuranceNow deals in the quarter. What we are seeing is the positive effect of a portfolio approach that is delivering a healthy balance across the business. We've been working hard to drive specific plans and accountabilities in the markets, region, country and line of business and with specific carriers across all deal types. Speaker 400:08:05We added 4 net new customers in Q4 and saw continued strong win rates with insurers looking to modernize their core systems. A super regional personal lines carrier elected to adopt our full suite and broad selection of our data products in order to standardize on a modern core system and facilitate their growth ambitions. Argonaut Managed Services, a leader in excess and surplus, selected ClaimCenter to consolidate multiple claim systems and improve operational efficiency. Our track record and commitment to customer success were key factors in their decision. Preferred Mutual, a personal and commercial lines carrier in the Northeast of the U. Speaker 400:08:43S, selected the full suite to leverage the Guidewire cloud platform and its digital capabilities. And finally, Pearl Holdings, a single state non standard auto MGA headquartered in Miami, Florida, selected InsuranceNow and Predict to modernize their core with an emphasis on claims. I highlight these net new wins because they exemplify our ability to execute and compete across a broad range of carrier size and complexity. It was also a strong quarter for cloud migration activity with a total of 7 InsuranceSuite cloud migrations. 5 of the InsuranceSuite migrations included very meaningful expansions beyond the scope of work we were addressing on prem. Speaker 400:09:24One of the themes in the quarter was our customers' willingness to make bigger commitments on Guidewire cloud, which was a key driver of our 19% fully ramped ARR growth. Notable in the quarter were deals that initiated as a single product discussion and evolved into broader full suite outcomes. For example, a Tier 1 commercial insurer significantly expanded adoption of Guidewire cloud platform for its scalability, total cost of ownership and platform unity across policy billing and claims. The referenceability of our relationships and the power of full suite and data is resonating in the market. We saw healthy sales activity in both Asia Pac and EMEA for the year. Speaker 400:10:05Our strength in North America really delivered in Q4. Looking at global deals by tier, Q4 was fairly balanced with 3 Tier 1 deals, 7 Tier 2 deals and the remainder coming from Tiers 3 and 4. Turning to our ecosystem, we are seeing continued momentum. There are now over 25,000 professionals from 38 SIs working with us today. And in the Q4, the number of cloud certified partner professionals from these firms increased 22% year over year to 9,500. Speaker 400:10:36The pace of uptake on our ski release training with this community affirms the SI's shared commitment to the model. Similarly, our solution partner community continues to expand. Guidewire Marketplace now has over 215 technology partners. Finally, we saw strong results on customer programs in Q4. We achieved 7 initial cloud go lives on Guidewire cloud platform in the quarter. Speaker 400:10:59We are seeing, as expected, significant increases in the number of cloud updates throughout the year, which speaks to the growing efficiency of our platform inside the customer environment. The services organization achieved higher than expected revenue and gross margins in the quarter. The team has been working hard to improve predictability. And while we have more work to do, Q4 was a positive step forward. Successful customer outcomes is our primary objective and our services organization in collaboration with our SI partners have worked well together in this last year to drive pace and predictability for our community. Speaker 400:11:31In summary, fiscal year 'twenty four demonstrated strong execution and we look ahead to fiscal year 'twenty five confident in our ability to continue to build momentum. With that, I'll hand it over Speaker 100:11:41to Jeff. Thanks, John. The financial highlight of Speaker 600:11:45the quarter was the incredible combination of 19% constant currency fully ramped ARR growth and 20% cash flow from operations margin. Our ability to deliver durable profitable growth is a testament to the value that we deliver to the industry. With that, let me jump into the details. 4th quarter ARR ended at $872,000,000 up 14% year over year on a constant currency basis ahead of our expectations. As a reminder, we measure ARR on a constant currency basis throughout the year and then update ARR for year end FX rates. Speaker 600:12:17Making this update impacted ARR by negative $8,000,000 resulting in ARR of 8 $64,000,000 Fully ramped ARR, which is defined as the fully ramped annual price outlined in our customer contracts, grew 19% year over year on a constant currency basis. This is a tremendous result that reflects a lot of hard work. We are winning in the market and executing well across the entire organization. Total cloud ARR, which includes ARR for all of our cloud products and for customers that have contracted to move to the cloud, grew 28% year over year and comprised 66 percent of total ARR. Total revenue for the year was $980,000,000 ahead of our expectations due to stronger performance across all components of revenue. Speaker 600:13:04File strength continues to be visible in subscription revenue, which was $477,000,000 up 36% year over year. It's exciting to see the progression of our subscription revenue lines, which finished the year at just under 50% of total revenue. Subscription and support revenue was $549,000,000 up 28% year over year. License revenue is $250,000,000 down 6% year over year as we continue to migrate our on premise customers to our cloud. At the start of FY 'twenty four, we thought that this decline this would decline closer to 10% year over year, but we benefited from stronger than expected true ups during the year. Speaker 600:13:40Services revenue finished at $181,000,000 down 14% year over year as we transition more implementation work to our SI partners and we minimize our reliance on subcontractors. Services revenue in Q4 was $51,000,000 up from our low of $38,000,000 in Q2. We are pleased with how we finished the year and expect modest year over year growth in services revenue in fiscal year 2025. Turning to profitability for the fiscal year, which we will discuss on a non GAAP basis. Gross profit was $618,000,000 This was up 25% year over year. Speaker 600:14:15Overall gross margin was 63% compared to 55% a year ago. Subscription and support gross margin was 65.5%, an over 10 percentage point increase. The investments we made in our cloud platform are showing up in a much more efficient cloud operations function as we deliver the industry leading cloud service at an increasingly attractive gross margin profile. Services margin was 7% compared with just below breakeven a year ago. Notably in Q4, services gross margin was 14% as we exit the year closer to our longer term margin expectations for this business. Speaker 600:14:53Operating income was $99,500,000 which was just above the midpoint of our outlook. The positive impact of higher than expected revenue was offset by the impact of the employee bonus accrual, which was higher than our expectations due to outperformance of key financial targets. Overall, stock based compensation was $146,000,000 for the year, up 2.5%. Operating cash flow ended the year at 196,000,000 dollars We noted at the Analyst Day last year that we were at an exciting inflection point in profitability and cash flow, and our progress on cash flow from operations and free cash flow significantly surpassed our expectations on stronger than expected collections. We ended the quarter with $1,100,000,000 in cash, cash equivalents and investments. Speaker 600:15:40We also have $400,000,000 in convertible debt that matures in March and we expect to settle in cash. Now let me turn to our outlook. For fiscal 2025, we expect ARR of between $995,000,000 to $1,005,000,000 representing 16% constant currency growth at the midpoint. Updating our forecast model to reflect current FX rates has had an approximately $9,000,000 negative impact on our fiscal 'twenty five outlook. Total revenue for the year is expected to be between 1 point $135,000,000 $1,149,000,000 We expect subscription revenue will be approximately $642,000,000 representing 34% growth. Speaker 600:16:28Maintaining this strong growth rate is a reflection of the strength of the cloud deals we signed in fiscal 'twenty four. Support revenue will decline by about $3,000,000 or $4,000,000 year over year as a result of the continued migration of our installed base to the cloud, resulting in approximately $710,000,000 in subscription and support revenue. As a reminder, support revenue attaches to term license customers. For cloud customers, support activities are included in the subscription fee. We expect license revenue to decline a bit due to steady progress on cloud migrations, which is partially offset by contract true ups in our on prem customer base. Speaker 600:17:05Our outlook for service revenue services revenue is approximately $190,000,000 We expect total gross margins for the year to be approximately 65%, subscription and support gross margins to be approximately 68% and professional services gross margin to be approximately 12%. We are pleased with this progression as we work to continue to drive margin improvement. With respect to operating income, we expect a non GAAP operating income of between $157,000,000 $171,000,000 for the fiscal year. We also expect GAAP operating income of between negative $4,000,000 and positive 10,000,000 dollars Given the strength in the business, we are able to deliver on our profitability goals and in many cases raise our targets, while also increasing some spend in our operating expenses, most notably in R and D as we invest in the significant opportunities we see in front of us to help insurers take advantage of modern applications to engage, innovate and grow. I expect R and D spend to grow around 14% in fiscal 'twenty five, sales and marketing should grow a bit less than that, and G and A should grow in the mid to upper single digits. Speaker 600:18:19Cash flow from operations in fiscal 2025 is expected to be between $220,000,000 $250,000,000 Our CapEx expectations for the year are between $20,000,000 $25,000,000 including approximately $12,000,000 in capitalized software development costs and $7,000,000 in office build out projects in India. Our Q1 outlook can be found in our earnings press release, but let me provide a bit more color. Given the strong sales activity in Q4, we did not have many deals slip into Q1, so we expect typical seasonality in our Q1, which impacts sequential ARR growth expectations. We expect subscription and support revenue of approximately $167,000,000 and services revenue of approximately 50,000,000 dollars We expect subscription and support margin between 67% 68% and services margins of around 11% and total gross margins of approximately 61%. Also, annual employee bonuses and commission expenses related to Q4 sales are paid out in Q1, which impacts cash flow. Speaker 600:19:25As a result, we expect Q1 cash flow from operations to follow a similar pattern to what we experienced last year. In summary, we are incredibly proud of the year we had in FY 'twenty four, and we are on track to meet or exceed the targets that we established during my first Analyst Day as CFO back in October of 2020. And we look forward to seeing many of you at our Analyst Day this coming October 10 in New York. With that, let's open the call for questions. Operator00:19:53Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer session. Thank you. Our first question is from Ken Wong with Oppenheimer and Company. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 500:20:22Great. Thank you for taking my questions. This first one for either Mike or John. Can you provide a little color on the context of some of these fully ramped deals? Are we seeing this across the board with customers? Speaker 500:20:37Are these kind of one off large deals? Would you say that these are typically kind of flatter upfront and steep in the back or fairly vineyard? Just any color to help us think through the dynamics would be fantastic. Speaker 300:20:53Sure. Let me touch on it real briefly and then I'll let John comment. The first thing is that I don't want you to read anything into this with respect to ramps. We're seeing pretty normal ramp structures and activity, and we'll be able to provide a little bit more detail around that at Analyst Day. But relative to the commentary we provided a year ago around the ramp structures and the corresponding impact on ARR, you shouldn't read anything into this. Speaker 300:21:20We just had a phenomenal quarter from a bookings perspective with great deals across the board. They were reasonably sized, and so that creates a total deal value that drives a fully ramped number that's very healthy. Super proud of the team and the execution and it kind of to me indicates the strength in the business. That's the way that's the only thing I'd like you to read into it. Just very, very successful outcome with a bunch of great deals in the quarter that drove that fully ramped number. Speaker 300:21:55Anything to add, John? Speaker 400:21:56I'll just add that if I look at the last quarter, there are two dimensions to it. The first one is, certainly in some cases, it's larger lines of business, but maybe more important is covering other areas, additional areas of scope. The team is getting much more attuned to listening for and solving business problems rather than addressing just the initial scope for consideration. And as we do that, the power of the suite is pulling in more conversations and that was pretty prevalent actually in these Q4 deals. Speaker 500:22:28Perfect. And then just a quick one for Jeff, maybe kind of also building on the fully ramped number, guiding to about 16% in fiscal 'twenty five. I guess when we kind of compare that with a 19% fully ramped number, I guess would it be wrong for us to assume that there's potentially an acceleration in the future? Or what's the right way to read that fully ramped versus what we're looking at in 2025? Speaker 600:22:54Yes. The fully ramped outcome certainly gives us confidence as we look at the durability of the growth. I'm not sure I would model in accelerations above kind of that 16 percent range, but I do think it kind of creates a bit more for us and a bit more visibility into the durability of kind of ticking above mid teens a bit on the overall ARR growth side. Speaker 500:23:20Okay. Thank you, Jeff. Speaker 200:23:23Thanks, Ken. Operator00:23:24Thank you. Our next question is from Michael Turrin with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 600:23:31Hey, great. Thanks. Congrats on the close of the year. I guess the first question is just maybe Mike or John, you're seeing a series of tailwinds that are it seems a bit better than what we're getting across software. So I'd just love to hear commentary on your perspective on the overall demand environment, where you sit in terms of cloud momentum and overall competitive dynamics alongside just what you've taken in and observed with the end of year? Speaker 300:24:00Sure. Thanks for the question. There's certainly a lot of things that feel like they're helping us, right? First is the industry we serve is very, very durable. Premiums are going up across the insurance industry and that does with our pricing constructs. Speaker 300:24:17Our contract constructs create some lift to our ARR just based on DWP increasing. I also think we are distancing ourselves from alternatives. And it's really, in my opinion, just based on the track record of success that we have been able to establish with our cloud products over the past 5 or 6 years. We are it's still a competitive market and we still compete fiercely for every single deal, but we are winning our fair share of those deals, and I think that factors into the outperformance in the quarters. We're also seeing just a, I guess, I'd call it a conversion strength in that the deals that we're working on, the opportunities that we're looking at in a particular quarter are closing more frequently than we might have expected a couple of years ago, which I think speaks to the trust and confidence in the platform, in the programs, in the whole community, like just collectively our ability to land these programs and make sure that they're successful, it all contributes to the lift and the incredible success that we had in the quarter. Speaker 300:25:33So that's my take, and I'm sure John has some more to add to it. Speaker 400:25:37Yes. While the industry is large by surface area, it's small by community. And to Mike's point, really, the referenceability of the programs that we've been driving has provided a nice ability for that conversion rate. But I think the biggest tailwind we face is that chapter of moving from defending a cloud platform to really scaling and solving business problems with the cloud platform as certainly the industry has a tight convergence of IT needs and business needs are no longer 2 different dimensions. They're merging together every day and we're in a really good spot to help navigate that and that's really what I think we saw over the course of this year. Speaker 600:26:21That's all super helpful commentary. Jeff, you're leading with cash flow in the press release. I can't help but notice the cash flow margin for fiscal 'twenty five looks like it's also running ahead of target model. So maybe you can I don't want to steal any thunder ahead of a bigger investor session you're hosting, but maybe speak to just the increasing focus on cash flow and what you're seeing that's driving the good conversion there? Thanks. Speaker 600:26:48Yes. I mean, we're really pleased with how the model is inflecting from an overall cash flow perspective. Obviously, I kind of think at the end of the day, that's the primary metric that software companies are measured on. And so, we're pleased with that. Some of the interesting dynamics that we're noticing are some of the timing of revenue elements that create a bit of a difference between non GAAP operating income and some of the cash flow dynamics. Speaker 600:27:15And we'll talk about that a little bit more at Analyst Day. But that underpins the power of our model. But certainly this has been a focus of ours for a number of years. And as we kind of established how we think about our long term model, we've always had this part of the journey in the back of our mind and it's nice to see it come to realization. And we'll be continuing to monitor the targets against the targets that we have out there that we still think are very appropriate targets and we'll talk about that a bit more at Analyst Day. Operator00:27:51Thank you. Our next question is from Aleksei Gogolov with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 200:28:00Hi, everyone. Mike, firstly congratulations with the 5 year anniversary and hope you managed to fight off those parking beasts. Can I ask you a bit more about the demand environment, especially around commercial lines, Because I've seen some data from council insurance agents? They were talking about some softness in commercial PMC. Are you seeing anything of that sort? Speaker 200:28:31Or are you winning more market share, which is not reflecting in terms of the dynamics that we're seeing for you? Speaker 300:28:41Yes. Alexey, I'm going to thank you for the compliment. I appreciate it very much. And I'll let John answer question about commercial lines. Speaker 400:28:48All right. So, Alexi, the potential softening in the market on commercial lines attributable in large part to large commercial and large property. We think that excess and surplus specialty and middle market is still a very dynamic rate environment. That is an industry commentary. What I'll also say that as we go forward, we're finding really good success with our commercial lines opportunities. Speaker 400:29:17London market has set a really good pace for us. Large commercial in North America, excess and surplus and specialty have all been really solid for us. And the only thing I would say in addition to that is, these decisions of getting to enterprise data and decisions and getting to large scale durable core processing is a decision that goes beyond hard and soft market evolution. What is very critical is these large commercial carriers and commercial in general, they really are every day tuning their ability to make price, make product changes, enter and exit markets and make the right rating decisions and it's very difficult to make that decision without operating on a modern core platform. So, we feel good about our ability to help navigate the ebbs and flows of hard and soft markets and we're really tuned into where we think the opportunities are to move faster. Speaker 200:30:12Thank you, John. And Jeff, just a quick question for you. Can you elaborate on the benefits from the AWS contract to gross margins going forward? I think last time we spoke, you mentioned that there was some front loaded R and D investment. Has it sort of fades away? Speaker 200:30:31Do you expect more benefits to gross margins? Speaker 600:30:36Yes. Look, I think we have a long standing partnership with AWS. I'm not going to get into the particulars of that arrangement. But we do have certain incentives in that contract that we realize over the contract. I think the big and there's an element of that, that plays into how we think about the margin expansion. Speaker 600:30:57But the largest part of the overall margin expansion is the investments we've made in Guidewire cloud platform and the efficiencies that we're realizing as a result of that. So I wouldn't want to focus too much on kind of the particulars of that arrangement and focus more on the engineering teams deliver to enable our margins. Speaker 400:31:17Thank you very much. Speaker 300:31:19Thanks, Alexi. Operator00:31:22Thank you. Our next question is from Kevin Kumar with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:31:29Hi, thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 800:31:31Mike, wanted to ask you about just overall migration activity. How would you characterize kind of momentum there? Are you seeing kind of interest from customers who are on premise? Is that starting to build? How do you think that plays out as we head into fiscal 'twenty five? Speaker 300:31:51Yes. Thanks for the question. I would describe it as steadily improvingsteadily building. I think, again, it has to do this has to do with the track record of success, the reliability we've demonstrated, the success stories, the customers that have moved, the concept that they're not they're no longer breaking new ground from an IT perspective when they think about a migration to Guidewire Cloud. It's much more a question of when it makes sense for their business and planning that with those customers. Speaker 300:32:25And so you see that build. It's one of the really nice things about Guidewire is that we have this incredible customer base and it's an opportunity for us to grow ARR. It's an opportunity for help to for us to help those customers get more agile. This resonates. It doesn't it's not all going to come in 1 year. Speaker 300:32:45It's going to get spaced out over the course of many years and we're up for that challenge. And so, yes, it's steadily building and we're very we're pretty happy with where it is right now and especially the balance between migration activity and net new, either customers specifically or the net new use cases for existing customers that we pair to a migration. All those components of the business are going very well for us right now. Speaker 800:33:14That's great. And maybe one for Jeff on the premium true ups. You talked about some of the impact of the license revenue, but just curious kind of how that true up is affecting the model more broadly in terms of ARR revenue? Anything you can share to help kind of give context to kind of how that's impacting the broader model? Speaker 600:33:39Yes. No, we saw a healthy backdrop of both CPI and DWP true ups this year. It added a couple of percentage points to overall ARR growth above and beyond what we would see in a typical year. And we expect it to be a pretty resilient looking into next year that, that would remain at slightly elevated levels. It was balanced, right? Speaker 600:34:06I mean, I think if you look at the overall true up activity, there was proportionally more coming from the on prem installed base. But given now the scale of our ARR in the cloud, we also saw a healthy amount coming from the cloud installed base. And so on an absolute dollars, it was pretty balanced between both on prem and cloud. Speaker 300:34:26Great. Thank you. Hi, Kevin. Operator00:34:32Our next question is from Dylan Becker with William Blair. Speaker 700:34:40Maybe going back to Jeff and John, the point on fully ramped ARR, seeing larger deals and seeing more full suite adoption, is that a function? It's probably a little bit of both, but of increased willingness from those Tier 1 carriers who maybe look to adopt a bit more piecemeal, is that a step function change in how they're looking at the ecosystem? Or I think, John, you made a point of kind of better sales targeting being able to expand that scope. I'm sure it's a little bit of both, but maybe some additional color there. Thanks. Speaker 300:35:09I would say this is Speaker 600:35:10just continued progression in terms of how we're selling. I wouldn't attribute it to Tier 1 activity, but we have seen some Tier 1 activity, healthy Tier 2 activity. It's just I think John noted this, the team has done a really good job when we look at a migration, maybe expanding a little bit beyond the initial on prem footprint. And I think that there's an understanding of the maturity of the platform that is giving comfort to customers and making some of these larger and long duration commitments. So I don't know if there's anything you want to add? Speaker 400:35:50The ability for customers to call each other, prospects and customers to call each other and have very, very deep conversations about what's the right pace and cadence of programs to bite off and what's the value of the suite is really what's driving it. I would reiterate what Jeff said. I don't think it's tier specific at this point. Tier 1s are still very much a bespoke shoulder to shoulder conversation about what's the right size and fit for them. Speaker 700:36:17Okay, great. Thank you, guys. And then maybe for Mike as well to given that there is I mean, there's a step function of drivers for adoption here, but another one that we've kind of picked up to, I don't know if this is coming up in your conversations, but it's around the fact that labor is massively constrained, right, as we think about what the ecosystem is looking like. Is that something that's coming up in conversations quite yet? Is there thinking about that kind of capacity or that skills gap as an additional driver of that core system modernization efforts? Speaker 700:36:54Thanks guys. Speaker 300:36:57What you're describing certainly comes up. I think it comes up sometimes in the context of attracting younger people to come work in the industry and providing systems for them that are aligned to their expectations, let's say, about how computers should work, computer systems should work, that comes up. I think it also comes up with a perspective of your development teams and what are you asking them to work on and are you able to retain the people that are capable of maintaining the legacy systems that they've been running sometimes for 20, 30 years. So this certainly comes up. I mean, the whole industry is constantly trying to get more efficient and get more done with the existing folks that they have so that they can operate the company more effectively. Speaker 300:37:46And I think the IT agility, the operational efficiency, the data and insights that we can help provide, it helps in all of those areas. And so for sure, it's a component along with a number of others that factors into the just overall push to modernize the industry. Operator00:38:11Our next question is from Rishi Jaluria with RBC. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:38:17Wonderful. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Nice to see continued momentum on the cloud transition. 2 for me. First, I wanted to maybe think about now that you have some time of customers being live on Guidewire cloud platform, maybe potentially getting towards that fully ramped level, what have you seen in terms of customer spending behavior from customers that have fully migrated over to Guidewire cloud platform, especially in terms of their own propensity to spend, thinking about their expansion? Speaker 900:38:53For example, if we were to look at NRR for on premise Guidewire or InsuranceSuite cloud customers, how would those compare to NRR on kind of a fully ramped basis for similar customers as they're on InsuranceSuite cloud? And then I've got a quick follow-up. Speaker 600:39:09Yes. I mean, I'm not going to get into the NRR, the different cohorts. I mean, I think we have seen, healthy expansion within the cloud installed base. Some of that is coming in the form of how they build in the Guidewire cloud platform and requirements for different environments that increase what we call platform spend within Guidewire. Some of that may come in the form of attach of different product sets within our data and analytics suite. Speaker 600:39:42I think it's still pretty early to make any judgments on that overall attach rate, but that's something we're watching. And then as we've obviously seen some direct written premium expansion as well that flows into how we think about net renewal rates for the cloud installed base. So I think that there's more potential there in the cloud, especially as you start to think about the marketplace and how that presents itself in the future than there was on prem, but probably too early to make any sort of real comparisons. Speaker 300:40:19It's progressing very well. This component of our business model, I think, is going very well. I won't say it's like exactly according to plan and we don't track it that closely, but it's exactly what I would expect. And it has to do with, honestly, the track record of success. If we make these customers successful, they're going to want to do more with us. Speaker 300:40:40They're going to find other core system use cases that are going to make sense to expand. That is based off of the success we can drive with the program, but also the relationship of the various applications within InsuranceSuite. Jeff mentioned the other add on opportunities with platform, with partners, with data, with analytics. I think this will increasingly be a part of the story going forward. And right now, it's going sort of according to plan. Speaker 300:41:14So it's an insightful question. I think it's early, but it is going very well. Speaker 900:41:21All right, got it. That's really helpful, guys. Thank you. And then, Mike, in your prepared remarks, you called out some of the success you're seeing on the InsuranceNow side. Can you maybe talk to, I guess, number 1, you've seen what seems to be improving momentum with InsuranceNow over really the past year or so. Speaker 900:41:39What's driving that, both from an industry and maybe product perspective? And then number 2, is there a glide path or what would it look like for maybe insurers who land on insurance now, but over time might get big enough that InsuranceSuite cloud is actually the right solution? What does that actual upgrade or on ramp path look like? Thanks. Speaker 300:42:02Yes. So we have it's a strategic question that we looked at years ago when we embarked on the cloud transformation is what should be the core strategy with InsuranceNow and InsuranceSuite. And we chose to maintain both of those applications to do our best to make sure that they were leveraging common infrastructure as much as possible and continue to invest in both. Primarily, this has to do with our commitment to the customer base, who is very happy with the InsuranceNow product. There's a good sort of cohort of insurance companies in North America where InsuranceNow is a very, very good fit. Speaker 300:42:42And we're very competitive when we find an opportunity in that sweet spot. So it's a great product. It's a great business unit within the company. With respect to, I would say like its acceleration over the past couple of years, it has to do with us being very, very clear about our commitment to it and our investment in it and making sure that it's more out beating competitors in the head to head deals. I mean, that's what it comes down to. Speaker 300:43:11With respect to an on ramp to InsuranceSuite, I would say we really we try to focus a lot on landing the customer on the right platform to begin with. And there isn't you shouldn't imagine a strategy that we have of like start with InsuranceNow and move to InsuranceSuite, just because it's a pretty significant implementation on either one of those things. And so we would like to get that correct from the very beginning. Where we do have an opportunity to add more value is around the additional analytics and data offerings. Like I mentioned, we can move the infrastructure over to Guidewire cloud platform and create a little bit more margin for us and just run the service more efficiently. Speaker 300:43:53And that's beneficial to us. It's beneficial to our InsuranceNow customers. But that's basically what's going on is we're committed to these customers and we're committed to ensuring that this is successful and it's working pretty well for us. Speaker 100:44:07Wonderful. Thank you. Speaker 300:44:10Thanks, Rishi. Operator00:44:13Thank you. Our next question is from Parker Lane with Stifel. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 300:44:19Hi, guys. Thanks for taking the question. Good to see the momentum with the net new customers. I think it was 4 during the quarter. Mike and John, any common themes on those customers that you talked about during your prepared remarks either in terms of the systems you're replacing or common challenges that they face that precipitated the decision to move at Guidewire? Speaker 400:44:42I think the first common theme is that we've been talking to them for a long time. These are customers that we stay close to. We've been talking to all of those wins, net new wins for quite some time, building relationship and understand the business problems. The thematic really is around opportunity, business opportunity for growth and the need to move faster and the ability to get in and out of markets with the right products, the right product definitions, the right rates. And that really has is what's bringing the conversation to the table. Speaker 400:45:18In a couple of cases in the quarter, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, those led to while it was often a claims conversation or a billing conversation and take 2 specific cases, those expanded very quickly to be sweet conversations. And the reason for that really is around the confidence of execution and the confidence of that early commitment. So I'd say the 2 major themes are 1, the pressure to compete at speed is very real. And so being close to the customers and being in a right time and place to have those conversations because of how close we stay to them was a really important theme for the quarter and the year. And then the second piece was really around because of the confidence of the platform today, the ability to expand. Speaker 400:46:04I bring that up because in that expansion, obviously, has a displacement of some in some cases relatively modern implementations of systems that you would see maybe a couple of years ago or a couple of years old. We feel really good now about our ability to confidently address those displacements and execution and in the sales cycle. Operator00:46:32Thank you. Our next question is from Joe Bruehring with Baird. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:46:39Great. Thanks for taking my questions. The difference between 19% growth and fully ramped ARR and the 16% growth you're talking about a quarter ago, the implication for the net new value that's booked in 4Q, that's just very far above your original plan it would seem. And I wanted to put a finer point on what drove that. John just made the comment that you're getting more full suite deals. Speaker 700:47:08Did you originally pencil in that some of these deals in 4Q were maybe modules and not full suites? I think win rates came up. Did that skew more favorable and you ended up grabbing some deals maybe you weren't expecting? And then I wanted to ask just did any of the deals perhaps close a bit earlier, so there's simply a timing factor behind the 4Q strength? Speaker 600:47:34Yes. I think you highlighted a couple of the key components. I don't think that we had a very strong Q4, and we sometimes use the word run the table internally and we did our best to run the table. But I don't think there was anything there was certainly nothing that surprised us to say, oh man, I didn't think that was going to close until Q1 or Q2. So it was pretty typical in that fashion. Speaker 600:48:02We are just seeing a willingness, whereas 2 years ago we weren't seeing this willingness. We're seeing kind of starting small a little bit more and see how it goes then make a big commitment. And I think we're seeing a bit more willingness to make a big commitment at the outset. I think from an insurer's perspective, they can put the most muscle behind the negotiation in that outcome. But they feel confident that the platform that we have is ready to support those big programs, and we're seeing that willingness more today than certainly were 2 years ago. Speaker 600:48:36And we saw this last Q4, but we didn't want to assume that was a trend, right, because that was a very big quarter for us. But we backed it up with another very strong Q4. Speaker 700:48:49That's great. And then one thing I wanted to reconcile. So bigger average deals and customers going all in upfront, I think a lot of folks hear that and think it's a bigger carrier that's doing it. But I think I heard this right, 13 of the 16 cloud deals this quarter came from tiers 2 through 4. So I'm just wondering if maybe the strategy you've outlined is actually resonating more down market than maybe it has up into this point. Speaker 700:49:28And does that actually drive even better referenceability for you going forward? Your mind share is well established in Tier 1 and Tier 2, but are you starting to see the needle move more meaningfully down market? Speaker 400:49:44I'd say, number 1, Tier 2 is a big span of carriers. So there's Tier 2 can be split into kind of 3 or 4 different segments within it. So happy that in those Tier 2 deals we talked about that 2 of them sit towards the higher end of the Tier 2. So, that's good. It's resonating at that Tier 2 level. Speaker 400:50:06It's resonating down market. The how then do we think about Tier 1? And I would say Tier 1 still works very specifically as its own proof points, very specific proof points getting in and doing proofs of concept and digging in deep technically. The thing that has resonated since the day I got here is the deeper a customer goes, the better we come out in the analysis. And so Tier 2 has got a lot of referenceability. Speaker 400:50:34And even at this point, some movement of professionals across carriers where that is not just referenceability, but portability of relationship, which is really powerful. And more and more as we dig in deeper with the Tier 1s and we're running proofs of concept and very specific deep conversations on it, We're now very importantly well past the technical proof points. And as Mike said in the earlier answer, we're really into what's the best business timing, the best business outcome for the backlog of work that they might have in other arena and also for the business drivers that they want to put in the marketplace. So it's moving well. Tier 2 is a very portable conversation across all parts of Tier 2. Speaker 400:51:16Tier 1, again, still very specific to each Speaker 100:51:22Tier 1 carrier. Operator00:51:27Our next question is from Alex Sklar with Raymond James. Speaker 300:51:33Great. Thank you. John, first one for you, just following up on Dylan's question on the Tier 1 customers, but maybe asking it slightly different way. Has anything changed in terms of the conversations there indicating more of a willingness from the top to standardize across like all commercial lines of business or all personal lines of business? Or does it still feel like it's a pretty separate line of business by line of business decision? Speaker 300:51:56Thanks. Speaker 400:51:58It's very specifically still a line of business by line of business conversation. And we're okay with that because we know the depth of Proofpoint, we're going to have to dig in those and prove it out and expand from there, which gives us tremendous amount of long term opportunity. But for good or for bad, and it is, I think, good because it allows us to go deeper, it's very specific two lines of business or specific products. Speaker 300:52:26Okay, great. Thanks. And then Jeff, one for you. Just the smoothing of quarterly bookings is something that you've kind of had a lot of success with over this past year, landing earlier in the year upfront. Any change to how you're thinking about seasonality as we go into this upcoming year? Speaker 600:52:41Yes, we had a we did a lot of work on that and then we had a blowout Q4. So, I mean, look, I think we saw this pretty typical linearity for us. Certainly, the team did a lot of work in Q1, Q2 and Q3 to put us in a very strong position. And so I think we're continuing to work hard to make sure that we don't rely on Herculean Q4s, given the size of our sales team and the vertical that we focus on. And I think the team is doing a really good job. Speaker 600:53:16So I would expect kind of Speaker 400:53:18as I look at this year similarly. I'll add one point to linearity is it's in large part been due to the execution of the team and focusing on our smoothing. But the real benefit of linearity is timing more of our financial activities up to our customers and the market's financial activities, allowing for our Q2 to become an increasingly important quarter for us times us up better for planning when we look at ourselves through the customer's lens. Speaker 300:53:47All right. Thank you both for that. Operator00:53:52Our next question is from Matt VanVliet with BTIG. Speaker 1000:54:01I guess wanted to touch on the partner community, especially on the services side of it. Our conversations continue to talk about improving relationship there and a lot better communication back and forth. But I guess, John, where do you feel like you're at in terms of the plan you've implemented? Obviously knowing both sides of the house now very well? Is there still more work to be done or is it just a matter of continuing to execute on the plans in place and just sort of incremental changes here and there? Speaker 400:54:32Yes. Thanks for the question. The work ahead is, if you look at it from a distance, it's very much more of the same. But if you dig into regional specificity, it becomes the next round of focus for us, which is Europe and Asia Pacific, Japan in particular, have very specific and different needs and some different requirements of partnership there. And so, we're working very specifically now with our managing directors in each region to make sure that we've got the right strategic plan for go to market and also the right services plan for collaboration. Speaker 400:55:08The piece that I don't think changes at all is the foundational elements of how we work together on programs and how we continue to invest in making sure that the SIs can sit in that driver seat of the program to bring scale increased scale and predictability to the community. So more of the same, but really pleased with how that progressed over this last year. Speaker 1000:55:27Yes, very helpful. And then maybe dovetailing a little bit on the ability to expand more quickly as more customers are on GWCP. When we look at it from sort of the marketplace and some of your technology partners out there, how are you balancing that element of cultivating a lot more partners, getting into very specific use cases or even very regionally dependent items versus building out more of that internally now that you have the majority of your customers either on or on the path to being on essentially one version of the platform? Speaker 300:56:06Yes, this is a tough strategic question. And I think the way I think about this is that we want to create the ecosystem that our customers would want from us as a vendor, right? They want to have choices. They want to have Guidewire produce something that has a degree of openness to it that enables people to connect safely and securely and reliably into the cloud system that we serve. And then we also will have objectives about what we build and what we sell and what we deliver 1st party. Speaker 300:56:46And they'll be we're not going to be able to do everything. We are certainly going to do more. We are like I said, we're in a really good position strategically to provide more and more value to our customer base in this industry, and we'll have a product strategy that we will attempt to be open about. And maybe from time to time, there will be overlap with partners. But you basically want to have that dynamic if you are a customer of Guidewire, and that's how I try to think about how we should approach building that ecosystem. Speaker 300:57:23And at the end of the day, if we keep creating a, call it, a community of customers on our cloud, that's going to create a very large opportunity for InsurTechs and technology partners to connect into Guidewire and build applications that integrate with us. And I think that's going to be great for our whole ecosystem. And so that's how I think about it. It's a complicated thing to manage and work through every single use case, but at a high level, that's how we're approaching it. Speaker 600:57:57All right, great. Thank you. Operator00:58:02Thank you. Our next question is from Aaron Kimson with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 400:58:10Great. Thanks for the questions. Would it be fair to classify the current state of the P and C end market as a bit Speaker 600:58:16of a golden age for your customers who Speaker 400:58:18are simultaneously in a robust hard market and have high interest rates to reinvest the flow? If so, how do you think about the sustainability of the end market strength as it flows through the guide wire on both the hard market piece and if we start to see rate cuts? Speaker 300:58:33Yes. I would say that the thing I love about serving this industry is how durable it is. And John said, there's going to be hard markets, there's going to be softer markets, there's going to be changes. Fundamentally, what I want to deliver to this industry is agility. I want to enable them to operate their companies more efficiently, make decisions faster, adjust changing dynamics as quickly as they need to, And core systems and Guidewire provided core systems can do that in a unique way. Speaker 300:59:14That's what I see and that's what's nice about serving this market is that there is a need for this and this industry is very durable. So I don't yes, things may be going in a positive direction for the insurance industry. The outlook may be improving, but that I don't want people to think that we imagine a day in which all that reverses, right? I just think that there's such a huge opportunity to help modernize this industry, and the industry is going to continue to operate and grow steadily over, I would imagine, at least the next 10 to 20 years. It creates a very it just creates a great opportunity for Guidewire, Whether or not the current kind of conditions right now are great, that's wonderful, right? Speaker 301:00:06But I still think that whether or not it's interest rates or risk or premium, this industry is just going to stay durable and it's going to continue to need to be modernized. And so that's how I think about making plans for Guidewire is how do we serve this industry for the next 10 or 20 years. Speaker 401:00:26That's really helpful. Thank you. And then the second question I have is, it's now been 9.5 months since you talked about wanting to be more opportunistic around M and A. Yet you spoke today and last quarter pretty poignantly about organic product investments. What are you seeing in private market valuation expectations? Speaker 401:00:42And has your outlook on organic versus inorganic investment changed over the last few quarters? Speaker 301:00:49Yes. We are certainly in a position to be able to consider M and A more seriously than we have in the past, right? The strength of our business improving and the customer base increasing, just the durability of our business improving makes it more and more possible for us to approach inorganic growth, okay? But we are also very careful. We want to ensure that we get the right price and we get the right technology and we get the right culture and we get the right team and it fits in with Guidewire. Speaker 301:01:30And so we I think we have something very special at Guidewire right now in terms of just a software company and looking at the overall landscape. And I don't want to put that at risk. And so we're going to be very careful. So yes, we are more open to it and we are looking more aggressively, but I'm also pretty picky. We are also pretty picky, and we want to make sure that we do it correctly. Speaker 301:01:55And I also want people to understand that I have a high degree of confidence that we can build product at Guidewire. We can execute. We have proven over the past 5 years that we can build software and execute effectively. And so we may choose in certain categories to build product organically, and that will take us a little while to build it, but we'll I have a high degree of confidence we'll execute. So I guess that's how I would think about it. Speaker 301:02:24Don't put me on a clock to do M and A. We're open to it, but we're not it's not necessary for us to reach our long term ambitions. Operator01:02:41There are no further questions at this time. I think I'd like to hand the floor back over to Mike Rosenbaum for any closing comments. Speaker 301:02:48I just wanted to say thank you to everybody at Guidewire who put in all the work to deliver a great year. I appreciate everybody joining us on the call today and look forward to seeing you, if possible, at our Analyst Day in New York or maybe connections a little bit later in the year. So, thanks for joining everybody.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallGuidewire Software Q4 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2xRemove Ads Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Guidewire Software Earnings HeadlinesGuidewire Software CEO sells $272,860 in stockApril 14 at 7:03 PM | investing.comAnalysts Offer Insights on Technology Companies: Robinhood Markets (HOOD) and Guidewire (GWRE)April 9, 2025 | markets.businessinsider.comThe Trump Dump is starting; Get out of stocks now?The first 365 days of the Trump presidency… Will be the best time to get rich in American history.April 16, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Guidewire Software, Inc. (NYSE:GWRE) CEO Sells $234,948.00 in StockApril 9, 2025 | americanbankingnews.comGuidewire Software, Inc. (NYSE:GWRE) Receives $206.08 Average Target Price from BrokeragesApril 8, 2025 | americanbankingnews.com5 Analysts Assess Guidewire Software: What You Need To KnowMarch 28, 2025 | nasdaq.comSee More Guidewire Software Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Guidewire Software? Sign up for Earnings360's daily newsletter to receive timely earnings updates on Guidewire Software and other key companies, straight to your email. Email Address About Guidewire SoftwareGuidewire Software (NYSE:GWRE) provides a platform for property and casualty (P&C) insurers worldwide. The company offers Guidewire InsuranceSuite Cloud, such as PolicyCenter Cloud, BillingCenter Cloud, and ClaimCenter Cloud applications. It also provides Guidewire InsuranceNow, a cloud-based platform that offers policy, billing, and claims management functionality to insurers; and Guidewire InsuranceSuite for Self-Managed. In addition, the company offers Guidewire Rating Management to manage the pricing of insurance products; and Guidewire Reinsurance Management to use rules-based logic to execute reinsurance strategy through underwriting and claims processes. Further, it provides Guidewire Underwriting Management, a cloud-based integrated business application; Guidewire AppReader, a submission intake management solution; Guidewire ClaimCenter Package for the London market supports the claims workflow used by London Market insurers and brokers; Guidewire Digital Engagement Applications, which enable insurers to provide digital experiences to customers, agents, vendors, and field personnel through their device of choice; and Guidewire for Salesforce to provide customer information regarding policies and claims. Additionally, the company offers Guidewire Predict, a P&C-specific machine-learning platform; Guidewire HazardHub that allows insurers to understand, assess, price, and manage property risk; Guidewire Canvas, Guidewire Compare, and Guidewire Explore cloud-native applications; and Guidewire Cyence, a cyber-risk economic modeling product. 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There are 11 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Greetings, and welcome to the Guidewire 4th Quarter and Full Year Fiscal 20 24 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. A brief question and answer session will follow the formal presentation. As a reminder, this call is being recorded. I would now like to turn the call over to Alex Hughes, Vice President of Investor Relations. Operator00:00:26Thank you, Alex. You may begin. Speaker 100:00:29Thanks, Paul. I'm Alex Hughes, Vice President of Investor Relations. And with me today is Mike Rosenbaum, Chief Executive Officer Jeff Cooper, Chief Financial Officer and John Mullen, President and Chief Revenue Officer, who has joined us to provide a year end recap of adoption activity. A complete disclosure of our results can be found in our press release issued today as well as in our related Form 8 ks furnished Speaker 200:00:50to the SEC, both of Speaker 100:00:51which are available on the Investor Relations section of our website. Today's call is being recorded and a replay will be available following the conclusion of the call. Statements made on this call include forward looking ones regarding our financial results, outlook and targets, our future business momentum relating to our products, cloud deals, customer demand, operations, the impact of local, national and geopolitical events on our business, our associate business plan and strategy, among other matters. These statements are subject to risks, uncertainties and assumptions and are based on management's current expectations as of today and should not be relied upon as representing our views as of any subsequent date. Please refer to our press release and risk factors and documents we file with the SEC including our most recent quarterly reports on Form 10 Q and our prior and forthcoming annual report on Form 10 ks filed and to be filed with the SEC for information on risks, uncertainties and assumptions that may cause actual results to differ materially from those set forth in such statements. Speaker 100:01:49We also will refer to non GAAP financial measures to provide additional information to investors. All commentary on margins, profitability and expenses are on a non GAAP basis unless stated otherwise. A reconciliation of non GAAP to GAAP measures is provided in our press release. Reconciliations and additional data are also posted in a supplement on our IR website. And with that, I'll now turn the call over to Mike. Speaker 300:02:12Thank you, Alex. Good afternoon, and thanks, everyone, for joining today. I'm thrilled to have the opportunity to report stellar 4th quarter results, capping off what was an incredible year for Guidewire and our community of customers and partners. This quarter marked 5 years at Guidewire for me, and the results in the quarter and fiscal year feel like a clear validation of the hard work and determination everyone here has contributed to our cloud transformation. We have now established a consistent track record of customer program success with our cloud applications, and we are seeing the maturity and reliability of our cloud platform continue to drive demand from new and existing customers. Speaker 300:02:53The referenceability of customers choosing Guidewire cloud platform continues to grow and that reputation continues to drive demand, new sales and adoption and ultimately customer program success and the associated insurance outcomes the P and C industry demands. The market momentum we've established is clearly reflected in strong ARR and fully ramped ARR growth. ARR was up 14% on the year, while fully ramped ARR accelerated to 19% as we continue to sign larger deals with more significant fully ramped value. We closed 16 cloud deals in the quarter and 42 for the year. John Mullen, our President, will go into more detail on cloud adoption, but I'll just say that the strength across these metrics is a result of the combined efforts of every single member of our global organization. Speaker 300:03:46The results this quarter and this year position us well to achieve our $1,000,000,000 ARR target this fiscal year. As we continue to drive cloud adoption, we are also seeing greater leverage in our cloud model. Guidewire cloud platform is demonstrating greater scale and efficiency with subscription and support gross margins increasing 10 points to over 65% for the year. We feel very confident in our objective to achieve our long term margin targets as we continue to scale the platform. We are also continually driving better overall company operational discipline and efficiency, generating non GAAP operating profit of nearly $100,000,000 and operating cash flow of nearly $200,000,000 We also expect to be GAAP profitable in fiscal 2025. Speaker 300:04:37These outcomes clearly demonstrate the power of the software as a service business model we have created here. Looking forward, we are excited to enter the new fiscal year with momentum. We continue to see acceleration in the number of conversations around cloud transitions and modernizations. Customers realize that they need greater agility in their core operations and based on our track record of references to success stories, we are distancing ourselves from alternatives. As a result, our pipeline continues to build and is very healthy going into the year. Speaker 300:05:17In November, we will be back in Nashville to hold our annual customer conference Connections, which is attended by 3,000 members of the broader Guidewire community. This will give us another valuable opportunity to showcase the latest innovation on our platform Speaker 400:05:33and highlight samples of customer success. Speaker 300:05:39I'll finish by saying that this past year and these last 5 years sometimes seem like a remarkable achievement. We have taken a market defining on premise vertical software leader and re platformed it to become a vertical software as a service leader. I have spoken to many people in the past few months, this achievement and our success was somewhat surprising. But looking back now, it all looks pretty logical to me. We made a straightforward plan that made sense, required nothing miraculous and focused on execution, all the while ensuring that every single customer who chose to trust us never doubted their decision. Speaker 300:06:17We are not and will never be perfect, but we will continue to prioritize our customers and the programs they run on our platform. We will continue to optimize our technical decisions for the long term and we will strive every day to earn the trust our customers place in us. We are right now very well aligned with our customers and in a unique position to help shape the future of the industry we serve. We continue to execute in the fashion we have demonstrated over the past few years and I'm confident we will continue to hit the forward looking objectives we set for ourselves. With that, I'll hand it over to John to provide a year end perspective on the insurance industry and discuss in more detail around customer adoption and success on the Guidewire cloud platform. Speaker 400:06:59Thanks, Mike. Good afternoon, everyone. It's been a very successful year at Guidewire. We have the pleasure of serving a customer base that is both critical and resilient. This year, we saw property and casualty insurance navigate convergence of pressures and continue to evolve with both the agility and precision with which they respond to inflation, the evolution of risk in the world, and the increased expectation of consumers and businesses. Speaker 400:07:25We remain very confident in the durability of our relationship with the market and optimistic regarding the pace of change that we Speaker 500:07:31can help drive with and for the Speaker 400:07:32P and C industry. Reflecting on the 42 cloud deals we did for the year, we closed 13 InsuranceSuite cloud deals in Q4, bringing our total InsuranceSuite cloud deals for the year to 37. We also closed 3 InsuranceNow deals in the quarter. What we are seeing is the positive effect of a portfolio approach that is delivering a healthy balance across the business. We've been working hard to drive specific plans and accountabilities in the markets, region, country and line of business and with specific carriers across all deal types. Speaker 400:08:05We added 4 net new customers in Q4 and saw continued strong win rates with insurers looking to modernize their core systems. A super regional personal lines carrier elected to adopt our full suite and broad selection of our data products in order to standardize on a modern core system and facilitate their growth ambitions. Argonaut Managed Services, a leader in excess and surplus, selected ClaimCenter to consolidate multiple claim systems and improve operational efficiency. Our track record and commitment to customer success were key factors in their decision. Preferred Mutual, a personal and commercial lines carrier in the Northeast of the U. Speaker 400:08:43S, selected the full suite to leverage the Guidewire cloud platform and its digital capabilities. And finally, Pearl Holdings, a single state non standard auto MGA headquartered in Miami, Florida, selected InsuranceNow and Predict to modernize their core with an emphasis on claims. I highlight these net new wins because they exemplify our ability to execute and compete across a broad range of carrier size and complexity. It was also a strong quarter for cloud migration activity with a total of 7 InsuranceSuite cloud migrations. 5 of the InsuranceSuite migrations included very meaningful expansions beyond the scope of work we were addressing on prem. Speaker 400:09:24One of the themes in the quarter was our customers' willingness to make bigger commitments on Guidewire cloud, which was a key driver of our 19% fully ramped ARR growth. Notable in the quarter were deals that initiated as a single product discussion and evolved into broader full suite outcomes. For example, a Tier 1 commercial insurer significantly expanded adoption of Guidewire cloud platform for its scalability, total cost of ownership and platform unity across policy billing and claims. The referenceability of our relationships and the power of full suite and data is resonating in the market. We saw healthy sales activity in both Asia Pac and EMEA for the year. Speaker 400:10:05Our strength in North America really delivered in Q4. Looking at global deals by tier, Q4 was fairly balanced with 3 Tier 1 deals, 7 Tier 2 deals and the remainder coming from Tiers 3 and 4. Turning to our ecosystem, we are seeing continued momentum. There are now over 25,000 professionals from 38 SIs working with us today. And in the Q4, the number of cloud certified partner professionals from these firms increased 22% year over year to 9,500. Speaker 400:10:36The pace of uptake on our ski release training with this community affirms the SI's shared commitment to the model. Similarly, our solution partner community continues to expand. Guidewire Marketplace now has over 215 technology partners. Finally, we saw strong results on customer programs in Q4. We achieved 7 initial cloud go lives on Guidewire cloud platform in the quarter. Speaker 400:10:59We are seeing, as expected, significant increases in the number of cloud updates throughout the year, which speaks to the growing efficiency of our platform inside the customer environment. The services organization achieved higher than expected revenue and gross margins in the quarter. The team has been working hard to improve predictability. And while we have more work to do, Q4 was a positive step forward. Successful customer outcomes is our primary objective and our services organization in collaboration with our SI partners have worked well together in this last year to drive pace and predictability for our community. Speaker 400:11:31In summary, fiscal year 'twenty four demonstrated strong execution and we look ahead to fiscal year 'twenty five confident in our ability to continue to build momentum. With that, I'll hand it over Speaker 100:11:41to Jeff. Thanks, John. The financial highlight of Speaker 600:11:45the quarter was the incredible combination of 19% constant currency fully ramped ARR growth and 20% cash flow from operations margin. Our ability to deliver durable profitable growth is a testament to the value that we deliver to the industry. With that, let me jump into the details. 4th quarter ARR ended at $872,000,000 up 14% year over year on a constant currency basis ahead of our expectations. As a reminder, we measure ARR on a constant currency basis throughout the year and then update ARR for year end FX rates. Speaker 600:12:17Making this update impacted ARR by negative $8,000,000 resulting in ARR of 8 $64,000,000 Fully ramped ARR, which is defined as the fully ramped annual price outlined in our customer contracts, grew 19% year over year on a constant currency basis. This is a tremendous result that reflects a lot of hard work. We are winning in the market and executing well across the entire organization. Total cloud ARR, which includes ARR for all of our cloud products and for customers that have contracted to move to the cloud, grew 28% year over year and comprised 66 percent of total ARR. Total revenue for the year was $980,000,000 ahead of our expectations due to stronger performance across all components of revenue. Speaker 600:13:04File strength continues to be visible in subscription revenue, which was $477,000,000 up 36% year over year. It's exciting to see the progression of our subscription revenue lines, which finished the year at just under 50% of total revenue. Subscription and support revenue was $549,000,000 up 28% year over year. License revenue is $250,000,000 down 6% year over year as we continue to migrate our on premise customers to our cloud. At the start of FY 'twenty four, we thought that this decline this would decline closer to 10% year over year, but we benefited from stronger than expected true ups during the year. Speaker 600:13:40Services revenue finished at $181,000,000 down 14% year over year as we transition more implementation work to our SI partners and we minimize our reliance on subcontractors. Services revenue in Q4 was $51,000,000 up from our low of $38,000,000 in Q2. We are pleased with how we finished the year and expect modest year over year growth in services revenue in fiscal year 2025. Turning to profitability for the fiscal year, which we will discuss on a non GAAP basis. Gross profit was $618,000,000 This was up 25% year over year. Speaker 600:14:15Overall gross margin was 63% compared to 55% a year ago. Subscription and support gross margin was 65.5%, an over 10 percentage point increase. The investments we made in our cloud platform are showing up in a much more efficient cloud operations function as we deliver the industry leading cloud service at an increasingly attractive gross margin profile. Services margin was 7% compared with just below breakeven a year ago. Notably in Q4, services gross margin was 14% as we exit the year closer to our longer term margin expectations for this business. Speaker 600:14:53Operating income was $99,500,000 which was just above the midpoint of our outlook. The positive impact of higher than expected revenue was offset by the impact of the employee bonus accrual, which was higher than our expectations due to outperformance of key financial targets. Overall, stock based compensation was $146,000,000 for the year, up 2.5%. Operating cash flow ended the year at 196,000,000 dollars We noted at the Analyst Day last year that we were at an exciting inflection point in profitability and cash flow, and our progress on cash flow from operations and free cash flow significantly surpassed our expectations on stronger than expected collections. We ended the quarter with $1,100,000,000 in cash, cash equivalents and investments. Speaker 600:15:40We also have $400,000,000 in convertible debt that matures in March and we expect to settle in cash. Now let me turn to our outlook. For fiscal 2025, we expect ARR of between $995,000,000 to $1,005,000,000 representing 16% constant currency growth at the midpoint. Updating our forecast model to reflect current FX rates has had an approximately $9,000,000 negative impact on our fiscal 'twenty five outlook. Total revenue for the year is expected to be between 1 point $135,000,000 $1,149,000,000 We expect subscription revenue will be approximately $642,000,000 representing 34% growth. Speaker 600:16:28Maintaining this strong growth rate is a reflection of the strength of the cloud deals we signed in fiscal 'twenty four. Support revenue will decline by about $3,000,000 or $4,000,000 year over year as a result of the continued migration of our installed base to the cloud, resulting in approximately $710,000,000 in subscription and support revenue. As a reminder, support revenue attaches to term license customers. For cloud customers, support activities are included in the subscription fee. We expect license revenue to decline a bit due to steady progress on cloud migrations, which is partially offset by contract true ups in our on prem customer base. Speaker 600:17:05Our outlook for service revenue services revenue is approximately $190,000,000 We expect total gross margins for the year to be approximately 65%, subscription and support gross margins to be approximately 68% and professional services gross margin to be approximately 12%. We are pleased with this progression as we work to continue to drive margin improvement. With respect to operating income, we expect a non GAAP operating income of between $157,000,000 $171,000,000 for the fiscal year. We also expect GAAP operating income of between negative $4,000,000 and positive 10,000,000 dollars Given the strength in the business, we are able to deliver on our profitability goals and in many cases raise our targets, while also increasing some spend in our operating expenses, most notably in R and D as we invest in the significant opportunities we see in front of us to help insurers take advantage of modern applications to engage, innovate and grow. I expect R and D spend to grow around 14% in fiscal 'twenty five, sales and marketing should grow a bit less than that, and G and A should grow in the mid to upper single digits. Speaker 600:18:19Cash flow from operations in fiscal 2025 is expected to be between $220,000,000 $250,000,000 Our CapEx expectations for the year are between $20,000,000 $25,000,000 including approximately $12,000,000 in capitalized software development costs and $7,000,000 in office build out projects in India. Our Q1 outlook can be found in our earnings press release, but let me provide a bit more color. Given the strong sales activity in Q4, we did not have many deals slip into Q1, so we expect typical seasonality in our Q1, which impacts sequential ARR growth expectations. We expect subscription and support revenue of approximately $167,000,000 and services revenue of approximately 50,000,000 dollars We expect subscription and support margin between 67% 68% and services margins of around 11% and total gross margins of approximately 61%. Also, annual employee bonuses and commission expenses related to Q4 sales are paid out in Q1, which impacts cash flow. Speaker 600:19:25As a result, we expect Q1 cash flow from operations to follow a similar pattern to what we experienced last year. In summary, we are incredibly proud of the year we had in FY 'twenty four, and we are on track to meet or exceed the targets that we established during my first Analyst Day as CFO back in October of 2020. And we look forward to seeing many of you at our Analyst Day this coming October 10 in New York. With that, let's open the call for questions. Operator00:19:53Thank you. We'll now be conducting a question and answer session. Thank you. Our first question is from Ken Wong with Oppenheimer and Company. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 500:20:22Great. Thank you for taking my questions. This first one for either Mike or John. Can you provide a little color on the context of some of these fully ramped deals? Are we seeing this across the board with customers? Speaker 500:20:37Are these kind of one off large deals? Would you say that these are typically kind of flatter upfront and steep in the back or fairly vineyard? Just any color to help us think through the dynamics would be fantastic. Speaker 300:20:53Sure. Let me touch on it real briefly and then I'll let John comment. The first thing is that I don't want you to read anything into this with respect to ramps. We're seeing pretty normal ramp structures and activity, and we'll be able to provide a little bit more detail around that at Analyst Day. But relative to the commentary we provided a year ago around the ramp structures and the corresponding impact on ARR, you shouldn't read anything into this. Speaker 300:21:20We just had a phenomenal quarter from a bookings perspective with great deals across the board. They were reasonably sized, and so that creates a total deal value that drives a fully ramped number that's very healthy. Super proud of the team and the execution and it kind of to me indicates the strength in the business. That's the way that's the only thing I'd like you to read into it. Just very, very successful outcome with a bunch of great deals in the quarter that drove that fully ramped number. Speaker 300:21:55Anything to add, John? Speaker 400:21:56I'll just add that if I look at the last quarter, there are two dimensions to it. The first one is, certainly in some cases, it's larger lines of business, but maybe more important is covering other areas, additional areas of scope. The team is getting much more attuned to listening for and solving business problems rather than addressing just the initial scope for consideration. And as we do that, the power of the suite is pulling in more conversations and that was pretty prevalent actually in these Q4 deals. Speaker 500:22:28Perfect. And then just a quick one for Jeff, maybe kind of also building on the fully ramped number, guiding to about 16% in fiscal 'twenty five. I guess when we kind of compare that with a 19% fully ramped number, I guess would it be wrong for us to assume that there's potentially an acceleration in the future? Or what's the right way to read that fully ramped versus what we're looking at in 2025? Speaker 600:22:54Yes. The fully ramped outcome certainly gives us confidence as we look at the durability of the growth. I'm not sure I would model in accelerations above kind of that 16 percent range, but I do think it kind of creates a bit more for us and a bit more visibility into the durability of kind of ticking above mid teens a bit on the overall ARR growth side. Speaker 500:23:20Okay. Thank you, Jeff. Speaker 200:23:23Thanks, Ken. Operator00:23:24Thank you. Our next question is from Michael Turrin with Wells Fargo. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 600:23:31Hey, great. Thanks. Congrats on the close of the year. I guess the first question is just maybe Mike or John, you're seeing a series of tailwinds that are it seems a bit better than what we're getting across software. So I'd just love to hear commentary on your perspective on the overall demand environment, where you sit in terms of cloud momentum and overall competitive dynamics alongside just what you've taken in and observed with the end of year? Speaker 300:24:00Sure. Thanks for the question. There's certainly a lot of things that feel like they're helping us, right? First is the industry we serve is very, very durable. Premiums are going up across the insurance industry and that does with our pricing constructs. Speaker 300:24:17Our contract constructs create some lift to our ARR just based on DWP increasing. I also think we are distancing ourselves from alternatives. And it's really, in my opinion, just based on the track record of success that we have been able to establish with our cloud products over the past 5 or 6 years. We are it's still a competitive market and we still compete fiercely for every single deal, but we are winning our fair share of those deals, and I think that factors into the outperformance in the quarters. We're also seeing just a, I guess, I'd call it a conversion strength in that the deals that we're working on, the opportunities that we're looking at in a particular quarter are closing more frequently than we might have expected a couple of years ago, which I think speaks to the trust and confidence in the platform, in the programs, in the whole community, like just collectively our ability to land these programs and make sure that they're successful, it all contributes to the lift and the incredible success that we had in the quarter. Speaker 300:25:33So that's my take, and I'm sure John has some more to add to it. Speaker 400:25:37Yes. While the industry is large by surface area, it's small by community. And to Mike's point, really, the referenceability of the programs that we've been driving has provided a nice ability for that conversion rate. But I think the biggest tailwind we face is that chapter of moving from defending a cloud platform to really scaling and solving business problems with the cloud platform as certainly the industry has a tight convergence of IT needs and business needs are no longer 2 different dimensions. They're merging together every day and we're in a really good spot to help navigate that and that's really what I think we saw over the course of this year. Speaker 600:26:21That's all super helpful commentary. Jeff, you're leading with cash flow in the press release. I can't help but notice the cash flow margin for fiscal 'twenty five looks like it's also running ahead of target model. So maybe you can I don't want to steal any thunder ahead of a bigger investor session you're hosting, but maybe speak to just the increasing focus on cash flow and what you're seeing that's driving the good conversion there? Thanks. Speaker 600:26:48Yes. I mean, we're really pleased with how the model is inflecting from an overall cash flow perspective. Obviously, I kind of think at the end of the day, that's the primary metric that software companies are measured on. And so, we're pleased with that. Some of the interesting dynamics that we're noticing are some of the timing of revenue elements that create a bit of a difference between non GAAP operating income and some of the cash flow dynamics. Speaker 600:27:15And we'll talk about that a little bit more at Analyst Day. But that underpins the power of our model. But certainly this has been a focus of ours for a number of years. And as we kind of established how we think about our long term model, we've always had this part of the journey in the back of our mind and it's nice to see it come to realization. And we'll be continuing to monitor the targets against the targets that we have out there that we still think are very appropriate targets and we'll talk about that a bit more at Analyst Day. Operator00:27:51Thank you. Our next question is from Aleksei Gogolov with JPMorgan. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 200:28:00Hi, everyone. Mike, firstly congratulations with the 5 year anniversary and hope you managed to fight off those parking beasts. Can I ask you a bit more about the demand environment, especially around commercial lines, Because I've seen some data from council insurance agents? They were talking about some softness in commercial PMC. Are you seeing anything of that sort? Speaker 200:28:31Or are you winning more market share, which is not reflecting in terms of the dynamics that we're seeing for you? Speaker 300:28:41Yes. Alexey, I'm going to thank you for the compliment. I appreciate it very much. And I'll let John answer question about commercial lines. Speaker 400:28:48All right. So, Alexi, the potential softening in the market on commercial lines attributable in large part to large commercial and large property. We think that excess and surplus specialty and middle market is still a very dynamic rate environment. That is an industry commentary. What I'll also say that as we go forward, we're finding really good success with our commercial lines opportunities. Speaker 400:29:17London market has set a really good pace for us. Large commercial in North America, excess and surplus and specialty have all been really solid for us. And the only thing I would say in addition to that is, these decisions of getting to enterprise data and decisions and getting to large scale durable core processing is a decision that goes beyond hard and soft market evolution. What is very critical is these large commercial carriers and commercial in general, they really are every day tuning their ability to make price, make product changes, enter and exit markets and make the right rating decisions and it's very difficult to make that decision without operating on a modern core platform. So, we feel good about our ability to help navigate the ebbs and flows of hard and soft markets and we're really tuned into where we think the opportunities are to move faster. Speaker 200:30:12Thank you, John. And Jeff, just a quick question for you. Can you elaborate on the benefits from the AWS contract to gross margins going forward? I think last time we spoke, you mentioned that there was some front loaded R and D investment. Has it sort of fades away? Speaker 200:30:31Do you expect more benefits to gross margins? Speaker 600:30:36Yes. Look, I think we have a long standing partnership with AWS. I'm not going to get into the particulars of that arrangement. But we do have certain incentives in that contract that we realize over the contract. I think the big and there's an element of that, that plays into how we think about the margin expansion. Speaker 600:30:57But the largest part of the overall margin expansion is the investments we've made in Guidewire cloud platform and the efficiencies that we're realizing as a result of that. So I wouldn't want to focus too much on kind of the particulars of that arrangement and focus more on the engineering teams deliver to enable our margins. Speaker 400:31:17Thank you very much. Speaker 300:31:19Thanks, Alexi. Operator00:31:22Thank you. Our next question is from Kevin Kumar with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:31:29Hi, thanks for taking my questions. Speaker 800:31:31Mike, wanted to ask you about just overall migration activity. How would you characterize kind of momentum there? Are you seeing kind of interest from customers who are on premise? Is that starting to build? How do you think that plays out as we head into fiscal 'twenty five? Speaker 300:31:51Yes. Thanks for the question. I would describe it as steadily improvingsteadily building. I think, again, it has to do this has to do with the track record of success, the reliability we've demonstrated, the success stories, the customers that have moved, the concept that they're not they're no longer breaking new ground from an IT perspective when they think about a migration to Guidewire Cloud. It's much more a question of when it makes sense for their business and planning that with those customers. Speaker 300:32:25And so you see that build. It's one of the really nice things about Guidewire is that we have this incredible customer base and it's an opportunity for us to grow ARR. It's an opportunity for help to for us to help those customers get more agile. This resonates. It doesn't it's not all going to come in 1 year. Speaker 300:32:45It's going to get spaced out over the course of many years and we're up for that challenge. And so, yes, it's steadily building and we're very we're pretty happy with where it is right now and especially the balance between migration activity and net new, either customers specifically or the net new use cases for existing customers that we pair to a migration. All those components of the business are going very well for us right now. Speaker 800:33:14That's great. And maybe one for Jeff on the premium true ups. You talked about some of the impact of the license revenue, but just curious kind of how that true up is affecting the model more broadly in terms of ARR revenue? Anything you can share to help kind of give context to kind of how that's impacting the broader model? Speaker 600:33:39Yes. No, we saw a healthy backdrop of both CPI and DWP true ups this year. It added a couple of percentage points to overall ARR growth above and beyond what we would see in a typical year. And we expect it to be a pretty resilient looking into next year that, that would remain at slightly elevated levels. It was balanced, right? Speaker 600:34:06I mean, I think if you look at the overall true up activity, there was proportionally more coming from the on prem installed base. But given now the scale of our ARR in the cloud, we also saw a healthy amount coming from the cloud installed base. And so on an absolute dollars, it was pretty balanced between both on prem and cloud. Speaker 300:34:26Great. Thank you. Hi, Kevin. Operator00:34:32Our next question is from Dylan Becker with William Blair. Speaker 700:34:40Maybe going back to Jeff and John, the point on fully ramped ARR, seeing larger deals and seeing more full suite adoption, is that a function? It's probably a little bit of both, but of increased willingness from those Tier 1 carriers who maybe look to adopt a bit more piecemeal, is that a step function change in how they're looking at the ecosystem? Or I think, John, you made a point of kind of better sales targeting being able to expand that scope. I'm sure it's a little bit of both, but maybe some additional color there. Thanks. Speaker 300:35:09I would say this is Speaker 600:35:10just continued progression in terms of how we're selling. I wouldn't attribute it to Tier 1 activity, but we have seen some Tier 1 activity, healthy Tier 2 activity. It's just I think John noted this, the team has done a really good job when we look at a migration, maybe expanding a little bit beyond the initial on prem footprint. And I think that there's an understanding of the maturity of the platform that is giving comfort to customers and making some of these larger and long duration commitments. So I don't know if there's anything you want to add? Speaker 400:35:50The ability for customers to call each other, prospects and customers to call each other and have very, very deep conversations about what's the right pace and cadence of programs to bite off and what's the value of the suite is really what's driving it. I would reiterate what Jeff said. I don't think it's tier specific at this point. Tier 1s are still very much a bespoke shoulder to shoulder conversation about what's the right size and fit for them. Speaker 700:36:17Okay, great. Thank you, guys. And then maybe for Mike as well to given that there is I mean, there's a step function of drivers for adoption here, but another one that we've kind of picked up to, I don't know if this is coming up in your conversations, but it's around the fact that labor is massively constrained, right, as we think about what the ecosystem is looking like. Is that something that's coming up in conversations quite yet? Is there thinking about that kind of capacity or that skills gap as an additional driver of that core system modernization efforts? Speaker 700:36:54Thanks guys. Speaker 300:36:57What you're describing certainly comes up. I think it comes up sometimes in the context of attracting younger people to come work in the industry and providing systems for them that are aligned to their expectations, let's say, about how computers should work, computer systems should work, that comes up. I think it also comes up with a perspective of your development teams and what are you asking them to work on and are you able to retain the people that are capable of maintaining the legacy systems that they've been running sometimes for 20, 30 years. So this certainly comes up. I mean, the whole industry is constantly trying to get more efficient and get more done with the existing folks that they have so that they can operate the company more effectively. Speaker 300:37:46And I think the IT agility, the operational efficiency, the data and insights that we can help provide, it helps in all of those areas. And so for sure, it's a component along with a number of others that factors into the just overall push to modernize the industry. Operator00:38:11Our next question is from Rishi Jaluria with RBC. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 900:38:17Wonderful. Thanks so much for taking my questions. Nice to see continued momentum on the cloud transition. 2 for me. First, I wanted to maybe think about now that you have some time of customers being live on Guidewire cloud platform, maybe potentially getting towards that fully ramped level, what have you seen in terms of customer spending behavior from customers that have fully migrated over to Guidewire cloud platform, especially in terms of their own propensity to spend, thinking about their expansion? Speaker 900:38:53For example, if we were to look at NRR for on premise Guidewire or InsuranceSuite cloud customers, how would those compare to NRR on kind of a fully ramped basis for similar customers as they're on InsuranceSuite cloud? And then I've got a quick follow-up. Speaker 600:39:09Yes. I mean, I'm not going to get into the NRR, the different cohorts. I mean, I think we have seen, healthy expansion within the cloud installed base. Some of that is coming in the form of how they build in the Guidewire cloud platform and requirements for different environments that increase what we call platform spend within Guidewire. Some of that may come in the form of attach of different product sets within our data and analytics suite. Speaker 600:39:42I think it's still pretty early to make any judgments on that overall attach rate, but that's something we're watching. And then as we've obviously seen some direct written premium expansion as well that flows into how we think about net renewal rates for the cloud installed base. So I think that there's more potential there in the cloud, especially as you start to think about the marketplace and how that presents itself in the future than there was on prem, but probably too early to make any sort of real comparisons. Speaker 300:40:19It's progressing very well. This component of our business model, I think, is going very well. I won't say it's like exactly according to plan and we don't track it that closely, but it's exactly what I would expect. And it has to do with, honestly, the track record of success. If we make these customers successful, they're going to want to do more with us. Speaker 300:40:40They're going to find other core system use cases that are going to make sense to expand. That is based off of the success we can drive with the program, but also the relationship of the various applications within InsuranceSuite. Jeff mentioned the other add on opportunities with platform, with partners, with data, with analytics. I think this will increasingly be a part of the story going forward. And right now, it's going sort of according to plan. Speaker 300:41:14So it's an insightful question. I think it's early, but it is going very well. Speaker 900:41:21All right, got it. That's really helpful, guys. Thank you. And then, Mike, in your prepared remarks, you called out some of the success you're seeing on the InsuranceNow side. Can you maybe talk to, I guess, number 1, you've seen what seems to be improving momentum with InsuranceNow over really the past year or so. Speaker 900:41:39What's driving that, both from an industry and maybe product perspective? And then number 2, is there a glide path or what would it look like for maybe insurers who land on insurance now, but over time might get big enough that InsuranceSuite cloud is actually the right solution? What does that actual upgrade or on ramp path look like? Thanks. Speaker 300:42:02Yes. So we have it's a strategic question that we looked at years ago when we embarked on the cloud transformation is what should be the core strategy with InsuranceNow and InsuranceSuite. And we chose to maintain both of those applications to do our best to make sure that they were leveraging common infrastructure as much as possible and continue to invest in both. Primarily, this has to do with our commitment to the customer base, who is very happy with the InsuranceNow product. There's a good sort of cohort of insurance companies in North America where InsuranceNow is a very, very good fit. Speaker 300:42:42And we're very competitive when we find an opportunity in that sweet spot. So it's a great product. It's a great business unit within the company. With respect to, I would say like its acceleration over the past couple of years, it has to do with us being very, very clear about our commitment to it and our investment in it and making sure that it's more out beating competitors in the head to head deals. I mean, that's what it comes down to. Speaker 300:43:11With respect to an on ramp to InsuranceSuite, I would say we really we try to focus a lot on landing the customer on the right platform to begin with. And there isn't you shouldn't imagine a strategy that we have of like start with InsuranceNow and move to InsuranceSuite, just because it's a pretty significant implementation on either one of those things. And so we would like to get that correct from the very beginning. Where we do have an opportunity to add more value is around the additional analytics and data offerings. Like I mentioned, we can move the infrastructure over to Guidewire cloud platform and create a little bit more margin for us and just run the service more efficiently. Speaker 300:43:53And that's beneficial to us. It's beneficial to our InsuranceNow customers. But that's basically what's going on is we're committed to these customers and we're committed to ensuring that this is successful and it's working pretty well for us. Speaker 100:44:07Wonderful. Thank you. Speaker 300:44:10Thanks, Rishi. Operator00:44:13Thank you. Our next question is from Parker Lane with Stifel. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 300:44:19Hi, guys. Thanks for taking the question. Good to see the momentum with the net new customers. I think it was 4 during the quarter. Mike and John, any common themes on those customers that you talked about during your prepared remarks either in terms of the systems you're replacing or common challenges that they face that precipitated the decision to move at Guidewire? Speaker 400:44:42I think the first common theme is that we've been talking to them for a long time. These are customers that we stay close to. We've been talking to all of those wins, net new wins for quite some time, building relationship and understand the business problems. The thematic really is around opportunity, business opportunity for growth and the need to move faster and the ability to get in and out of markets with the right products, the right product definitions, the right rates. And that really has is what's bringing the conversation to the table. Speaker 400:45:18In a couple of cases in the quarter, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, those led to while it was often a claims conversation or a billing conversation and take 2 specific cases, those expanded very quickly to be sweet conversations. And the reason for that really is around the confidence of execution and the confidence of that early commitment. So I'd say the 2 major themes are 1, the pressure to compete at speed is very real. And so being close to the customers and being in a right time and place to have those conversations because of how close we stay to them was a really important theme for the quarter and the year. And then the second piece was really around because of the confidence of the platform today, the ability to expand. Speaker 400:46:04I bring that up because in that expansion, obviously, has a displacement of some in some cases relatively modern implementations of systems that you would see maybe a couple of years ago or a couple of years old. We feel really good now about our ability to confidently address those displacements and execution and in the sales cycle. Operator00:46:32Thank you. Our next question is from Joe Bruehring with Baird. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 700:46:39Great. Thanks for taking my questions. The difference between 19% growth and fully ramped ARR and the 16% growth you're talking about a quarter ago, the implication for the net new value that's booked in 4Q, that's just very far above your original plan it would seem. And I wanted to put a finer point on what drove that. John just made the comment that you're getting more full suite deals. Speaker 700:47:08Did you originally pencil in that some of these deals in 4Q were maybe modules and not full suites? I think win rates came up. Did that skew more favorable and you ended up grabbing some deals maybe you weren't expecting? And then I wanted to ask just did any of the deals perhaps close a bit earlier, so there's simply a timing factor behind the 4Q strength? Speaker 600:47:34Yes. I think you highlighted a couple of the key components. I don't think that we had a very strong Q4, and we sometimes use the word run the table internally and we did our best to run the table. But I don't think there was anything there was certainly nothing that surprised us to say, oh man, I didn't think that was going to close until Q1 or Q2. So it was pretty typical in that fashion. Speaker 600:48:02We are just seeing a willingness, whereas 2 years ago we weren't seeing this willingness. We're seeing kind of starting small a little bit more and see how it goes then make a big commitment. And I think we're seeing a bit more willingness to make a big commitment at the outset. I think from an insurer's perspective, they can put the most muscle behind the negotiation in that outcome. But they feel confident that the platform that we have is ready to support those big programs, and we're seeing that willingness more today than certainly were 2 years ago. Speaker 600:48:36And we saw this last Q4, but we didn't want to assume that was a trend, right, because that was a very big quarter for us. But we backed it up with another very strong Q4. Speaker 700:48:49That's great. And then one thing I wanted to reconcile. So bigger average deals and customers going all in upfront, I think a lot of folks hear that and think it's a bigger carrier that's doing it. But I think I heard this right, 13 of the 16 cloud deals this quarter came from tiers 2 through 4. So I'm just wondering if maybe the strategy you've outlined is actually resonating more down market than maybe it has up into this point. Speaker 700:49:28And does that actually drive even better referenceability for you going forward? Your mind share is well established in Tier 1 and Tier 2, but are you starting to see the needle move more meaningfully down market? Speaker 400:49:44I'd say, number 1, Tier 2 is a big span of carriers. So there's Tier 2 can be split into kind of 3 or 4 different segments within it. So happy that in those Tier 2 deals we talked about that 2 of them sit towards the higher end of the Tier 2. So, that's good. It's resonating at that Tier 2 level. Speaker 400:50:06It's resonating down market. The how then do we think about Tier 1? And I would say Tier 1 still works very specifically as its own proof points, very specific proof points getting in and doing proofs of concept and digging in deep technically. The thing that has resonated since the day I got here is the deeper a customer goes, the better we come out in the analysis. And so Tier 2 has got a lot of referenceability. Speaker 400:50:34And even at this point, some movement of professionals across carriers where that is not just referenceability, but portability of relationship, which is really powerful. And more and more as we dig in deeper with the Tier 1s and we're running proofs of concept and very specific deep conversations on it, We're now very importantly well past the technical proof points. And as Mike said in the earlier answer, we're really into what's the best business timing, the best business outcome for the backlog of work that they might have in other arena and also for the business drivers that they want to put in the marketplace. So it's moving well. Tier 2 is a very portable conversation across all parts of Tier 2. Speaker 400:51:16Tier 1, again, still very specific to each Speaker 100:51:22Tier 1 carrier. Operator00:51:27Our next question is from Alex Sklar with Raymond James. Speaker 300:51:33Great. Thank you. John, first one for you, just following up on Dylan's question on the Tier 1 customers, but maybe asking it slightly different way. Has anything changed in terms of the conversations there indicating more of a willingness from the top to standardize across like all commercial lines of business or all personal lines of business? Or does it still feel like it's a pretty separate line of business by line of business decision? Speaker 300:51:56Thanks. Speaker 400:51:58It's very specifically still a line of business by line of business conversation. And we're okay with that because we know the depth of Proofpoint, we're going to have to dig in those and prove it out and expand from there, which gives us tremendous amount of long term opportunity. But for good or for bad, and it is, I think, good because it allows us to go deeper, it's very specific two lines of business or specific products. Speaker 300:52:26Okay, great. Thanks. And then Jeff, one for you. Just the smoothing of quarterly bookings is something that you've kind of had a lot of success with over this past year, landing earlier in the year upfront. Any change to how you're thinking about seasonality as we go into this upcoming year? Speaker 600:52:41Yes, we had a we did a lot of work on that and then we had a blowout Q4. So, I mean, look, I think we saw this pretty typical linearity for us. Certainly, the team did a lot of work in Q1, Q2 and Q3 to put us in a very strong position. And so I think we're continuing to work hard to make sure that we don't rely on Herculean Q4s, given the size of our sales team and the vertical that we focus on. And I think the team is doing a really good job. Speaker 600:53:16So I would expect kind of Speaker 400:53:18as I look at this year similarly. I'll add one point to linearity is it's in large part been due to the execution of the team and focusing on our smoothing. But the real benefit of linearity is timing more of our financial activities up to our customers and the market's financial activities, allowing for our Q2 to become an increasingly important quarter for us times us up better for planning when we look at ourselves through the customer's lens. Speaker 300:53:47All right. Thank you both for that. Operator00:53:52Our next question is from Matt VanVliet with BTIG. Speaker 1000:54:01I guess wanted to touch on the partner community, especially on the services side of it. Our conversations continue to talk about improving relationship there and a lot better communication back and forth. But I guess, John, where do you feel like you're at in terms of the plan you've implemented? Obviously knowing both sides of the house now very well? Is there still more work to be done or is it just a matter of continuing to execute on the plans in place and just sort of incremental changes here and there? Speaker 400:54:32Yes. Thanks for the question. The work ahead is, if you look at it from a distance, it's very much more of the same. But if you dig into regional specificity, it becomes the next round of focus for us, which is Europe and Asia Pacific, Japan in particular, have very specific and different needs and some different requirements of partnership there. And so, we're working very specifically now with our managing directors in each region to make sure that we've got the right strategic plan for go to market and also the right services plan for collaboration. Speaker 400:55:08The piece that I don't think changes at all is the foundational elements of how we work together on programs and how we continue to invest in making sure that the SIs can sit in that driver seat of the program to bring scale increased scale and predictability to the community. So more of the same, but really pleased with how that progressed over this last year. Speaker 1000:55:27Yes, very helpful. And then maybe dovetailing a little bit on the ability to expand more quickly as more customers are on GWCP. When we look at it from sort of the marketplace and some of your technology partners out there, how are you balancing that element of cultivating a lot more partners, getting into very specific use cases or even very regionally dependent items versus building out more of that internally now that you have the majority of your customers either on or on the path to being on essentially one version of the platform? Speaker 300:56:06Yes, this is a tough strategic question. And I think the way I think about this is that we want to create the ecosystem that our customers would want from us as a vendor, right? They want to have choices. They want to have Guidewire produce something that has a degree of openness to it that enables people to connect safely and securely and reliably into the cloud system that we serve. And then we also will have objectives about what we build and what we sell and what we deliver 1st party. Speaker 300:56:46And they'll be we're not going to be able to do everything. We are certainly going to do more. We are like I said, we're in a really good position strategically to provide more and more value to our customer base in this industry, and we'll have a product strategy that we will attempt to be open about. And maybe from time to time, there will be overlap with partners. But you basically want to have that dynamic if you are a customer of Guidewire, and that's how I try to think about how we should approach building that ecosystem. Speaker 300:57:23And at the end of the day, if we keep creating a, call it, a community of customers on our cloud, that's going to create a very large opportunity for InsurTechs and technology partners to connect into Guidewire and build applications that integrate with us. And I think that's going to be great for our whole ecosystem. And so that's how I think about it. It's a complicated thing to manage and work through every single use case, but at a high level, that's how we're approaching it. Speaker 600:57:57All right, great. Thank you. Operator00:58:02Thank you. Our next question is from Aaron Kimson with Citizens JMP. Please proceed with your question. Speaker 400:58:10Great. Thanks for the questions. Would it be fair to classify the current state of the P and C end market as a bit Speaker 600:58:16of a golden age for your customers who Speaker 400:58:18are simultaneously in a robust hard market and have high interest rates to reinvest the flow? If so, how do you think about the sustainability of the end market strength as it flows through the guide wire on both the hard market piece and if we start to see rate cuts? Speaker 300:58:33Yes. I would say that the thing I love about serving this industry is how durable it is. And John said, there's going to be hard markets, there's going to be softer markets, there's going to be changes. Fundamentally, what I want to deliver to this industry is agility. I want to enable them to operate their companies more efficiently, make decisions faster, adjust changing dynamics as quickly as they need to, And core systems and Guidewire provided core systems can do that in a unique way. Speaker 300:59:14That's what I see and that's what's nice about serving this market is that there is a need for this and this industry is very durable. So I don't yes, things may be going in a positive direction for the insurance industry. The outlook may be improving, but that I don't want people to think that we imagine a day in which all that reverses, right? I just think that there's such a huge opportunity to help modernize this industry, and the industry is going to continue to operate and grow steadily over, I would imagine, at least the next 10 to 20 years. It creates a very it just creates a great opportunity for Guidewire, Whether or not the current kind of conditions right now are great, that's wonderful, right? Speaker 301:00:06But I still think that whether or not it's interest rates or risk or premium, this industry is just going to stay durable and it's going to continue to need to be modernized. And so that's how I think about making plans for Guidewire is how do we serve this industry for the next 10 or 20 years. Speaker 401:00:26That's really helpful. Thank you. And then the second question I have is, it's now been 9.5 months since you talked about wanting to be more opportunistic around M and A. Yet you spoke today and last quarter pretty poignantly about organic product investments. What are you seeing in private market valuation expectations? Speaker 401:00:42And has your outlook on organic versus inorganic investment changed over the last few quarters? Speaker 301:00:49Yes. We are certainly in a position to be able to consider M and A more seriously than we have in the past, right? The strength of our business improving and the customer base increasing, just the durability of our business improving makes it more and more possible for us to approach inorganic growth, okay? But we are also very careful. We want to ensure that we get the right price and we get the right technology and we get the right culture and we get the right team and it fits in with Guidewire. Speaker 301:01:30And so we I think we have something very special at Guidewire right now in terms of just a software company and looking at the overall landscape. And I don't want to put that at risk. And so we're going to be very careful. So yes, we are more open to it and we are looking more aggressively, but I'm also pretty picky. We are also pretty picky, and we want to make sure that we do it correctly. Speaker 301:01:55And I also want people to understand that I have a high degree of confidence that we can build product at Guidewire. We can execute. We have proven over the past 5 years that we can build software and execute effectively. And so we may choose in certain categories to build product organically, and that will take us a little while to build it, but we'll I have a high degree of confidence we'll execute. So I guess that's how I would think about it. Speaker 301:02:24Don't put me on a clock to do M and A. We're open to it, but we're not it's not necessary for us to reach our long term ambitions. Operator01:02:41There are no further questions at this time. I think I'd like to hand the floor back over to Mike Rosenbaum for any closing comments. Speaker 301:02:48I just wanted to say thank you to everybody at Guidewire who put in all the work to deliver a great year. I appreciate everybody joining us on the call today and look forward to seeing you, if possible, at our Analyst Day in New York or maybe connections a little bit later in the year. So, thanks for joining everybody.Read moreRemove AdsPowered by