NYSE:RDDT Reddit Q4 2024 Earnings Report $96.04 +0.66 (+0.70%) Closing price 04/17/2025 03:59 PM EasternExtended Trading$96.12 +0.07 (+0.07%) As of 04/17/2025 06:22 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 Reddit EPS ResultsActual EPS$0.36Consensus EPS $0.24Beat/MissBeat by +$0.12One Year Ago EPSN/AReddit Revenue ResultsActual RevenueN/AExpected Revenue$405.06 millionBeat/MissN/AYoY Revenue GrowthN/AReddit Announcement DetailsQuarterQ4 2024Date2/12/2025TimeAfter Market ClosesConference Call DateWednesday, February 12, 2025Conference Call Time5:00PM ETUpcoming EarningsReddit's Q1 2025 earnings is scheduled for Thursday, May 1, 2025, with a conference call scheduled at 5:00 PM ET. Check back for transcripts, audio, and key financial metrics as they become available.Q1 2025 Earnings ReportConference Call ResourcesConference Call AudioConference Call TranscriptPress Release (8-K)Annual Report (10-K)Earnings HistoryCompany ProfilePowered by Reddit Q4 2024 Earnings Call TranscriptProvided by QuartrFebruary 12, 2025 ShareLink copied to clipboard.There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon. My name is Krista, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Reddit's Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Earnings Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Operator00:00:31Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Jesse Rose, Head of Investor Relations. Jesse, you may begin your conference. Speaker 100:00:41Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Rite Aid's fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four earnings conference call. Joining me today are Steve Hoffman, Rite Aid's Co Founder and CEO Jen Wong, Reddit's COO and Drew Valero, Reddit's CFO. Before we get started, I'd like to remind you that our remarks today will include forward looking statements and actual results may vary materially from those contemplated by these forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:07Information concerning risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause these results to differ is included in our SEC filings. These forward looking statements represent our outlook only as of the date of this call. We undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward looking statements. During this call, we will discuss both GAAP and non GAAP financial measures. Reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP financial measures is set forth in our letter to shareholders. Speaker 100:01:35Our fourth quarter letter to shareholders and accompanying earnings press release are available on our Investor Relations website, investor.redditinc.com and Investor Relations subreddit, rrdt. And now, I'll turn the call over to Steve. Speaker 200:01:50Thanks, Jesse. Hi, everyone. Thank you for joining and welcome to our Q4 earnings call. The fourth quarter marked the end of a milestone year for Reddit, our first as a public company. In 2024, we surpassed a distinct amount of across 100,000,000 DAUQs and gained traction in several new countries around the world. Speaker 200:02:09Over nearly two decades, our users have created a trove of knowledge about all aspects of the human experience, making Reddit one of the largest repositories of human generated information online. And we're using AI to make this content accessible to everyone. Machine translation is rolling out in eight languages with more on the way and is enabling international users to participate in their favorite communities and find the information they seek. International growth is critical to our goal of Reddit being a global platform. For the second consecutive quarter, we are GAAP profitable with total revenue growing 71% year over year and 3.5 times faster than our total costs. Speaker 200:02:51Our advertising customers are diversifying across industries, objectives and geographies as more brands tap into Reddit's unique ability to grow their business. Over 40% of Internet users consider recommendations on Reddit the most influential factor in purchasing decisions, surpassing expert reviews, influencer endorsements, and aggregated star ratings. Reddit conversations are where interests meet intent. They inform purchase decisions and offer valuable spaces for brands to connect with people looking for trustworthy opinions. We finished the year with 101,700,000.0 DAUQ, marking 39% growth year over year, led by strong international growth at 46%. Speaker 200:03:36Additionally, logged in users grew 27% and they've grown at this rate or higher every quarter for the last year and have maintained a steady upward trend for the last two years. Late in Q4, we did experience some volatility from Google Search triggered by a periodic algorithm change, but traffic from search has recovered so far in Q1 and we've regained momentum. What happened wasn't unusual. Referrals from search fluctuate from time to time and they primarily affect logged out users. Our teams have navigated many algorithm updates over the years and did an excellent job adapting to these latest changes effectively. Speaker 200:04:15This particular swing was interesting because along with it, we saw a corresponding increase in the query term Reddit, which suggests users are searching with the specific intent of reaching Reddit, and this propensity continues to rise. We typically see two types of users on Reddit, those who scroll and those who Scrollers engage with Reddit for its core community and conversation product, while seekers come to or end up on Reddit for answers to their questions. Just a few years ago, adding Reddit to the end of your search query felt novel. Today, it's a common way for people to find trusted information, recommendations, and advice. Regardless of why or where a user starts their journey, they should have a seamless path to discovering what they need on Reddit. Speaker 200:05:06These search trends provide insight into what we should prioritize. To improve the experience for seekers, we're focused on making on platform search a truly first class product and the go to place to find information on Reddit. In The U. S, we launched the beta for Reddit Answers, an AI powered search tool that provides curated summaries of community discussions. Although it's still in its early stages, it's already proven versatile as people turn to it for everything from local updates about the LA wildfires to opinions on the best coffee maker. Speaker 200:05:41When it comes to answers, we see that Reddit excels at providing insightful responses to questions with subjective answers that are difficult to find elsewhere. It's currently only available in English, but we're excited about how people are using it and the early promise of this product. Human perspectives have never been more important, and we've updated our mission statement to reflect this. Our updated mission is to empower communities and make their knowledge accessible to all. This captures both our work in creating a platform for community and for using Reddit as a source for knowledge. Speaker 200:06:18With this mission as our guide, we are focused on making Reddit faster, easier, and better to use, whether you're an avid user or a first time visitor deciding, for example, what backpack to buy. Our role is to enable any community to exist and thrive on Reddit by helping make them useful, accessible, and well moderated. By strengthening our unique community model, we ensure that Reddit is for everyone, everywhere. Thank you again for being a part of this journey. Together, we are building a platform that connects the world through shared knowledge and perspectives. Speaker 200:06:53And with that, I'll pass it to Jen. Speaker 300:06:55Thanks, Steve. Hello, everyone. It was a strong quarter and finish to the year for Reddit. Our unique proposition and core platform improvements continue to drive differentiated growth and positive outcomes for advertisers. Total revenue in Q4 grew 71% year over year to $428,000,000 And for the full year, revenue grew 62% year over year to $1,300,000,000 In Q4, the advertising business grew 60% year over year to $395,000,000 driven by broad based strength across objectives, channels, verticals and geographies. Speaker 300:07:36Let me discuss our ad revenue drivers in more detail. Our strategy is to be a multi objective ad platform and in Q4, we grew across the funnel. We saw strength in brand advertising, top of the funnel revenue growing the fastest rate in over three years. Mid and lower funnel revenue accounted for about 60% of total ad revenue and drove more than half of the year over year growth in the quarter. Across channels, our scaled business, which includes mid market and SMB advertisers continues to be a growth driver as we are activating new advertisers across both The U. Speaker 300:08:17S. And EMEA regions and tuning our product set to better address these performance oriented advertisers. We saw broad growth across verticals with 10 of our top 15 verticals growing over 50% year over year led by finance, retail, auto, pharma, gaming and tech. Across geographies, international ad revenue grew 77% year over year, the fastest growth in over two years and led by The UK and broader EMEA regions. We saw double digit year over year growth in impressions from underlying user growth, personalized ad loads, deeper engagement and improved monetization of the conversation page, while pricing was mostly consistent with the prior year. Speaker 300:09:06Average impressions per user increased year over year as we benefited from ad placement and brand safety optimization work from prior periods. The ads and comments placement contributed about three percent of impressions in the quarter. We continue to test this new format and expect this could reach up to mid single digits percentage in the near term. Revenue from the Cyber five week during the holiday period grew over 60% year over year. This was driven by a combination of first time brands and existing retail customers who increased their spend with us. Speaker 300:09:39Now moving to our ad stack, we continue to focus on one, driving performance of our ad solutions across objectives two, improving usability for our advertisers and productivity for our sales force and three, offering our advertisers ready unique solutions in ad formats. We made meaningful progress against each of these areas in Q4. First, driving performance of our ad solutions. We continue to improve the contextual relevance of ads on the conversation page, which drives higher conversion volume and performance revenue. In Q4, we doubled click volume for the fourth consecutive quarter and also doubled conversion volume in the second half of the year versus the first half. Speaker 300:10:24We also continue driving CAFE conversion API adoption with onboarding improvements and new integration partnerships. The share of conversion revenue covered by CAPI tripled in the second half of twenty twenty four versus the prior year. Advertisers see a 25% reduction in cost per action when they adopt CAPI with Pixel compared to Pixel only. Second, improving usability for our advertisers and productivity for our sales force. Over the course of the year, we've launched capabilities across two categories. Speaker 300:10:58The first is our ads manager where we recently improved our report center to provide advertisers with deeper historical trends, comparative attribution windows and keyword breakdowns to optimize targeting strategy. Next is how we continue to invest in GenAI as a driver of productivity and performance. In 2024, we launched our AI Headline Generator and acquired Memorable AI, both of which are driving more adoption for mid market and SMB advertisers, enabling dynamic campaign creation and providing more predictive insights into creative performance. We recently launched an LOM powered ad review system, which increases automated ad review by 70% and decreases review time from thirty minutes to one minute, enabling advertisers to run campaigns faster while also improving ad quality and safety. We also expanded brand safety measurements to both IAS and Double Verify. Speaker 300:11:49With the IAS launch in Q4, we tested the solution against more than 500,000,000 impressions in North America and found Reddit to be over 99% brand safe. And third, offering advertisers Reddit unique solutions and formats. We are developing products that leverage Reddit's community intelligence that can help businesses grow insights, Reddit Pro trends and advertising solutions that leverage community signals. As we announced at CES, we began testing Reddit Pro trends, a tool that helps businesses uncover real time insights and build an organic presence on Reddit. To date, we've seen thousands of advertisers adopt Reddit Pro and seeing participating companies posting and engaging more on the site within communities. Speaker 300:12:36Next, I'll shift to our content licensing business. Britics content is a unique source of authentic insights and perspectives that is valuable to our users, advertisers, researchers and our content licensing partners. In Q4, we entered into a partnership with InterContinental Exchange to develop new data and analytics products for the financial industry. This partnership explores a new market vertical for our content licensing business and connects anonymous conversations on Reddit with InterContinental Exchange's infrastructure to provide financial customers with insights into market trends and sentiment. More broadly, we remain diligent about who we partner with and we will do so when it's complementary to our business. Speaker 300:13:17And we are investing in building our own products around our content, including Reddit Answers and Reddit Pro that reveal the authentic insights and recommendations that are unique to Reddit. Okay. Looking ahead, I'm pleased with the progress we are making in building a multi objective ad platform that enables businesses of all types and sizes to be successful on Reddit. Our opportunity is as big as ever. Reddit covers every topic and interest and we believe every business can find value on Reddit. Speaker 300:13:48The ad market feels healthy and we're monitoring events that could impact the broader industry and the evolving EU privacy landscape. I believe we're well positioned heading into 2025 and I'm excited about our roadmap. In the year ahead, we'll focus on three areas that build on our progress to date. First, delivering more Reddit unique experiences and communicating value across objectives. This includes bringing more ML optimization to our brand objectives as well as Reddit unique formats that bring in more context and engagement from communities and more product catalog features for shopping. Speaker 300:14:21We believe all of this work can augment performance. Second, bringing more automation to our ad stack. We're in the early stages of exploring end to end automation across our performance objective. We believe this can help drive performance and lower the barrier to adoption while enabling us to continue to sustain our high marks in customer service. Third, continuing to grow and diversify our advertiser base. Speaker 300:14:46We've made good progress diversifying the business, broadening verticals, having customers use multiple objectives and adding more advertisers, all of which increase the resiliency of our business. We believe there's significant opportunity to bring many more advertisers to Reddit by lead generation efforts like Reddit Pro, partnerships, easier onboarding with features like dynamic creation and campaign import and then retaining these advertisers with strong performance outcomes. Overall, I'm proud of our progress and excited about the opportunity we have to continue growing our share and driving outcomes for advertisers. Thanks for joining and for your continued support. Speaker 400:15:24Now, I'll turn the call over to Drew. Thank you, Jen, and good afternoon, everyone. Q4 was a strong ending to a solid opening year for Reddit. Once again, Q4 was our highest revenue quarter of the year, driven by five key financial story lines that have been consistent throughout 2024. They are specifically, first, growing revenues faster than peers. Speaker 400:15:44Revenues grew 71% for the quarter. Second, scaling profitably. Adjusted EBITDA hit $154,000,000 in Q4 and GAAP net income reached $71,000,000 Third, expanding margins. Gross margins hit 92.6% in Q4. Adjusted EBITDA margin hit 36% and our net income margin was 17%. Speaker 400:16:07In the quarter, our incremental adjusted EBITDA margin was 74%. Fourth, generating positive cash flow. Operating cash flow reached $90,000,000 and free cash flow margin was 21%. We had positive cash flow all four quarters in 2024. And fifth, minimizing dilution. Speaker 400:16:27Total diluted shares actually fell sequentially to $206,200,000 in Q4. Our earnings per share more than doubled from Q3 helped by a stable share count. Let me provide a little more color on these highlights. First, Q4 revenues of $428,000,000 grew 71% year over year driven by a ramp in ad revenue, which grew 60% year over year in Q4, up 4% sequentially. By region, The U. Speaker 400:16:55S. Grew 70% and international grew 76%, marking the first time international growth outpaced U. S. Growth since mid-twenty twenty three. For the quarter, let me summarize three key drivers for revenue acceleration. Speaker 400:17:10First, we're continuing to see success with our revenue investments, which include building new products for our ad platform or adding new sales team members to increase customer coverage. Second, we saw a strong gain in ad impressions, while overall ad pricing was pretty consistent with last year. Impression gains remain our primary objective and these increases were driven by user growth, improved ad click through rates and new ad surfaces like comments. And third, we saw strength across the ad funnel, led by high double digit growth rates from performance advertisements, which now comprise slightly less than 60% of our revenue. For the year, revenue ended at $1,300,000,000 up 62%. Speaker 400:17:57Now on the cost side, total adjusted cost growth was 21%. In Q4, similar to Q3, but some notable differences in two key areas: cloud hosting costs and hiring pace. Let me comment on each. In Q4, we signed revised agreements with our key hosting providers, which positively benefited gross margins over 150 basis points this quarter, a key factor in driving our gross margins to 92.6%. Over time, we continue to see both cost opportunities and challenges in the future for gross margins. Speaker 400:18:32We believe these new arrangements will likely serve to help offset future cost increases, which we could see from increased user growth, machine learning investments or new initiatives like search. For the full year, gross margins were 90.5%. The second area worth a brief mention was hiring pace, which accelerated slightly in the quarter, driven by our growth investments in ad tech, sales and search. Total headcount was up 5% sequentially and 11% for the year. We ended the year with 2,233 heads, up slightly more than 200 people net for the year. Speaker 400:19:10Differentiated revenue growth and modest cost growth meant we were GAAP profitable again in Q4 and a key focus is to turn profitability into cash flow. Q4 cash flow was $90,000,000.107000000 dollars change from a year ago. For the full year, operating cash flow was $222,000,000 Our CapEx remained very light, less than 1% in the quarter excuse me, less than $1,000,000 in the quarter, less than 0.5% of revenue. Free cash flow for Q4 was $89,000,000 and $216,000,000 Speaker 200:19:42for the year. Cash in Speaker 400:19:44the balance sheet ended at $1,840,000,000 up $96,000,000 sequentially. The total number of diluted shares outstanding in Q4 was 206,200,000 down 1% sequentially and only up 1.1% for the year, excluding the IPO, well below our 2% to 3% dilution target. Shares were slightly lower, driven in part by a net settlement of a portion of employee vested shares as well. Stock based compensation in Q4 was $97,000,000 about 23% of revenue, in line with peers at this scale, but slightly lower than the prior slightly higher than the prior quarter reflecting a full quarter of expense from our annual performance grants, the accelerated hiring pace and increases in taxes from stock vesting and exercises. In the fourth quarter, net income was $71,000,000 or $0.4 per basic share and $0.36 per diluted share. Speaker 400:20:38EPS more than doubled from the prior quarter, where basic earnings per share was $0.18 and diluted earnings per share was $0.16 As we look ahead, we'll share our internal thoughts on revenue and adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter, which is where we have the greatest visibility. In the first quarter of twenty twenty five, we estimate revenue in the range of $360,000,000 to $370,000,000 representing 48% to 52% year over year revenue growth with a midpoint of 50% Adjusted EBITDA in the range of $80,000,000 to $90,000,000 representing approximately 700% to 800% growth. In Q1, we could see slightly elevated sequential SBC costs due to higher employer taxes depending on share price volatility. So Q4 was an important proof point for the medium and long term financial goals we outlined in our last call. Simply put, we are focused on scaling profitably and turning differentiated revenue growth, high margins and low CapEx into meaningful cash flow generation. Speaker 400:21:43We delivered on all those dimensions in the fourth quarter, but there is much more to do and many more opportunities for progress. As we enter 2025, these financial goals will remain our North Star. We've seen the positive impact revenue growth can have on our financial performance. The keys to continued differentiated revenue growth will be innovation and execution as they were in 2024. That concludes my comments. Speaker 400:22:06Now let me turn the call back over to Steve. Speaker 200:22:08Okay. Thanks, Drew. Thanks, Jen. So, we posted in the RDDT subreddit as we have in past quarters to get questions from the community from our user investors. We will take a couple of those questions now. Speaker 200:22:24Again, we do this because we want to include our user investors in as many of these formal conversations as possible alongside the pros. Jen Drew and I will also record answers to many more of the questions after our call today. Those will be posted tomorrow morning in that subreddit. Okay. First question is for you, Jen. Speaker 200:22:45I've noticed a substantial increase in the quality and quantity of ads since Q3. How focused are you on developing new types of ads going forward and how could these potentially differentiate Reddit from other platforms? Speaker 300:22:59Thanks for your question. When we think about building ad formats, we always want to leverage what's unique about Reddit. And I think about two things. One is community intelligence, the trove of opinions and recommendations that are on Reddit that are really trusted and the engagement and interest on Reddit. So you saw that in last year we launched the placement, ads and comments. Speaker 300:23:24This page is growing in engagement. It's early, but we like what we're seeing there in terms of performance. So we're excited about that placement. In terms of formats, I'm excited to work on enhancing our AMAs or Ask Me Anything. That's very unique to Reddit where there's a two way engagement and conversation between brand and our community. Speaker 300:23:47Also excited about shopping, more work in terms of product level creative and dynamic product optimization. And then finally, it's something we've long excited to wanted to do, which is bringing in signals from the community and their perspectives into ads to provide more context. And I think all of the above can augment both brand and conversion performance and we're excited about the work to come. Speaker 200:24:16Okay. Thanks. Jen or excuse me, Drew, second question is for you. Q4 showed strong profitability, but full year 2024 still ended in a major loss. How confident is Reddit in maintaining or expanding profitability in 2025? Speaker 400:24:33Thanks for the question. Really like the question. GAAP profitability is something that really matters and we're focused on that. I think let me divide the question in a couple of parts. Let's talk about the $484,000,000 loss total in 2024. Speaker 400:24:48I think if you double click on that, you'll see that we lost $575,000,000 in the first quarter. That really was sort of an isolated incident. We took a $595,000,000 accounting charge related to stock based compensation. What's happening there is you're recognizing your charges for the last multiple years. It's a catch up charge for the stock that you've been giving employees for a long time. Speaker 400:25:10So you can't expense that as a private company the way that we structured that stock. So we had all of those catch up charges. So that's really what drove the loss in 2024. The last three quarters, we were profitable on a cumulative basis. That's why when I look at sort of evaluating the health of a company, I'm always looking at three statements. Speaker 400:25:28I'm looking at the income statement that you're looking at. I'm always looking at the cash flow statement, the balance sheet. We provide an EBITDA metric as well. That also gives you a kind of a look on how the financials are going. We've been EBITDA profitable for the last three quarters. Speaker 400:25:41So I think those are the ways that I look at the business. In terms of the trends, I think they're good to us. As I mentioned, obviously, 71% revenue growth in the quarter. The margins are strong here. Revenue has been growing three to five times as fast as cost. Speaker 400:25:54Those are all good signs that the business is scaling in a very positive way. And then obviously, most importantly, we made $71,000,000 this quarter. Last quarter, we were GAAP profitable. We made about $30,000,000 So last couple of quarters, you're reaching scale on the business and watching the profitability in the Flex. So appreciate the question. Speaker 400:26:11Those are my thoughts, Steve. Speaker 100:26:13Great. Steve, Jen, Drew, thank you. Krista, why don't we take some questions from the folks on the line, please? Operator00:26:20Thank you. And your first question comes from the line of Ron Josey with Citi. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:26:41Great. Thanks for taking the questions. I had questions for, I guess, all three of you. But first and foremost, Steve and Jen, I want to ask about ready to answer. Just I wanted to hear about early results, maybe some insights on the rollout. Speaker 500:26:54And then what types of queries are you seeing with this more conversational search format? Clearly, there's a lot of data and insights to glean with the data on Reddit. So any insights on what you're seeing thus far in rollout? And then, Steve, you mentioned, sort of some insights or some changes in Google search algorithm. We'd love to hear any thoughts on what the change was. Speaker 500:27:15Was there any impact to engagement, maybe revenue? That would be helpful. Thank you. Speaker 200:27:20Okay. I'll take both of those. Thanks, Ron. Great to hear from you. Okay. Speaker 200:27:25So first, Reddit answers. So, we turned this on in December and it's basically a prototype. So it's a beta and the purpose of getting this online was to answer the question of actually kind of a couple of questions. How deep is Reddit's corpus and are there compelling answers to a broad set of questions? The answer to both of those tests is yes. Speaker 200:27:50I think we're off to a very promising start. I think even I am learning and excited at the depth of the answers here. For example, there are things that I could ask for good answers that I feel like I don't get good coverage elsewhere online. So I've done it with a number of authors. What's the best way to get started reading this author? Speaker 200:28:10And you get it turns out that question has been asked a million times for every author on Reddit. So you get nice annotated answers to that. The other one that I thought was really cool was I asked to tell me what the fan theories of Severance season one were in preparing for season two. And you get to kind of relive that whole conversations or those conversations that played out on Reddit three years ago. The thing that's interesting about it is the core product, the community and conversation product, you're really only interacting with like the last day, the last twenty four hours of content. Speaker 200:28:43But in those conversations for twenty years, our users have left this absolutely massive and deep corpus of information about everything. And so we're starting to unlock that with answers. Okay. So where is this going? We'll continue to iterate on this product, but really the work here right now answers is in the app from a separate place than search. Speaker 200:29:06Over time over this year, we actually want there to just be one product which is Reddit search that will help users navigate Reddit, find subreddits on Reddit and even answer subjective, hard, interesting questions. So, we want to bring all these things together, but we wanted to get this answers functionality out fast. And so that's why it came out as its own thing. So, I think just a ton of promise there. We're really excited about where that's going. Speaker 200:29:31Okay. Your second question, was about Google as a third party provider. Like these changes happen, they actually happen all the time. I'd say ballpark, twice a year, not the first, not the last. For us, it primarily affects logged out users in The U. Speaker 200:29:50S. And this one was particularly interesting because it really was a swing, down but then a recovery shortly thereafter. Happened right at the end of the quarter. What's kind of interesting during this one, the team recovered, I think adapted nice. We see these things for all sorts of different reasons. Speaker 200:30:09We did see an increase in the query term Reddit in our own search dashboard, which says that kind of despite what happens on the Google side, internet consumers broadly want to end up on Reddit. So, as we've mentioned, we started off Q1, I think on a great foot, both with our search traffic, and then also with the rest of our traffic. And I think in Q4, we grew in all the areas that count. Logged in users up 27% and it's been that way for over a year, international itself starting to pick up steam at 46%. So, we like where we're at and we like the way things look going forward. Operator00:30:56Your next question comes from the line of Justin Post with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:31:04Great. Thank you. A couple more follow ups on search, and then maybe one for Drew. Can the tools on Reddit do a lot more than what Google can do now? And then second, how do you think about those searches' commercial relevance? Speaker 600:31:19Is there a percentage or a thought about how much of that search content could be monetizable? It would be very interesting because you've given us the queries, which is really helpful. And then Drew, any thoughts on cost growth for the year? I don't know if Speaker 200:31:35you can give us anything on how Speaker 600:31:36you're thinking about headcount or any cost directions for the total year. Thank you. Speaker 200:31:41Okay. We'll do, me search, Jen, search monetization through cost. So the reason Reddit searches is interesting is because we're the only search provider who is focusing exclusively on Reddit. Right? Other search engines are general. Speaker 200:32:03They call the entire internet. And, you know, our relationship with Google has been really good and deep and continues to be symbiotic. But Reddit is one of many content providers on the internet. And what we know is that Reddit or internet users broadly want what's on Reddit. And what we're learning with answers is that there's even more on Reddit than I think we even believed six months ago for this type of behavior, the seeker behavior. Speaker 200:32:33And by focusing on Reddit specifically, we can do things like what we're doing in Reddit Answers, which is every fact that Reddit Answers responds with links to a specific Reddit comment that was written by a human being. And so, it's a set of highly annotated answers. And so you can read that sentence, get your answer, but you can also click on it and actually see the whole conversation. You can get the conversation about it. And so I think this is really, really interesting for things like recommendations, travel, advice, where there isn't an answer. Speaker 200:33:09There are lots of answers and there's lots of conversations about it. And there's an added benefit that we're seeing in answers which is after you read your answer at the bottom, you see where the answers came from. So there'll be a whole bunch of posts and there'll be a bunch of subreddits. And so it actually helps you expand your interests on Reddit. And so I was telling you before about the authors. Speaker 200:33:29I'm not going to name the authors, but, I've now joined the subreddits for a number of different authors. I found all these communities. I've been on Reddit for twenty years and I'm still finding new communities. So, just really excited about what we can do when we build something on Reddit specifically for Reddit. So, I think there's a kind of an opportunity in the market. Speaker 200:33:49Jen, do you want to take the commercial opportunity of search? Speaker 300:33:53Yeah. I mean, Reddit is actually inherently commercial in so many ways. About 40% of the posts are actually classified as like really commercial being about products and services. But in a lot of ways like joining an interest, starting skiing, I mean, that is commercial and that there's gear and things that you want as you start up an interest. So I think Reddit just naturally has that. Speaker 300:34:21What's interesting and exciting about Reddit Answers is this idea of recommendations. I think Reddit is a place where people are going to for specific recommendation on what to buy to make decisions. And what Reddit Answers does is reveals the recommendations in a way that shows what's the opinions across all of Reddit. And that's an incredible opportunity because that's if you think about search, search is incredibly high intent and people are really in the mindset of wanting to convert on that recommendation. So the more that we build experiences like Reddit answers that put people in a mindset of recommendations and thinking about what they want to buy, the bigger the opportunity is for us to provide to bring in a brand or a marketer to meet that demand and drive that into an action. Speaker 300:35:17If you think about what we're building, we're building shopping, right? Shopping is product level ad creative. We already have the foundation in keyword targeting, which is around contextual. Those two pieces allow us to create a monetization opportunity at the time that it makes sense. It's an early product test, but the foundation is there for us to monetize that intent as the product develops. Speaker 400:35:44Justin, on the cost side of things, I think we found a new level here in the last couple of quarters. If I look at kind of total adjusted costs, third quarter, fourth quarter, and then the guide here kind of in that 20% range, that's where the business has been in terms of year over year cost growth. We're not guiding further out than that because the revenue visibility isn't more than a quarter at this point. We're still at a place where we're within the quarter trying to earn about half of our business, right? And so it's hard for us Speaker 200:36:13to give a kind of Speaker 400:36:14a full year guide. But I think overall you have the places that we're investing in. I think the pace of hiring will probably be slightly accelerated from what it was the prior year. Last year we added a little bit more than 200. We're still hiring a little bit more on the engineering side. Speaker 400:36:27We're building a small search team here. So there will be investments there. But I also wanted to speak to there's a lot of in year discussions here. We could move the needle quickly on some of the sales investment projects that have helped accelerate our revenue growth. And so that's really dynamic information that we're looking at. Speaker 400:36:42So it's hard to kind of give a full year guide. But I think what you have from the company right now is kind of we've established over the last three quarters kind of growing costs about 20%. I do think we'll hire a little bit more than we did last year, but we do want the flexibility to make those in your investments. They've been driving the accelerated revenue that you've been seeing. We can snap them in quickly and make things happen. Operator00:37:04Your next question comes from the line of Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:37:11Great. Thank you for taking my question. Just a follow-up on Reddit Answers. Have you seen an impact on retention, on engagement or even on sort of logged in conversion? And longer term, does Reddit answer potentially alter the way you think about data licensing more broadly? Speaker 700:37:30And then just a quick one on sort of the year ahead, how do you think about the balance of U. S. User growth versus ARPU growth? And across the two, which one do you think you have the most visibility on? Thank you. Speaker 200:37:46Okay. Thanks, Ben. So on answers, I think too soon to tell on things like retention. It's only in English. It's not even on all platforms yet or it's just barely on all platforms. Speaker 200:38:00And so it's truly, right out the gate. So, we're more of testing kind of the technology and the potential from a product point of view. That's all looking very promising. I think if we were to explain how this would lead into retention, what I'm very excited about is the general user journey on Reddit is they're often coming to Reddit as seekers. So that's what I was talking about in my opening statement. Speaker 200:38:34They're often coming from Google with a question and then learning that Reddit has answers to their questions. I think helping the user be able to search directly on Reddit, refine their queries on Reddit, eventually come directly to Reddit for those types of queries, even integrating search into something like onboarding over time, I think would all be really interesting things for us to try as on platform search gets better and better. And so, I think it opens all sorts of doors. And just about everything we do on the product is in the name of improving retention. But I think the number one retention challenge for Reddit is a user shows up to Reddit and we help them find the perfect community or communities for them, well, that's a search problem. Speaker 200:39:26So, search will get at that over time. That's really the point. In terms of licensing, I think what you're seeing here is, we're still in the market, we're still working on various deals. We announced one with NYSE, I think just yesterday. And we're still talking to some of the big players as well. Speaker 200:39:48But we're also turning inward and looking at the opportunities for us to kind of capture the value of the data ourselves. And so again, that's how we arrive at something like Red Advantures. We're like, hey, this corpus is really amazing. Sure, we can help other people build good products and good models, but we can build the best product, our data, and that should be our focus as well. So, we're doing all of these things. Speaker 200:40:14So, yeah, we're still in the licensing business, but also I think very excited about all of the things that we can build on our data as well. And then in terms of user growth and ARPU growth, I'll spend ten seconds on users. Look, I think we still have a tremendous amount of opportunity on users. We haven't come I think close to tapping out in The U. S. Speaker 200:40:39Which is our most mature market and we're really getting off the ground in a number of countries around the world. Communities are universal. And so we see very high potential in building a product that is literally universe, right? Everybody belongs to communities. Everybody wants that feeling of belonging. Speaker 200:40:59Everybody has questions. Everybody's going through life's journey and those things are all on Reddit. The way we get there, is the things we've talked about performance, quality, some of these new products like search, which actually kind of touches on both of those things. And then of course, things like machine translation in our community or excuse me, country growth efforts around the world. I'll turn it over to Janda to talk about ARPU we're looking for. Speaker 300:41:23So, as we've mentioned before, we don't manage to ARPU. There's nobody who manages to it. It is just the revenue divided by the users. It did grow in Q4 nicely in both regions, The U. S. Speaker 300:41:39And rest of world. And there's a lot of headroom there. I mean, we know that that's an opportunity to grow over time. But the way we think about it is we're trying to grow revenue by continuing to expand our verticals, drive performance, make our ad platform easier so that we get more advertisers on it, driving more demand into our platform that grows our share as we continue to also grow users in parallel. Look, the ARPU in both The U. Speaker 300:42:06S. And rest of worldwide, they grew in Q4 are still very early. And the ARPU for the rest of world is, just a fraction of The U. S. So there's a lot of opportunity for growth there. Speaker 300:42:21But again, we think of it as really growing our revenue, growing our share and users in parallel. And you see that the user growth has been a really nice driver of value for us as well as some of the brand safety and the personalized ad load work. And there's a lot more there in addition to the ad format work that we did adding ads and comments. So there are a bunch there are a lot of different levers that we have for augmenting monetization. Operator00:42:52Your next question comes from the line of Brian Nowak with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:43:00Thanks for taking my questions. I have two, one for Steve, one for Jen. Steve, I wanted to sort of talk to you about the initiatives that you have in place to continue to convert the logged out users to logged in users. Maybe talk to us about where you've made the most progress in 2024? And as you look out to 2025, what are you focused on internally to sort of continue to convert the logged out to logged in? Speaker 800:43:23And then Jen, I know there's a lot of advertising initiatives in 2025. Can you just help us understand a little bit, when you look across your pipeline of products, what are some that are sort of the lowest hanging fruit areas of improvement versus areas where it is a little bit of a higher climb that could take a little longer to sort of manifest itself in the P and L? Thanks. Speaker 200:43:48Okay, Brian. Thanks for the questions. So, log out to log in. So, big picture of the way that we think about it is, Reddit is universal. And let's start with The U. Speaker 200:44:01S. First. If Reddit has a community for everybody and it does, then why isn't everybody on Reddit? Well, I think there's two reasons. Either they haven't heard of Reddit, which is increasingly less likely or they've tried Reddit and it didn't work for them. Speaker 200:44:18That is the cohort of users that we are focused on. And so those users are either coming from external search like Google or they're coming to Reddit's front door, right? They're going to reddit.com or they're opening the app. Those folks who come direct and log out, that is where we are the most aggressive because what they're saying to us in that moment is, I am open to joining this platform. And so the work we've done there that's been most effective is we've made it much, much easier to log in. Speaker 200:44:51It used to be very hard. We used to lose 80% of our sign ups on the choose a username stuff. It was a neat grind. It's much, much smoother now. You can log in and register with an email, with a phone number, with Google or Apple. Speaker 200:45:08So really, really fast login and then much improved onboarding from there. So what are your interests? And we get you into the home feed. Our ML in the home feed, our ability to take your interests and expand them or show you more related sub rates, that's gotten much better. So that's kind of now the top driver of for users to join a new communities on Reddit and that's the number one driver for retention. Speaker 200:45:36So, that stuff has been working very well in 2024. Now, if you're coming from search, we actually used to be more aggressive. You come from Google, we'd say, hey, you know, download the app, log in. That is a classic case of it works in the short term, it moves the numbers and it doesn't work in the long term. It annoys people, it makes them mad and it actually tapers off. Speaker 200:46:02So we actually go the other direction. If you're coming from search, we want to give you the answers, right? We're trying to make our customers happy. What are they there for? Answers. Speaker 200:46:11Give them answers. They're not looking to join a community in that moment. And so our work there and looking forward is can we make Reddit amazing at giving them answers? So that's things like literally Reddit answers, that specialized landing pages for seekers. That's having Reddit search itself be amazing, so users can learn that they can ask these specific questions on Reddit. Speaker 200:46:33This idea of building products for the seekers, not just the scrollers is so important to us that we expanded our mission to include it. So that's what I mentioned in my opening remarks, empower communities and make their knowledge accessible to all. So a lot of what we're doing requires us to think about each of these use cases specifically. So that's what leads to logging in, that's what leads in the higher retention. Okay, Jen, the question was about what's the easy stuff, what's the hard stuff in 2025? Speaker 300:47:05Yes. In terms of the roadmap, things that are I think more lower hanging fruit, I mean, things that we know work, right? ML, applying ML optimization, applying models to brand, which we don't do extensively today that has worked so well in performance. I think applying that to brand, can deliver really significant performance for our advertisers. We know that formula works. Speaker 300:47:31So really applying ML for opto. Second is measurement. There's work that you want to do around conversion modeling, really getting credit for the value that we're driving. That's really important moving to industry standard there. So you'll see us do that work. Speaker 300:47:49And then finally, creative optimization. The work that you do in optimizing variance and creative can have such a significant impact on performance and that's something you grind away at forever frankly. But that also is I think an opportunity for us. It's not an area that we spent that much time on so far, but we're excited to do that this year. The rest of our roadmap I think is again, the Azro Mac is about continuous improvement in terms of ease of use, in terms of performance for our advertisers and in terms of Reddit unique opportunities and you'll see us continue to grind away. Operator00:48:29Your next question comes from the line of Rich Greenfield with LightShed Partners. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:48:37Hi. Thanks for taking the question. I got a few that I think are some of the key questions investors are concerned about. What exactly did Google change in the algorithm? I think there's been a lot of view that sort of Google loves Reddit and was sort of prioritizing Reddit. Speaker 900:48:51So what exactly changed? And I guess, Steve, how do you get comfort or confidence that future changes are not going to be more problematic than this one? I think, Steve, you said that the Google change was mostly logged out users. I assume that means this had very minimal, if not no impact on revenue, but if you could qualify around that, that would be great. And then just given your comments about DAU growth resuming in Q1, As we think about that, is there any way you could sort of give us what was Q4 adjusted for the Google algorithm change so we could see what the underlying growth is to think about what the implication is for Q1? Speaker 900:49:26I apologize for the three questions, but thanks for taking. Speaker 200:49:30All good. Thanks, Rich. Okay. What did Google change? I have my suspicions, but it's not my place to say, but I'm not worried about it. Speaker 200:49:37Number two, assume no revenue impact sorry, assume no revenue impact. Correct, no revenue impact. And three, what was the adjusted Dow in Q4, what's it look like in Q1? Look, I can't put specific numbers on it, but I don't think we'd be having this conversation, if not for the swing there and we feel very good about the pace that we're on in Q1. Like I said, look, we see volatility from Google all the time as does everybody. Speaker 200:50:08You can read the blogs a couple of times a year. Our relationship with them is great. We collaborate in a number of ways, including how they can continue to call us better. So there's zero concern from us in this department. Operator00:50:24Your next question comes from the line of Ken Garelsky with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:50:31Thank you very much. Two, if I may. First, could we talk maybe Jen about as you think about your initiatives to grow the advertiser account, could you talk about the progress you've made maybe in the back half of twenty twenty four and initiatives maybe you have in place in 2025 and 2026 to grow that advertiser count, including maybe focus on the self serve side? And then the second is, I just want to go back to the search aspect and maybe approach from a different angle, which is the intent and signal that it may drive across the platform. Could you talk a little bit about the power of search and maybe even the power of getting growing engagement on the answers platform and its ability to drive improved conversion and intent across the rest of the platform? Speaker 1000:51:30Thank you very much. Speaker 300:51:32So I can take the first one about active advertisers. So, we continue to see really healthy year over year and quarter over quarter growth. We saw that in Q4 for our monthly active advertiser account. So that diversification continues. Again, there's many more advertisers that can be on the platform, but we're pleased with the progress there. Speaker 300:51:55What's unlocking that is a combination of things. One, our focus on ease of use, in terms of the onboarding, in terms of activation, just making it much more simple to activate things like a GenAI headline generator just takes the friction out of getting creative up and running on the platform, automating, you know, being able to optimize for like max clicks or lowest cost click, those kinds of semi automations allow smaller advertisers to get on the platform. As a reminder, our strategy is not focused on self serve right now. We do have a very nicely growing scaled business at mid market in SMB, but they are managed. They're managed in that we do give them some treatment, very light treatment to help them through the process. Speaker 300:52:44It's worth it in terms of the average revenue per advertisers that we see and helps with their retention and engagement. And we're focused on growing those what we call sort of filtered Tier one, Tier two SMBs. But that's been growing really, really nicely and there's a lot more that can be on the platform. We will continue that drive into 2025. We will be doing work at the top of the funnel to acquire more advertisers. Speaker 300:53:08So we've been doing that in terms of the acquisitions team that we sort of established embedded in pods in mid market last year that will continue this year, as well as top of the funnel some paid marketing, work in SEO around our business website, building relationships with partners who work with small businesses who we can then bring leads into our platform, developing Reddit Pro which is a landing spot for businesses where they can have a presence on Reddit, get to know the platform and then become advertisers. So these are all the ways that we're starting to expand our work on the top of the funnel for bringing in new advertisers. Speaker 200:53:50Okay. And the second part of your question was about search and opportunities for Sigma. I mean, this is why search is so amazing. I was just talking about how the key to retention for Reddit, which is the, you know, foundation for growth is, figuring out what users are interested in. Well, with search, they're literally typing into a box, this is what I'm interested in. Speaker 200:54:15So it's amazing for us to pick up on that signal and then of course, to actually click on things, right? They find their interest on Reddit. So not only do they tell us, they find sub Reddit so that they can then join and follow. So it's amazing from that point of view. And of course, that signal has incredible monetization potential, as you all know. Speaker 200:54:35So, search is one of those things where it's a product that is great for new users for the reasons I just mentioned. It's great for core users like myself, I search on Reddit every day, and it's great for monetization. So it's not every day we get a product that's on the build that scratches all of our itches. So we're very excited about it. Operator00:55:00Your next question comes from the line of Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:55:06Thanks so much for taking the question. Maybe a two parter on the international side of the business. When you think about your strategic priorities or where the business sits internationally relative to domestically, how should we be thinking about the runway for either user funnel optimization or monetization and building more density around the advertising initiatives globally as opposed to what you've proven out more domestically, just to think about contrasting the business by geographies? Thanks so much. Speaker 200:55:36Okay. Part one, I18 users, part two, I18 dollars. Okay. So I18 users, look, I think at the very beginning there. So, Reddit is roughly fiftyfifty, U. Speaker 200:55:49S. Versus non U. S. Here's in the space are 80% to 95% non U. S. Speaker 200:55:57We have no reason to believe that we won't be in that range, because Reddit is universal, because communities are universal. So, I think the opportunity is there. Now, everything we've talked about today about growth is really it's about kind of the quality and performance and search. Those things not only help us grow in The U. S, our most mature market, but helps us grow outside The U. Speaker 200:56:24S. As well, right? Product quality always works. Now, in addition to that, we have a couple of initiatives that I think are very promising. We've talked a number of times about machine translation. Speaker 200:56:37The first country for us to deploy this in was France. France, even within our focus markets countries, which themselves are outpacing the rest of the world and The U. S, France is growing 30% to 40% faster. And so that's because it got machine translation first. We're rolling it out into, a half a dozen languages right now and more throughout the year and the cost of that has come down. Speaker 200:57:02So we'll just continue to expand that. And then there's our community work. So we have people in country identifying topic areas, for example, sports, cities, important kind of cultural areas, making sure communities exist, recruiting moderators, training moderators, doing meetups, all the kind of high touch diplomatic work. And we're doing that in a number of countries around the world as well. So, the potential is there because communities are universal and our work is working. Speaker 200:57:33Now, it's very high touch work because we're growing communities, right? We can't force it, but it's coming along nicely. And then the revenue will follow the users. Speaker 300:57:46Yes, I would just say we follow the users and we do have markets like The UK, which are getting to be more mature markets for us and similar to what happened in The US, Reddit has become an intentionally entered term into Google in The UK from one of the top terms. So that's also created, again, a stronger base of awareness and understanding of our platform. Look, everything we build in the ad stack and in the ad platform, it's global. It works for advertisers globally. So they get the benefits of all the performance gains and the ease of use that we built into the platform. Speaker 300:58:21We are investing in marketing in EMEA to acquire more advertisers and we have invested in growing our go to market teams, again with a focus on acquiring more advertisers and bringing more customers onto the platform. And as you saw in Q4, that growth rate that we saw from EMEA is a result of some of the investments that we made. So we feel very good about the opportunity there. Speaker 100:58:49Krista, I think we have time for one last question. Operator00:58:53That question comes from Laura Martin with Needham and Company. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:58:59And I'll just speak to one since we're up against time and it's on DeepSeek. So Deep Seek, as you know, a lot of my companies are moving over to DeepSeek and their large language models and also you're seeing Facebook at all time highs. Both of those are open source. So my question for you is both of the deals you guys have are with proprietary large language model, Google and OpenAI. My question is, are you using these open models to help with your content creation for your customers or and or does it threaten your revenue stream coming from your content licensing if in fact open large language models win the battle of large magnet swaps? Speaker 1200:59:41Thank you. Speaker 200:59:42Okay. Thanks. Two great questions. So the first question, let me just kind of cut it in half. Are we using it, period? Speaker 200:59:50Yes. We and every company except for two on earth love open source AI models. And so I think a tremendous amount of opportunity there. And look, we use commercial models, we use open source models, we make our own. And so, I think what we're seeing happen is exactly what we said would happen two years ago. Speaker 201:00:14Access to this technology will become commoditized, open source will keep pace with the commercial offerings and ultimately it will be accessible to everyone. And that's exactly what's happening and I think it's great for the industry and it's of course great for us because basically every aspect of our business can benefit from this technology, right? Moderation, safety, copy generation, internal tools, all sorts of stuff, search. The second part of your question, which is how does this impact our opportunities and licensing? The short answer is it does not. Speaker 201:00:52Look, every foundation model that exists, including DeepSeek and including the models that DeepSeek stole from, use the Reddit data. So that's something that we've accepted. These models do not exist without Reddit depth. But what we are selling is ongoing access to up to date information. Imagine a search engine that stopped indexing in 2021, it gets less and less useful over time. Speaker 201:01:18The same thing is with the foundation model. If it stops getting new information, it just gets less and less relevant over time. And so you need a steady supply of up to date information. And Reddit is a supply of information about all aspects of the human experience, right? AI can't try a new hairdryer or listen to headphones and tell you what the experience is like. Speaker 201:01:43But users on Reddit can and do. And so that sort of information is super valuable. AI can't tell you what it's like to go through a breakup and what you should do. That information comes from Reddit. So, I don't see any change there. Speaker 201:01:54It's in fact, it's actually no change from the situation we are already experiencing, and we're very excited about the open source models. Speaker 101:02:03Great. Thanks, Steve, Jen, Drew. Thanks, everyone, for joining. We appreciate you all spending some time with us and we look forward to speaking again soon. Operator01:02:12This concludes Reddit's fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four earnings call. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by Conference Call Audio Live Call not available Earnings Conference CallReddit Q4 202400:00 / 00:00Speed:1x1.25x1.5x2x Earnings DocumentsPress Release(8-K)Annual report(10-K) Reddit Earnings HeadlinesReddit Inc Class A (RDDT) Gets a Buy from Truist FinancialApril 18 at 12:47 AM | markets.businessinsider.comReddit price target lowered to $140 from $210 at Morgan StanleyApril 17 at 7:46 PM | 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 18, 2025 | Paradigm Press (Ad)Reddit initiated with an Outperform at OppenheimerApril 17 at 2:44 PM | markets.businessinsider.comReddit (NYSE:RDDT) Expands Partnership With Integral Ad ScienceApril 17 at 2:44 PM | finance.yahoo.comOppenheimer bullish on Reddit, initiates with an OutperformApril 16 at 2:44 PM | markets.businessinsider.comSee More Reddit Headlines Get Earnings Announcements in your inboxWant to stay updated on the latest earnings announcements and upcoming reports for companies like Reddit? 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There are 13 speakers on the call. Operator00:00:00Good afternoon. My name is Krista, and I will be your conference operator today. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Reddit's Fourth Quarter and Full Year twenty twenty four Earnings Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer session. Operator00:00:31Thank you. I would now like to turn the call over to Jesse Rose, Head of Investor Relations. Jesse, you may begin your conference. Speaker 100:00:41Thank you. Good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Rite Aid's fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four earnings conference call. Joining me today are Steve Hoffman, Rite Aid's Co Founder and CEO Jen Wong, Reddit's COO and Drew Valero, Reddit's CFO. Before we get started, I'd like to remind you that our remarks today will include forward looking statements and actual results may vary materially from those contemplated by these forward looking statements. Speaker 100:01:07Information concerning risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause these results to differ is included in our SEC filings. These forward looking statements represent our outlook only as of the date of this call. We undertake no obligation to revise or update any forward looking statements. During this call, we will discuss both GAAP and non GAAP financial measures. Reconciliation of GAAP to non GAAP financial measures is set forth in our letter to shareholders. Speaker 100:01:35Our fourth quarter letter to shareholders and accompanying earnings press release are available on our Investor Relations website, investor.redditinc.com and Investor Relations subreddit, rrdt. And now, I'll turn the call over to Steve. Speaker 200:01:50Thanks, Jesse. Hi, everyone. Thank you for joining and welcome to our Q4 earnings call. The fourth quarter marked the end of a milestone year for Reddit, our first as a public company. In 2024, we surpassed a distinct amount of across 100,000,000 DAUQs and gained traction in several new countries around the world. Speaker 200:02:09Over nearly two decades, our users have created a trove of knowledge about all aspects of the human experience, making Reddit one of the largest repositories of human generated information online. And we're using AI to make this content accessible to everyone. Machine translation is rolling out in eight languages with more on the way and is enabling international users to participate in their favorite communities and find the information they seek. International growth is critical to our goal of Reddit being a global platform. For the second consecutive quarter, we are GAAP profitable with total revenue growing 71% year over year and 3.5 times faster than our total costs. Speaker 200:02:51Our advertising customers are diversifying across industries, objectives and geographies as more brands tap into Reddit's unique ability to grow their business. Over 40% of Internet users consider recommendations on Reddit the most influential factor in purchasing decisions, surpassing expert reviews, influencer endorsements, and aggregated star ratings. Reddit conversations are where interests meet intent. They inform purchase decisions and offer valuable spaces for brands to connect with people looking for trustworthy opinions. We finished the year with 101,700,000.0 DAUQ, marking 39% growth year over year, led by strong international growth at 46%. Speaker 200:03:36Additionally, logged in users grew 27% and they've grown at this rate or higher every quarter for the last year and have maintained a steady upward trend for the last two years. Late in Q4, we did experience some volatility from Google Search triggered by a periodic algorithm change, but traffic from search has recovered so far in Q1 and we've regained momentum. What happened wasn't unusual. Referrals from search fluctuate from time to time and they primarily affect logged out users. Our teams have navigated many algorithm updates over the years and did an excellent job adapting to these latest changes effectively. Speaker 200:04:15This particular swing was interesting because along with it, we saw a corresponding increase in the query term Reddit, which suggests users are searching with the specific intent of reaching Reddit, and this propensity continues to rise. We typically see two types of users on Reddit, those who scroll and those who Scrollers engage with Reddit for its core community and conversation product, while seekers come to or end up on Reddit for answers to their questions. Just a few years ago, adding Reddit to the end of your search query felt novel. Today, it's a common way for people to find trusted information, recommendations, and advice. Regardless of why or where a user starts their journey, they should have a seamless path to discovering what they need on Reddit. Speaker 200:05:06These search trends provide insight into what we should prioritize. To improve the experience for seekers, we're focused on making on platform search a truly first class product and the go to place to find information on Reddit. In The U. S, we launched the beta for Reddit Answers, an AI powered search tool that provides curated summaries of community discussions. Although it's still in its early stages, it's already proven versatile as people turn to it for everything from local updates about the LA wildfires to opinions on the best coffee maker. Speaker 200:05:41When it comes to answers, we see that Reddit excels at providing insightful responses to questions with subjective answers that are difficult to find elsewhere. It's currently only available in English, but we're excited about how people are using it and the early promise of this product. Human perspectives have never been more important, and we've updated our mission statement to reflect this. Our updated mission is to empower communities and make their knowledge accessible to all. This captures both our work in creating a platform for community and for using Reddit as a source for knowledge. Speaker 200:06:18With this mission as our guide, we are focused on making Reddit faster, easier, and better to use, whether you're an avid user or a first time visitor deciding, for example, what backpack to buy. Our role is to enable any community to exist and thrive on Reddit by helping make them useful, accessible, and well moderated. By strengthening our unique community model, we ensure that Reddit is for everyone, everywhere. Thank you again for being a part of this journey. Together, we are building a platform that connects the world through shared knowledge and perspectives. Speaker 200:06:53And with that, I'll pass it to Jen. Speaker 300:06:55Thanks, Steve. Hello, everyone. It was a strong quarter and finish to the year for Reddit. Our unique proposition and core platform improvements continue to drive differentiated growth and positive outcomes for advertisers. Total revenue in Q4 grew 71% year over year to $428,000,000 And for the full year, revenue grew 62% year over year to $1,300,000,000 In Q4, the advertising business grew 60% year over year to $395,000,000 driven by broad based strength across objectives, channels, verticals and geographies. Speaker 300:07:36Let me discuss our ad revenue drivers in more detail. Our strategy is to be a multi objective ad platform and in Q4, we grew across the funnel. We saw strength in brand advertising, top of the funnel revenue growing the fastest rate in over three years. Mid and lower funnel revenue accounted for about 60% of total ad revenue and drove more than half of the year over year growth in the quarter. Across channels, our scaled business, which includes mid market and SMB advertisers continues to be a growth driver as we are activating new advertisers across both The U. Speaker 300:08:17S. And EMEA regions and tuning our product set to better address these performance oriented advertisers. We saw broad growth across verticals with 10 of our top 15 verticals growing over 50% year over year led by finance, retail, auto, pharma, gaming and tech. Across geographies, international ad revenue grew 77% year over year, the fastest growth in over two years and led by The UK and broader EMEA regions. We saw double digit year over year growth in impressions from underlying user growth, personalized ad loads, deeper engagement and improved monetization of the conversation page, while pricing was mostly consistent with the prior year. Speaker 300:09:06Average impressions per user increased year over year as we benefited from ad placement and brand safety optimization work from prior periods. The ads and comments placement contributed about three percent of impressions in the quarter. We continue to test this new format and expect this could reach up to mid single digits percentage in the near term. Revenue from the Cyber five week during the holiday period grew over 60% year over year. This was driven by a combination of first time brands and existing retail customers who increased their spend with us. Speaker 300:09:39Now moving to our ad stack, we continue to focus on one, driving performance of our ad solutions across objectives two, improving usability for our advertisers and productivity for our sales force and three, offering our advertisers ready unique solutions in ad formats. We made meaningful progress against each of these areas in Q4. First, driving performance of our ad solutions. We continue to improve the contextual relevance of ads on the conversation page, which drives higher conversion volume and performance revenue. In Q4, we doubled click volume for the fourth consecutive quarter and also doubled conversion volume in the second half of the year versus the first half. Speaker 300:10:24We also continue driving CAFE conversion API adoption with onboarding improvements and new integration partnerships. The share of conversion revenue covered by CAPI tripled in the second half of twenty twenty four versus the prior year. Advertisers see a 25% reduction in cost per action when they adopt CAPI with Pixel compared to Pixel only. Second, improving usability for our advertisers and productivity for our sales force. Over the course of the year, we've launched capabilities across two categories. Speaker 300:10:58The first is our ads manager where we recently improved our report center to provide advertisers with deeper historical trends, comparative attribution windows and keyword breakdowns to optimize targeting strategy. Next is how we continue to invest in GenAI as a driver of productivity and performance. In 2024, we launched our AI Headline Generator and acquired Memorable AI, both of which are driving more adoption for mid market and SMB advertisers, enabling dynamic campaign creation and providing more predictive insights into creative performance. We recently launched an LOM powered ad review system, which increases automated ad review by 70% and decreases review time from thirty minutes to one minute, enabling advertisers to run campaigns faster while also improving ad quality and safety. We also expanded brand safety measurements to both IAS and Double Verify. Speaker 300:11:49With the IAS launch in Q4, we tested the solution against more than 500,000,000 impressions in North America and found Reddit to be over 99% brand safe. And third, offering advertisers Reddit unique solutions and formats. We are developing products that leverage Reddit's community intelligence that can help businesses grow insights, Reddit Pro trends and advertising solutions that leverage community signals. As we announced at CES, we began testing Reddit Pro trends, a tool that helps businesses uncover real time insights and build an organic presence on Reddit. To date, we've seen thousands of advertisers adopt Reddit Pro and seeing participating companies posting and engaging more on the site within communities. Speaker 300:12:36Next, I'll shift to our content licensing business. Britics content is a unique source of authentic insights and perspectives that is valuable to our users, advertisers, researchers and our content licensing partners. In Q4, we entered into a partnership with InterContinental Exchange to develop new data and analytics products for the financial industry. This partnership explores a new market vertical for our content licensing business and connects anonymous conversations on Reddit with InterContinental Exchange's infrastructure to provide financial customers with insights into market trends and sentiment. More broadly, we remain diligent about who we partner with and we will do so when it's complementary to our business. Speaker 300:13:17And we are investing in building our own products around our content, including Reddit Answers and Reddit Pro that reveal the authentic insights and recommendations that are unique to Reddit. Okay. Looking ahead, I'm pleased with the progress we are making in building a multi objective ad platform that enables businesses of all types and sizes to be successful on Reddit. Our opportunity is as big as ever. Reddit covers every topic and interest and we believe every business can find value on Reddit. Speaker 300:13:48The ad market feels healthy and we're monitoring events that could impact the broader industry and the evolving EU privacy landscape. I believe we're well positioned heading into 2025 and I'm excited about our roadmap. In the year ahead, we'll focus on three areas that build on our progress to date. First, delivering more Reddit unique experiences and communicating value across objectives. This includes bringing more ML optimization to our brand objectives as well as Reddit unique formats that bring in more context and engagement from communities and more product catalog features for shopping. Speaker 300:14:21We believe all of this work can augment performance. Second, bringing more automation to our ad stack. We're in the early stages of exploring end to end automation across our performance objective. We believe this can help drive performance and lower the barrier to adoption while enabling us to continue to sustain our high marks in customer service. Third, continuing to grow and diversify our advertiser base. Speaker 300:14:46We've made good progress diversifying the business, broadening verticals, having customers use multiple objectives and adding more advertisers, all of which increase the resiliency of our business. We believe there's significant opportunity to bring many more advertisers to Reddit by lead generation efforts like Reddit Pro, partnerships, easier onboarding with features like dynamic creation and campaign import and then retaining these advertisers with strong performance outcomes. Overall, I'm proud of our progress and excited about the opportunity we have to continue growing our share and driving outcomes for advertisers. Thanks for joining and for your continued support. Speaker 400:15:24Now, I'll turn the call over to Drew. Thank you, Jen, and good afternoon, everyone. Q4 was a strong ending to a solid opening year for Reddit. Once again, Q4 was our highest revenue quarter of the year, driven by five key financial story lines that have been consistent throughout 2024. They are specifically, first, growing revenues faster than peers. Speaker 400:15:44Revenues grew 71% for the quarter. Second, scaling profitably. Adjusted EBITDA hit $154,000,000 in Q4 and GAAP net income reached $71,000,000 Third, expanding margins. Gross margins hit 92.6% in Q4. Adjusted EBITDA margin hit 36% and our net income margin was 17%. Speaker 400:16:07In the quarter, our incremental adjusted EBITDA margin was 74%. Fourth, generating positive cash flow. Operating cash flow reached $90,000,000 and free cash flow margin was 21%. We had positive cash flow all four quarters in 2024. And fifth, minimizing dilution. Speaker 400:16:27Total diluted shares actually fell sequentially to $206,200,000 in Q4. Our earnings per share more than doubled from Q3 helped by a stable share count. Let me provide a little more color on these highlights. First, Q4 revenues of $428,000,000 grew 71% year over year driven by a ramp in ad revenue, which grew 60% year over year in Q4, up 4% sequentially. By region, The U. Speaker 400:16:55S. Grew 70% and international grew 76%, marking the first time international growth outpaced U. S. Growth since mid-twenty twenty three. For the quarter, let me summarize three key drivers for revenue acceleration. Speaker 400:17:10First, we're continuing to see success with our revenue investments, which include building new products for our ad platform or adding new sales team members to increase customer coverage. Second, we saw a strong gain in ad impressions, while overall ad pricing was pretty consistent with last year. Impression gains remain our primary objective and these increases were driven by user growth, improved ad click through rates and new ad surfaces like comments. And third, we saw strength across the ad funnel, led by high double digit growth rates from performance advertisements, which now comprise slightly less than 60% of our revenue. For the year, revenue ended at $1,300,000,000 up 62%. Speaker 400:17:57Now on the cost side, total adjusted cost growth was 21%. In Q4, similar to Q3, but some notable differences in two key areas: cloud hosting costs and hiring pace. Let me comment on each. In Q4, we signed revised agreements with our key hosting providers, which positively benefited gross margins over 150 basis points this quarter, a key factor in driving our gross margins to 92.6%. Over time, we continue to see both cost opportunities and challenges in the future for gross margins. Speaker 400:18:32We believe these new arrangements will likely serve to help offset future cost increases, which we could see from increased user growth, machine learning investments or new initiatives like search. For the full year, gross margins were 90.5%. The second area worth a brief mention was hiring pace, which accelerated slightly in the quarter, driven by our growth investments in ad tech, sales and search. Total headcount was up 5% sequentially and 11% for the year. We ended the year with 2,233 heads, up slightly more than 200 people net for the year. Speaker 400:19:10Differentiated revenue growth and modest cost growth meant we were GAAP profitable again in Q4 and a key focus is to turn profitability into cash flow. Q4 cash flow was $90,000,000.107000000 dollars change from a year ago. For the full year, operating cash flow was $222,000,000 Our CapEx remained very light, less than 1% in the quarter excuse me, less than $1,000,000 in the quarter, less than 0.5% of revenue. Free cash flow for Q4 was $89,000,000 and $216,000,000 Speaker 200:19:42for the year. Cash in Speaker 400:19:44the balance sheet ended at $1,840,000,000 up $96,000,000 sequentially. The total number of diluted shares outstanding in Q4 was 206,200,000 down 1% sequentially and only up 1.1% for the year, excluding the IPO, well below our 2% to 3% dilution target. Shares were slightly lower, driven in part by a net settlement of a portion of employee vested shares as well. Stock based compensation in Q4 was $97,000,000 about 23% of revenue, in line with peers at this scale, but slightly lower than the prior slightly higher than the prior quarter reflecting a full quarter of expense from our annual performance grants, the accelerated hiring pace and increases in taxes from stock vesting and exercises. In the fourth quarter, net income was $71,000,000 or $0.4 per basic share and $0.36 per diluted share. Speaker 400:20:38EPS more than doubled from the prior quarter, where basic earnings per share was $0.18 and diluted earnings per share was $0.16 As we look ahead, we'll share our internal thoughts on revenue and adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter, which is where we have the greatest visibility. In the first quarter of twenty twenty five, we estimate revenue in the range of $360,000,000 to $370,000,000 representing 48% to 52% year over year revenue growth with a midpoint of 50% Adjusted EBITDA in the range of $80,000,000 to $90,000,000 representing approximately 700% to 800% growth. In Q1, we could see slightly elevated sequential SBC costs due to higher employer taxes depending on share price volatility. So Q4 was an important proof point for the medium and long term financial goals we outlined in our last call. Simply put, we are focused on scaling profitably and turning differentiated revenue growth, high margins and low CapEx into meaningful cash flow generation. Speaker 400:21:43We delivered on all those dimensions in the fourth quarter, but there is much more to do and many more opportunities for progress. As we enter 2025, these financial goals will remain our North Star. We've seen the positive impact revenue growth can have on our financial performance. The keys to continued differentiated revenue growth will be innovation and execution as they were in 2024. That concludes my comments. Speaker 400:22:06Now let me turn the call back over to Steve. Speaker 200:22:08Okay. Thanks, Drew. Thanks, Jen. So, we posted in the RDDT subreddit as we have in past quarters to get questions from the community from our user investors. We will take a couple of those questions now. Speaker 200:22:24Again, we do this because we want to include our user investors in as many of these formal conversations as possible alongside the pros. Jen Drew and I will also record answers to many more of the questions after our call today. Those will be posted tomorrow morning in that subreddit. Okay. First question is for you, Jen. Speaker 200:22:45I've noticed a substantial increase in the quality and quantity of ads since Q3. How focused are you on developing new types of ads going forward and how could these potentially differentiate Reddit from other platforms? Speaker 300:22:59Thanks for your question. When we think about building ad formats, we always want to leverage what's unique about Reddit. And I think about two things. One is community intelligence, the trove of opinions and recommendations that are on Reddit that are really trusted and the engagement and interest on Reddit. So you saw that in last year we launched the placement, ads and comments. Speaker 300:23:24This page is growing in engagement. It's early, but we like what we're seeing there in terms of performance. So we're excited about that placement. In terms of formats, I'm excited to work on enhancing our AMAs or Ask Me Anything. That's very unique to Reddit where there's a two way engagement and conversation between brand and our community. Speaker 300:23:47Also excited about shopping, more work in terms of product level creative and dynamic product optimization. And then finally, it's something we've long excited to wanted to do, which is bringing in signals from the community and their perspectives into ads to provide more context. And I think all of the above can augment both brand and conversion performance and we're excited about the work to come. Speaker 200:24:16Okay. Thanks. Jen or excuse me, Drew, second question is for you. Q4 showed strong profitability, but full year 2024 still ended in a major loss. How confident is Reddit in maintaining or expanding profitability in 2025? Speaker 400:24:33Thanks for the question. Really like the question. GAAP profitability is something that really matters and we're focused on that. I think let me divide the question in a couple of parts. Let's talk about the $484,000,000 loss total in 2024. Speaker 400:24:48I think if you double click on that, you'll see that we lost $575,000,000 in the first quarter. That really was sort of an isolated incident. We took a $595,000,000 accounting charge related to stock based compensation. What's happening there is you're recognizing your charges for the last multiple years. It's a catch up charge for the stock that you've been giving employees for a long time. Speaker 400:25:10So you can't expense that as a private company the way that we structured that stock. So we had all of those catch up charges. So that's really what drove the loss in 2024. The last three quarters, we were profitable on a cumulative basis. That's why when I look at sort of evaluating the health of a company, I'm always looking at three statements. Speaker 400:25:28I'm looking at the income statement that you're looking at. I'm always looking at the cash flow statement, the balance sheet. We provide an EBITDA metric as well. That also gives you a kind of a look on how the financials are going. We've been EBITDA profitable for the last three quarters. Speaker 400:25:41So I think those are the ways that I look at the business. In terms of the trends, I think they're good to us. As I mentioned, obviously, 71% revenue growth in the quarter. The margins are strong here. Revenue has been growing three to five times as fast as cost. Speaker 400:25:54Those are all good signs that the business is scaling in a very positive way. And then obviously, most importantly, we made $71,000,000 this quarter. Last quarter, we were GAAP profitable. We made about $30,000,000 So last couple of quarters, you're reaching scale on the business and watching the profitability in the Flex. So appreciate the question. Speaker 400:26:11Those are my thoughts, Steve. Speaker 100:26:13Great. Steve, Jen, Drew, thank you. Krista, why don't we take some questions from the folks on the line, please? Operator00:26:20Thank you. And your first question comes from the line of Ron Josey with Citi. Please go ahead. Speaker 500:26:41Great. Thanks for taking the questions. I had questions for, I guess, all three of you. But first and foremost, Steve and Jen, I want to ask about ready to answer. Just I wanted to hear about early results, maybe some insights on the rollout. Speaker 500:26:54And then what types of queries are you seeing with this more conversational search format? Clearly, there's a lot of data and insights to glean with the data on Reddit. So any insights on what you're seeing thus far in rollout? And then, Steve, you mentioned, sort of some insights or some changes in Google search algorithm. We'd love to hear any thoughts on what the change was. Speaker 500:27:15Was there any impact to engagement, maybe revenue? That would be helpful. Thank you. Speaker 200:27:20Okay. I'll take both of those. Thanks, Ron. Great to hear from you. Okay. Speaker 200:27:25So first, Reddit answers. So, we turned this on in December and it's basically a prototype. So it's a beta and the purpose of getting this online was to answer the question of actually kind of a couple of questions. How deep is Reddit's corpus and are there compelling answers to a broad set of questions? The answer to both of those tests is yes. Speaker 200:27:50I think we're off to a very promising start. I think even I am learning and excited at the depth of the answers here. For example, there are things that I could ask for good answers that I feel like I don't get good coverage elsewhere online. So I've done it with a number of authors. What's the best way to get started reading this author? Speaker 200:28:10And you get it turns out that question has been asked a million times for every author on Reddit. So you get nice annotated answers to that. The other one that I thought was really cool was I asked to tell me what the fan theories of Severance season one were in preparing for season two. And you get to kind of relive that whole conversations or those conversations that played out on Reddit three years ago. The thing that's interesting about it is the core product, the community and conversation product, you're really only interacting with like the last day, the last twenty four hours of content. Speaker 200:28:43But in those conversations for twenty years, our users have left this absolutely massive and deep corpus of information about everything. And so we're starting to unlock that with answers. Okay. So where is this going? We'll continue to iterate on this product, but really the work here right now answers is in the app from a separate place than search. Speaker 200:29:06Over time over this year, we actually want there to just be one product which is Reddit search that will help users navigate Reddit, find subreddits on Reddit and even answer subjective, hard, interesting questions. So, we want to bring all these things together, but we wanted to get this answers functionality out fast. And so that's why it came out as its own thing. So, I think just a ton of promise there. We're really excited about where that's going. Speaker 200:29:31Okay. Your second question, was about Google as a third party provider. Like these changes happen, they actually happen all the time. I'd say ballpark, twice a year, not the first, not the last. For us, it primarily affects logged out users in The U. Speaker 200:29:50S. And this one was particularly interesting because it really was a swing, down but then a recovery shortly thereafter. Happened right at the end of the quarter. What's kind of interesting during this one, the team recovered, I think adapted nice. We see these things for all sorts of different reasons. Speaker 200:30:09We did see an increase in the query term Reddit in our own search dashboard, which says that kind of despite what happens on the Google side, internet consumers broadly want to end up on Reddit. So, as we've mentioned, we started off Q1, I think on a great foot, both with our search traffic, and then also with the rest of our traffic. And I think in Q4, we grew in all the areas that count. Logged in users up 27% and it's been that way for over a year, international itself starting to pick up steam at 46%. So, we like where we're at and we like the way things look going forward. Operator00:30:56Your next question comes from the line of Justin Post with Bank of America. Please go ahead. Speaker 600:31:04Great. Thank you. A couple more follow ups on search, and then maybe one for Drew. Can the tools on Reddit do a lot more than what Google can do now? And then second, how do you think about those searches' commercial relevance? Speaker 600:31:19Is there a percentage or a thought about how much of that search content could be monetizable? It would be very interesting because you've given us the queries, which is really helpful. And then Drew, any thoughts on cost growth for the year? I don't know if Speaker 200:31:35you can give us anything on how Speaker 600:31:36you're thinking about headcount or any cost directions for the total year. Thank you. Speaker 200:31:41Okay. We'll do, me search, Jen, search monetization through cost. So the reason Reddit searches is interesting is because we're the only search provider who is focusing exclusively on Reddit. Right? Other search engines are general. Speaker 200:32:03They call the entire internet. And, you know, our relationship with Google has been really good and deep and continues to be symbiotic. But Reddit is one of many content providers on the internet. And what we know is that Reddit or internet users broadly want what's on Reddit. And what we're learning with answers is that there's even more on Reddit than I think we even believed six months ago for this type of behavior, the seeker behavior. Speaker 200:32:33And by focusing on Reddit specifically, we can do things like what we're doing in Reddit Answers, which is every fact that Reddit Answers responds with links to a specific Reddit comment that was written by a human being. And so, it's a set of highly annotated answers. And so you can read that sentence, get your answer, but you can also click on it and actually see the whole conversation. You can get the conversation about it. And so I think this is really, really interesting for things like recommendations, travel, advice, where there isn't an answer. Speaker 200:33:09There are lots of answers and there's lots of conversations about it. And there's an added benefit that we're seeing in answers which is after you read your answer at the bottom, you see where the answers came from. So there'll be a whole bunch of posts and there'll be a bunch of subreddits. And so it actually helps you expand your interests on Reddit. And so I was telling you before about the authors. Speaker 200:33:29I'm not going to name the authors, but, I've now joined the subreddits for a number of different authors. I found all these communities. I've been on Reddit for twenty years and I'm still finding new communities. So, just really excited about what we can do when we build something on Reddit specifically for Reddit. So, I think there's a kind of an opportunity in the market. Speaker 200:33:49Jen, do you want to take the commercial opportunity of search? Speaker 300:33:53Yeah. I mean, Reddit is actually inherently commercial in so many ways. About 40% of the posts are actually classified as like really commercial being about products and services. But in a lot of ways like joining an interest, starting skiing, I mean, that is commercial and that there's gear and things that you want as you start up an interest. So I think Reddit just naturally has that. Speaker 300:34:21What's interesting and exciting about Reddit Answers is this idea of recommendations. I think Reddit is a place where people are going to for specific recommendation on what to buy to make decisions. And what Reddit Answers does is reveals the recommendations in a way that shows what's the opinions across all of Reddit. And that's an incredible opportunity because that's if you think about search, search is incredibly high intent and people are really in the mindset of wanting to convert on that recommendation. So the more that we build experiences like Reddit answers that put people in a mindset of recommendations and thinking about what they want to buy, the bigger the opportunity is for us to provide to bring in a brand or a marketer to meet that demand and drive that into an action. Speaker 300:35:17If you think about what we're building, we're building shopping, right? Shopping is product level ad creative. We already have the foundation in keyword targeting, which is around contextual. Those two pieces allow us to create a monetization opportunity at the time that it makes sense. It's an early product test, but the foundation is there for us to monetize that intent as the product develops. Speaker 400:35:44Justin, on the cost side of things, I think we found a new level here in the last couple of quarters. If I look at kind of total adjusted costs, third quarter, fourth quarter, and then the guide here kind of in that 20% range, that's where the business has been in terms of year over year cost growth. We're not guiding further out than that because the revenue visibility isn't more than a quarter at this point. We're still at a place where we're within the quarter trying to earn about half of our business, right? And so it's hard for us Speaker 200:36:13to give a kind of Speaker 400:36:14a full year guide. But I think overall you have the places that we're investing in. I think the pace of hiring will probably be slightly accelerated from what it was the prior year. Last year we added a little bit more than 200. We're still hiring a little bit more on the engineering side. Speaker 400:36:27We're building a small search team here. So there will be investments there. But I also wanted to speak to there's a lot of in year discussions here. We could move the needle quickly on some of the sales investment projects that have helped accelerate our revenue growth. And so that's really dynamic information that we're looking at. Speaker 400:36:42So it's hard to kind of give a full year guide. But I think what you have from the company right now is kind of we've established over the last three quarters kind of growing costs about 20%. I do think we'll hire a little bit more than we did last year, but we do want the flexibility to make those in your investments. They've been driving the accelerated revenue that you've been seeing. We can snap them in quickly and make things happen. Operator00:37:04Your next question comes from the line of Benjamin Black with Deutsche Bank. Please go ahead. Speaker 700:37:11Great. Thank you for taking my question. Just a follow-up on Reddit Answers. Have you seen an impact on retention, on engagement or even on sort of logged in conversion? And longer term, does Reddit answer potentially alter the way you think about data licensing more broadly? Speaker 700:37:30And then just a quick one on sort of the year ahead, how do you think about the balance of U. S. User growth versus ARPU growth? And across the two, which one do you think you have the most visibility on? Thank you. Speaker 200:37:46Okay. Thanks, Ben. So on answers, I think too soon to tell on things like retention. It's only in English. It's not even on all platforms yet or it's just barely on all platforms. Speaker 200:38:00And so it's truly, right out the gate. So, we're more of testing kind of the technology and the potential from a product point of view. That's all looking very promising. I think if we were to explain how this would lead into retention, what I'm very excited about is the general user journey on Reddit is they're often coming to Reddit as seekers. So that's what I was talking about in my opening statement. Speaker 200:38:34They're often coming from Google with a question and then learning that Reddit has answers to their questions. I think helping the user be able to search directly on Reddit, refine their queries on Reddit, eventually come directly to Reddit for those types of queries, even integrating search into something like onboarding over time, I think would all be really interesting things for us to try as on platform search gets better and better. And so, I think it opens all sorts of doors. And just about everything we do on the product is in the name of improving retention. But I think the number one retention challenge for Reddit is a user shows up to Reddit and we help them find the perfect community or communities for them, well, that's a search problem. Speaker 200:39:26So, search will get at that over time. That's really the point. In terms of licensing, I think what you're seeing here is, we're still in the market, we're still working on various deals. We announced one with NYSE, I think just yesterday. And we're still talking to some of the big players as well. Speaker 200:39:48But we're also turning inward and looking at the opportunities for us to kind of capture the value of the data ourselves. And so again, that's how we arrive at something like Red Advantures. We're like, hey, this corpus is really amazing. Sure, we can help other people build good products and good models, but we can build the best product, our data, and that should be our focus as well. So, we're doing all of these things. Speaker 200:40:14So, yeah, we're still in the licensing business, but also I think very excited about all of the things that we can build on our data as well. And then in terms of user growth and ARPU growth, I'll spend ten seconds on users. Look, I think we still have a tremendous amount of opportunity on users. We haven't come I think close to tapping out in The U. S. Speaker 200:40:39Which is our most mature market and we're really getting off the ground in a number of countries around the world. Communities are universal. And so we see very high potential in building a product that is literally universe, right? Everybody belongs to communities. Everybody wants that feeling of belonging. Speaker 200:40:59Everybody has questions. Everybody's going through life's journey and those things are all on Reddit. The way we get there, is the things we've talked about performance, quality, some of these new products like search, which actually kind of touches on both of those things. And then of course, things like machine translation in our community or excuse me, country growth efforts around the world. I'll turn it over to Janda to talk about ARPU we're looking for. Speaker 300:41:23So, as we've mentioned before, we don't manage to ARPU. There's nobody who manages to it. It is just the revenue divided by the users. It did grow in Q4 nicely in both regions, The U. S. Speaker 300:41:39And rest of world. And there's a lot of headroom there. I mean, we know that that's an opportunity to grow over time. But the way we think about it is we're trying to grow revenue by continuing to expand our verticals, drive performance, make our ad platform easier so that we get more advertisers on it, driving more demand into our platform that grows our share as we continue to also grow users in parallel. Look, the ARPU in both The U. Speaker 300:42:06S. And rest of worldwide, they grew in Q4 are still very early. And the ARPU for the rest of world is, just a fraction of The U. S. So there's a lot of opportunity for growth there. Speaker 300:42:21But again, we think of it as really growing our revenue, growing our share and users in parallel. And you see that the user growth has been a really nice driver of value for us as well as some of the brand safety and the personalized ad load work. And there's a lot more there in addition to the ad format work that we did adding ads and comments. So there are a bunch there are a lot of different levers that we have for augmenting monetization. Operator00:42:52Your next question comes from the line of Brian Nowak with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead. Speaker 800:43:00Thanks for taking my questions. I have two, one for Steve, one for Jen. Steve, I wanted to sort of talk to you about the initiatives that you have in place to continue to convert the logged out users to logged in users. Maybe talk to us about where you've made the most progress in 2024? And as you look out to 2025, what are you focused on internally to sort of continue to convert the logged out to logged in? Speaker 800:43:23And then Jen, I know there's a lot of advertising initiatives in 2025. Can you just help us understand a little bit, when you look across your pipeline of products, what are some that are sort of the lowest hanging fruit areas of improvement versus areas where it is a little bit of a higher climb that could take a little longer to sort of manifest itself in the P and L? Thanks. Speaker 200:43:48Okay, Brian. Thanks for the questions. So, log out to log in. So, big picture of the way that we think about it is, Reddit is universal. And let's start with The U. Speaker 200:44:01S. First. If Reddit has a community for everybody and it does, then why isn't everybody on Reddit? Well, I think there's two reasons. Either they haven't heard of Reddit, which is increasingly less likely or they've tried Reddit and it didn't work for them. Speaker 200:44:18That is the cohort of users that we are focused on. And so those users are either coming from external search like Google or they're coming to Reddit's front door, right? They're going to reddit.com or they're opening the app. Those folks who come direct and log out, that is where we are the most aggressive because what they're saying to us in that moment is, I am open to joining this platform. And so the work we've done there that's been most effective is we've made it much, much easier to log in. Speaker 200:44:51It used to be very hard. We used to lose 80% of our sign ups on the choose a username stuff. It was a neat grind. It's much, much smoother now. You can log in and register with an email, with a phone number, with Google or Apple. Speaker 200:45:08So really, really fast login and then much improved onboarding from there. So what are your interests? And we get you into the home feed. Our ML in the home feed, our ability to take your interests and expand them or show you more related sub rates, that's gotten much better. So that's kind of now the top driver of for users to join a new communities on Reddit and that's the number one driver for retention. Speaker 200:45:36So, that stuff has been working very well in 2024. Now, if you're coming from search, we actually used to be more aggressive. You come from Google, we'd say, hey, you know, download the app, log in. That is a classic case of it works in the short term, it moves the numbers and it doesn't work in the long term. It annoys people, it makes them mad and it actually tapers off. Speaker 200:46:02So we actually go the other direction. If you're coming from search, we want to give you the answers, right? We're trying to make our customers happy. What are they there for? Answers. Speaker 200:46:11Give them answers. They're not looking to join a community in that moment. And so our work there and looking forward is can we make Reddit amazing at giving them answers? So that's things like literally Reddit answers, that specialized landing pages for seekers. That's having Reddit search itself be amazing, so users can learn that they can ask these specific questions on Reddit. Speaker 200:46:33This idea of building products for the seekers, not just the scrollers is so important to us that we expanded our mission to include it. So that's what I mentioned in my opening remarks, empower communities and make their knowledge accessible to all. So a lot of what we're doing requires us to think about each of these use cases specifically. So that's what leads to logging in, that's what leads in the higher retention. Okay, Jen, the question was about what's the easy stuff, what's the hard stuff in 2025? Speaker 300:47:05Yes. In terms of the roadmap, things that are I think more lower hanging fruit, I mean, things that we know work, right? ML, applying ML optimization, applying models to brand, which we don't do extensively today that has worked so well in performance. I think applying that to brand, can deliver really significant performance for our advertisers. We know that formula works. Speaker 300:47:31So really applying ML for opto. Second is measurement. There's work that you want to do around conversion modeling, really getting credit for the value that we're driving. That's really important moving to industry standard there. So you'll see us do that work. Speaker 300:47:49And then finally, creative optimization. The work that you do in optimizing variance and creative can have such a significant impact on performance and that's something you grind away at forever frankly. But that also is I think an opportunity for us. It's not an area that we spent that much time on so far, but we're excited to do that this year. The rest of our roadmap I think is again, the Azro Mac is about continuous improvement in terms of ease of use, in terms of performance for our advertisers and in terms of Reddit unique opportunities and you'll see us continue to grind away. Operator00:48:29Your next question comes from the line of Rich Greenfield with LightShed Partners. Please go ahead. Speaker 900:48:37Hi. Thanks for taking the question. I got a few that I think are some of the key questions investors are concerned about. What exactly did Google change in the algorithm? I think there's been a lot of view that sort of Google loves Reddit and was sort of prioritizing Reddit. Speaker 900:48:51So what exactly changed? And I guess, Steve, how do you get comfort or confidence that future changes are not going to be more problematic than this one? I think, Steve, you said that the Google change was mostly logged out users. I assume that means this had very minimal, if not no impact on revenue, but if you could qualify around that, that would be great. And then just given your comments about DAU growth resuming in Q1, As we think about that, is there any way you could sort of give us what was Q4 adjusted for the Google algorithm change so we could see what the underlying growth is to think about what the implication is for Q1? Speaker 900:49:26I apologize for the three questions, but thanks for taking. Speaker 200:49:30All good. Thanks, Rich. Okay. What did Google change? I have my suspicions, but it's not my place to say, but I'm not worried about it. Speaker 200:49:37Number two, assume no revenue impact sorry, assume no revenue impact. Correct, no revenue impact. And three, what was the adjusted Dow in Q4, what's it look like in Q1? Look, I can't put specific numbers on it, but I don't think we'd be having this conversation, if not for the swing there and we feel very good about the pace that we're on in Q1. Like I said, look, we see volatility from Google all the time as does everybody. Speaker 200:50:08You can read the blogs a couple of times a year. Our relationship with them is great. We collaborate in a number of ways, including how they can continue to call us better. So there's zero concern from us in this department. Operator00:50:24Your next question comes from the line of Ken Garelsky with Wells Fargo. Please go ahead. Speaker 1000:50:31Thank you very much. Two, if I may. First, could we talk maybe Jen about as you think about your initiatives to grow the advertiser account, could you talk about the progress you've made maybe in the back half of twenty twenty four and initiatives maybe you have in place in 2025 and 2026 to grow that advertiser count, including maybe focus on the self serve side? And then the second is, I just want to go back to the search aspect and maybe approach from a different angle, which is the intent and signal that it may drive across the platform. Could you talk a little bit about the power of search and maybe even the power of getting growing engagement on the answers platform and its ability to drive improved conversion and intent across the rest of the platform? Speaker 1000:51:30Thank you very much. Speaker 300:51:32So I can take the first one about active advertisers. So, we continue to see really healthy year over year and quarter over quarter growth. We saw that in Q4 for our monthly active advertiser account. So that diversification continues. Again, there's many more advertisers that can be on the platform, but we're pleased with the progress there. Speaker 300:51:55What's unlocking that is a combination of things. One, our focus on ease of use, in terms of the onboarding, in terms of activation, just making it much more simple to activate things like a GenAI headline generator just takes the friction out of getting creative up and running on the platform, automating, you know, being able to optimize for like max clicks or lowest cost click, those kinds of semi automations allow smaller advertisers to get on the platform. As a reminder, our strategy is not focused on self serve right now. We do have a very nicely growing scaled business at mid market in SMB, but they are managed. They're managed in that we do give them some treatment, very light treatment to help them through the process. Speaker 300:52:44It's worth it in terms of the average revenue per advertisers that we see and helps with their retention and engagement. And we're focused on growing those what we call sort of filtered Tier one, Tier two SMBs. But that's been growing really, really nicely and there's a lot more that can be on the platform. We will continue that drive into 2025. We will be doing work at the top of the funnel to acquire more advertisers. Speaker 300:53:08So we've been doing that in terms of the acquisitions team that we sort of established embedded in pods in mid market last year that will continue this year, as well as top of the funnel some paid marketing, work in SEO around our business website, building relationships with partners who work with small businesses who we can then bring leads into our platform, developing Reddit Pro which is a landing spot for businesses where they can have a presence on Reddit, get to know the platform and then become advertisers. So these are all the ways that we're starting to expand our work on the top of the funnel for bringing in new advertisers. Speaker 200:53:50Okay. And the second part of your question was about search and opportunities for Sigma. I mean, this is why search is so amazing. I was just talking about how the key to retention for Reddit, which is the, you know, foundation for growth is, figuring out what users are interested in. Well, with search, they're literally typing into a box, this is what I'm interested in. Speaker 200:54:15So it's amazing for us to pick up on that signal and then of course, to actually click on things, right? They find their interest on Reddit. So not only do they tell us, they find sub Reddit so that they can then join and follow. So it's amazing from that point of view. And of course, that signal has incredible monetization potential, as you all know. Speaker 200:54:35So, search is one of those things where it's a product that is great for new users for the reasons I just mentioned. It's great for core users like myself, I search on Reddit every day, and it's great for monetization. So it's not every day we get a product that's on the build that scratches all of our itches. So we're very excited about it. Operator00:55:00Your next question comes from the line of Eric Sheridan with Goldman Sachs. Please go ahead. Speaker 1100:55:06Thanks so much for taking the question. Maybe a two parter on the international side of the business. When you think about your strategic priorities or where the business sits internationally relative to domestically, how should we be thinking about the runway for either user funnel optimization or monetization and building more density around the advertising initiatives globally as opposed to what you've proven out more domestically, just to think about contrasting the business by geographies? Thanks so much. Speaker 200:55:36Okay. Part one, I18 users, part two, I18 dollars. Okay. So I18 users, look, I think at the very beginning there. So, Reddit is roughly fiftyfifty, U. Speaker 200:55:49S. Versus non U. S. Here's in the space are 80% to 95% non U. S. Speaker 200:55:57We have no reason to believe that we won't be in that range, because Reddit is universal, because communities are universal. So, I think the opportunity is there. Now, everything we've talked about today about growth is really it's about kind of the quality and performance and search. Those things not only help us grow in The U. S, our most mature market, but helps us grow outside The U. Speaker 200:56:24S. As well, right? Product quality always works. Now, in addition to that, we have a couple of initiatives that I think are very promising. We've talked a number of times about machine translation. Speaker 200:56:37The first country for us to deploy this in was France. France, even within our focus markets countries, which themselves are outpacing the rest of the world and The U. S, France is growing 30% to 40% faster. And so that's because it got machine translation first. We're rolling it out into, a half a dozen languages right now and more throughout the year and the cost of that has come down. Speaker 200:57:02So we'll just continue to expand that. And then there's our community work. So we have people in country identifying topic areas, for example, sports, cities, important kind of cultural areas, making sure communities exist, recruiting moderators, training moderators, doing meetups, all the kind of high touch diplomatic work. And we're doing that in a number of countries around the world as well. So, the potential is there because communities are universal and our work is working. Speaker 200:57:33Now, it's very high touch work because we're growing communities, right? We can't force it, but it's coming along nicely. And then the revenue will follow the users. Speaker 300:57:46Yes, I would just say we follow the users and we do have markets like The UK, which are getting to be more mature markets for us and similar to what happened in The US, Reddit has become an intentionally entered term into Google in The UK from one of the top terms. So that's also created, again, a stronger base of awareness and understanding of our platform. Look, everything we build in the ad stack and in the ad platform, it's global. It works for advertisers globally. So they get the benefits of all the performance gains and the ease of use that we built into the platform. Speaker 300:58:21We are investing in marketing in EMEA to acquire more advertisers and we have invested in growing our go to market teams, again with a focus on acquiring more advertisers and bringing more customers onto the platform. And as you saw in Q4, that growth rate that we saw from EMEA is a result of some of the investments that we made. So we feel very good about the opportunity there. Speaker 100:58:49Krista, I think we have time for one last question. Operator00:58:53That question comes from Laura Martin with Needham and Company. Please go ahead. Speaker 1200:58:59And I'll just speak to one since we're up against time and it's on DeepSeek. So Deep Seek, as you know, a lot of my companies are moving over to DeepSeek and their large language models and also you're seeing Facebook at all time highs. Both of those are open source. So my question for you is both of the deals you guys have are with proprietary large language model, Google and OpenAI. My question is, are you using these open models to help with your content creation for your customers or and or does it threaten your revenue stream coming from your content licensing if in fact open large language models win the battle of large magnet swaps? Speaker 1200:59:41Thank you. Speaker 200:59:42Okay. Thanks. Two great questions. So the first question, let me just kind of cut it in half. Are we using it, period? Speaker 200:59:50Yes. We and every company except for two on earth love open source AI models. And so I think a tremendous amount of opportunity there. And look, we use commercial models, we use open source models, we make our own. And so, I think what we're seeing happen is exactly what we said would happen two years ago. Speaker 201:00:14Access to this technology will become commoditized, open source will keep pace with the commercial offerings and ultimately it will be accessible to everyone. And that's exactly what's happening and I think it's great for the industry and it's of course great for us because basically every aspect of our business can benefit from this technology, right? Moderation, safety, copy generation, internal tools, all sorts of stuff, search. The second part of your question, which is how does this impact our opportunities and licensing? The short answer is it does not. Speaker 201:00:52Look, every foundation model that exists, including DeepSeek and including the models that DeepSeek stole from, use the Reddit data. So that's something that we've accepted. These models do not exist without Reddit depth. But what we are selling is ongoing access to up to date information. Imagine a search engine that stopped indexing in 2021, it gets less and less useful over time. Speaker 201:01:18The same thing is with the foundation model. If it stops getting new information, it just gets less and less relevant over time. And so you need a steady supply of up to date information. And Reddit is a supply of information about all aspects of the human experience, right? AI can't try a new hairdryer or listen to headphones and tell you what the experience is like. Speaker 201:01:43But users on Reddit can and do. And so that sort of information is super valuable. AI can't tell you what it's like to go through a breakup and what you should do. That information comes from Reddit. So, I don't see any change there. Speaker 201:01:54It's in fact, it's actually no change from the situation we are already experiencing, and we're very excited about the open source models. Speaker 101:02:03Great. Thanks, Steve, Jen, Drew. Thanks, everyone, for joining. We appreciate you all spending some time with us and we look forward to speaking again soon. Operator01:02:12This concludes Reddit's fourth quarter and full year twenty twenty four earnings call. You may now disconnect.Read morePowered by