Zoom CFO Kelly Steckelberg joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss company earnings, macro economic pressure, consumer demand, hiring, and the outlook for growth.
– All right, let’s talk about shares of Zoom as well. That’s something else we’re watching closely today. The shares down 12% after Zoom posted slowing second-quarter revenue growth of 8% and also slashed its full-year guidance. The software company cited the US dollar and slowing consumer sales as the reasoning behind the hit to revenue. Its enterprise business fairly robust.
Joining us now to discuss is Zoom CFO Kelly Steckelberg. Kelly, it’s always great to see you. Thank you so much for joining us.
I want to ask you, first of all, about the forecast and how you characterized it and broke it down. You talked about macroeconomic pressure. You talked about pressure from the stronger dollar. And I’m wondering how you break all of that out. And in other words, when you’re looking at what’s pressuring the forecast, how do you figure out what’s macroeconomic? How do you figure out what is just lower demand, for example, from consumers?
KELLY STECKELBERG: So we have two pretty distinct segments of our business. We have the enterprise segment, which we are pleased with the performance there. It grew 27% year-over-year in Q2. And we continue to see highlights there, for example, with Zoom Phone, which crossed over the 4 million seat mark.
Where we are seeing pressure is in our online segment of the business. And this segment of the business is much more exposed to the strengthening dollar, as you mentioned, as well as macroeconomic, especially in Europe. So we actually saw revenues from Europe decline 8% year-over-year. And that was largely concentrated in our online segment of the business. And as we look forward, unfortunately, we expect some of that trend to continue through the rest of the year, which is what contributed to our lower guidance for the rest of the year as well.
– And so Kelly, I guess with what you had discussed on the call as well and this return to normalized sales cycles, what type of revenue growth rate and even margins on that should investors expect?
KELLY STECKELBERG: Yeah, so what we touched on is in the enterprise segment of the business, as we have now gone back to the majority of our revenue coming from the enterprise segment of the business– it’s 54% of our revenue in Q2– and the fact that we have really moved beyond the pandemic buying patterns that we’ve seen over the last couple of years, we are back to true enterprise linearity, which means a lot of these deals come at the end of the quarter, which that also results in the fact that they contribute very little revenue in the quarter themselves. They contribute to deferred revenue, which was up year-over-year and greater than– it was up greater than we had forecast. But they have very little impact in the quarter itself. And so as we expect those trends to continue, that is also built into our forward-looking guidance.
– Kelly, I didn’t hear much on the conference call last night about more closely managing expenses. That seems to be the buzzword in techland. How are you approaching that?
KELLY STECKELBERG: So we did talk about in our prepared remarks that we are taking a prudent and cautious approach as we look forward in the second half of the year. We are absolutely continuing to hire, but we’re doing that in very focused, high-ROI areas, which for us really includes our R&D teams, as well as sales partner enablement and product marketing.
We did highlight that our gross margins were 78.9% in Q2. And we expect them to continue in the range of 78% for the rest of the year, which is higher than we had expected. And we did maintain our full-year outlook for 33% non-GAAP operating margins, as we’re able to manage these expenses through the back half of the year, even with the lower top-line forecast.
– In the services that your portfolio of clients already buy into right now, where have you seen the best ability to cross-sell into some of the other products and services that you’ve brought forward? And how does that really contribute to not just the growth, but also where you’re able to see add-on margins for some of those larger customers as well?
KELLY STECKELBERG: Yeah, so we are making great progress in making this transition from being a meeting app to a full unified communications platform. And Zoom Phone was certainly a star in the quarter, crossing over that 4 million seat mark. We are also really thrilled with the performance of Zoom Contact Center, which had some great names that we’ll be excited to tell you about as they continue to deploy.
And they also, we’re seeing seat sizes sold in Zoom Contact Center only six months into the life of this product that we would not have expected for a couple of years. So that’s really great to see. And then also Zoom IQ for sales, which is also a new product, is really starting to contribute as well. So we’re looking forward to this full suite of platform products that are really going to enable the future growth, especially in our enterprise segment.
– Yeah, Kelly, everybody was talking about the phone, Zoom Phone, in terms of analyst notes and really highlighting that as an area of growth for you. I think, what, it more than doubled, right, in terms of the number of customers, individuals using the Zoom Phone. What do the margins look like on that product? And what are some of the goals and targets you guys have for it?
KELLY STECKELBERG: Yeah, so Zoom Phone has very high operating margins. As we said, our long-term target for the company operating gross margins, excuse me, is 80%. And that includes the contribution from Zoom Phone.
And what we see is that it’s typically an add on. Our sales strategy is it’s an add on to an existing customer. So it continues to increase the revenue that we’re getting from each individual account. And that’s why we’ve also talked about, we really expect the future growth in the enterprise segment to continue to come from expanding the experiences and the products that we’re selling into our existing install base.
– Kelly, you teased an investor day on November 8 to the extent you could. What is the sustainable growth rate for the top and bottom line for a company like Zoom at this point in the cycle?
KELLY STECKELBERG: So that will be one of the highlights that we will share at Zoomtopia and our analyst day on November 8. We will be thrilled to have our investors there. It gives us an opportunity to spend a little more time, go deeper into the story, and share things like our long-term operating margins, our long-term targets, as well as potentially seeing long-term growth. But really that will come when we give FY24 guidance on our Q4 call.
– Zoom CFO Kelly Steckelberg joining us here this morning on “Yahoo Finance Live.” Thanks so much for the time. We appreciate it.
KELLY STECKELBERG: Thanks for having me.
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