CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc.
Q4 2019 Earnings Call Transcript
Published:
- Operator:
- Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the CrowdStrike Holdings Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2020 Financial Results Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speakers' presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. I will now hand the conference over to your speaker today, Maria Riley, Investor Relations for CrowdStrike.
- Maria Riley:
- Good afternoon, and thank you for your participation today. With me on the call are George Kurtz, President and Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder of CrowdStrike; and Burt Podbere, Chief Financial Officer. Before we get started, I would like to note that certain statements made during this conference call that are not historical facts, including those regarding our future plans, objectives and expected performance, are forward-looking statements within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These forward-looking statements represent our outlook only as of the date of this call. While we believe any forward-looking statements we have made are reasonable, actual results could differ materially because the statements are based on current expectations and are subject to risks and uncertainties. We do not undertake and expressly disclaim any obligation to update or alter our forward-looking statements whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. Further information on these and other factors that could affect the Company's financial results is included in filings we make with the SEC from time to time, including the section titled Risk Factors in the Company's quarterly and annual reports that we file with the SEC. Also, unless otherwise stated, excluding revenue, all financial measures discussed on this call will be non-GAAP. A discussion of why we use non-GAAP financial measures and a reconciliation schedule showing GAAP versus non-GAAP results is currently available in our press release, which may be found on our Investor Relations website at ir.crowdstrike.com or on our Form 8-K filed with the SEC today. Now, I will turn the call over to George to begin.
- George Kurtz:
- Thank you, Maria, and thank you all for joining us today. We hope everyone is staying healthy. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by the coronavirus. Our top priority is ensuring the health and safety of all our colleagues, customers, and partners around the globe. We have implemented necessary safeguards to help protect them, which includes hosting this call remotely. We have a lot of ground to cover today and I will start by summarizing three key points. First, the dynamics of the competitive landscape are the best I have seen in my 27-year career. We believe this is the beginning of a multi-year trend as being driven by the industry consolidation that took place last year along with the seismic shift to cloud technologies. Second, customers and partners are increasingly choosing CrowdStrike as their security cloud platform and partner of choice. As a result, we are landing bigger with more modules and increasing the number of new customers that start with ARR over $1 million. And third, regardless of the spending environment, cybersecurity is not a discretionary purchase for organizations. Cybersecurity is mission critical to both the public and private sector. Endpoint or workload security is also essential to protecting a remote workforce. While the impact to the macroeconomy from the coronavirus is unfolding in real time, we know it is forcing companies to conduct business differently and rapidly shift to a remote workforce. With our cloud native platform, our lightweight agent that is easily deployed at scale and our frictionless go-to-market engine, CrowdStrike is uniquely positioned to meet their cybersecurity needs.
- Burt Podbere:
- Thank you, George, and good afternoon everyone. As a quick reminder, unless otherwise noted all numbers except revenue mentioned during my remarks today are non-GAAP. We delivered another outstanding quarter with strength in multiple areas of the business, including records in net new ARR, net new customers and free cash flow. In the fourth quarter, we delivered 92% ARR growth year-over-year to reach $600.5 million. We added $98.7 million in net new ARR, setting a new record for the fourth consecutive quarter and representing 69% year-over-year growth. The growth in ARR was driven by another strong quarter for new logo acquisition and expansion business, coupled with low contraction in churn within our existing customer base. We have been very pleased with the success we have seen with our land and expand strategy and with our continued best-in-class gross retention rate of 98% for Q4 and FY '20. Our dollar based net retention rate, which is intended to measure expansion in existing customer subscriptions over a 12-month period exceeded the 120% benchmark we set at the beginning of the year. Net retention came in at 124% as of the end of FY '20, which compares to 147% in FY '19 and 119% at the end of FY '18. For the interim to FY '20 quarters net retention was 131% in Q3, 133% in Q2 and 142% in Q1. As you may recall in Q4 of FY '19 we had an outsized expansion deal that contributed 11 percentage points to our net retention in that quarter. While we once again expanded within this account in Q4 of FY '20, the impact was smaller than the prior year as we have expected. As George mentioned, we are seeing strong success with our strategy to land bigger with more modules and we are also seeing an acceleration in new logo business which further accelerated in Q4 as the dynamics in the competitive landscape shifted in our favor. We view these two trends as positive developments and very healthy long-term indicators for our business, but they have a natural trade-off on expansions in the near term. Moving to the P&L, total revenue grew 89% over Q4 of last year to reach $152.1 million. Subscription revenue grew 90% over Q4 of last year to reach $138.5 million. In terms of geographic breakdown, approximately 73% of fourth quarter revenue was derived from customers in the US, 14% from Europe, Middle East and Africa markets, 9% from Asia-Pacific and 4% from other markets. We remain focused on building a long-term business with sustainable growth and compelling margins. In Q4 we continued to recognize operating leverage in our SaaS model and the benefits of scale, even as we increased investments in our global reach and cloud platform. Fourth quarter non-GAAP gross margin improved to 73% from 67% a year ago. Our non-GAAP subscription gross margin increased to 77%, a 700 basis point increase from Q4 of last year. Total non-GAAP operating expenses in the fourth quarter were $118.4 million or 78% of revenue versus $81.8 million last year or 102% of revenue. Scaling our business efficiently is a top priority, which is why we focus on our unit economics including Magic Number. In Q4, we ended with a Magic Number of 1.2, which we consider to be very strong and represents an improvement in our sales and marketing efficiency. We reported a non-GAAP operating loss of $6.7 million. As a result of our rapid top line growth, expanding gross margin profile and continued disciplined approach to investing in our business, we drove strong operating leverage in the quarter. Our non-GAAP operating margin improved 31 percentage points year-over-year. Q4 represents our fifth consecutive quarter of improving non-GAAP operating loss on both a dollar and a margin basis. We have a proven history of disciplined investing and remain committed to maintaining a thoughtful balance between generating top line growth and achieving operating leverage. Non-GAAP net loss in Q4 was $3.9 million or $0.02 on a per share basis, which compares to a non-GAAP net loss of $28.0 million or $0.60 per share in Q4 of last year. The weighted average common shares used to calculate fourth quarter EPS was 207.6 million shares in Q4 fiscal 2020 and 46.4 million shares in the Q4 fiscal 2019 period. Turning now to the balance sheet. Cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities increased to $912.1 million, our execution this quarter led to strong cash flow. Cash flow from operations was positive $66.1 million and free cash flow was positive $50.7 million reflecting improved operating leverage, growth in deferred revenue and strong collections. Before moving to our guidance, I will provide several modeling points. First, as we have previously noted and is typical for enterprise software companies, we expect to see seasonality in net new ARR generation moving from Q4 to Q1. We would also like you to keep in mind that we see operating margin seasonality in the first half of the year given a step-up in payroll taxes, new hires and annual events including sales kick-off and RSA. And as you'd expect these factors will impact the timing of operating cash and free cash flow with Q2s experiencing the biggest seasonal impact. This year we expect to see negative operating and free cash flow in the second quarter and we are maintaining our guidance to be operating cash and free cash flow positive for the full year. We implemented our employee stock purchase plan in July of 2019. As a result, we saw a benefit to free cash flow of approximately $8 million in Q3 of FY '20 and a net decrease of approximately $4 million in Q4 of FY '20 as we made the first purchase. Looking into FY '21, we currently expect to accrue between $10 million and $11 million per quarter for this benefit with the corresponding offset of approximately $20 million reflected in both Q2 and Q4. In summary, we expect to see benefits from employee contributions in Q1 and Q3 and net outflows for purchases in Q2 and Q4. Moving to our guidance for the first quarter and full year fiscal 2021. We continue to remain optimistic about the demand for our offerings. We have powerful secular trends fueling our growth, including a growing threat landscape, a favorable competitive dynamic and the proliferation of cloud workloads combined with an increasing remote workforce. While the full impact of the macroeconomy from the coronavirus is still unfolding and we continue to closely monitor the business environment, we believe our guidance is appropriately prudent based on what we know today. For Q1 total revenue is expected to be in the range of $164.3 million to $167.6 million, reflecting a year-over-year growth rate of 71% to 74% with subscription revenue being the dominant driver of growth. We expect non-GAAP loss from operations to be in the range of $16.2 million to $13.9 million and non-GAAP net loss to be in the range of $14.0 million to $11.7 million. Utilizing weighted average shares used in computing, non-GAAP net loss per share, basic and diluted of $211.3 million. We expect non-GAAP net loss per share basic and diluted in the range of $0.07 to $0.06. For the full fiscal year 2021, we currently expect total revenue to be in the range of $723.3 million to $733.5 million, reflecting a growth rate of 50% to 52% over the 2020 fiscal year. Non-GAAP loss from operations is expected to be between $37.1 million and $29.9 million. Additionally, we continue to expect to achieve non-GAAP operating income breakeven in the fourth quarter of fiscal year 2021 while at the same time continuing to aggressively invest in our market opportunity. We expect fiscal 2021 non-GAAP net loss to be between $29.3 million and $22.1 million. Utilizing weighted average shares used in computing non-GAAP net loss per share, basic and diluted of $212.5 million, we expect non-GAAP net loss per share to be in the range of $0.14 to $0.10. We are pleased with the strong results we are reporting today and believe we have the capacity and resources to continue driving the business forward over the long term. George and I will now take your questions.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Our first question is from Sterling Auty with J.P. Morgan. Please go ahead.
- Sterling Auty:
- Yeah, thanks. Hi guys. So I'm wondering amid the COVID-19 situation that we're in, you touched upon some of it, but I just want to make sure I put a finer point, how the sales processes and even more specifically the implementation process impacted? And is there any concern while maybe CrowdStrike is used to working remote perhaps your customers are not. So how do you mitigate some of those factors in terms of sales cycles?
- George Kurtz:
- Sure. Thanks, Sterling. Well, as you mentioned and as we pointed out, we've done a good job for many years working remotely, but we need to make sure that we can get hold of the customers. I think there are a couple of things that are working in our favor. Number one, there's lots of folks that are actually home and working remotely, and I think we've been big fans and users of Zoom and we've been able to move our sales operation to fully remote. We've been able to actually increase our first business meetings by 13% just by doing this as people are around in home and we're able to get in front of them. So from our perspective, whether it's the inside sales team or whether it's the field sales team, I think we've done a good job of reaching out, plus we've combined that with digital advertising, digital trial-to-pay and we continue to work the inside sales motion. So from that standpoint, I think we've been able to fully keep the machine operationalized and in many cases where people have been busy during the day they are sort of at home and we actually have their focus. So, those first business meetings have taken place and we are leveraging all of the remote technology that we have to get to our customers.
- Sterling Auty:
- Great. And then one follow-up for you Burt. You mentioned that the guidance is prudent in light of what you're seeing. But just again to make sure, would the guidance have actually been higher if COVID-19 had not broken out into this pandemic that we're seeing?
- Burt Podbere:
- Hey, Sterling. Thanks. So just to reiterate, we do believe that we've appropriately derisked our guidance, but as we know, it's a fluid situation. We believe our guidance is appropriately prudent based on what we know today, including Coronavirus. As of today, we haven't seen a change in our ability to close business. Our pipeline is at record levels. We've talked to our sales leaders and the theaters and we like where we're at. But we want to be prudent in light of the current macro situation, and out of abundance of caution, we’ve derisked our guidance.
- Operator:
- Thank you so much. Our next question is from Saket Kalia with Barclays.
- Saket Kalia:
- Hey, George. Hey, Burt. Thanks for taking my questions here. George, maybe just to start with you. Definitely hearing the customer displacement opportunities here with competitors like Symantec, for example. But I guess I want to ask about the competitive opportunity from a different angle. I think you touched on it in your prepared remarks, but is there an opportunity to really grow your share of the channel while others like Symantec are seeing disruption? So not the customer share but actually -- rather share of the actual channel out there.
- George Kurtz:
- Well thanks, Saket. And absolutely as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we are seeing many, many partners come our way, particularly from the Symantec channel. They realize that in today's environment their customers are demanding solutions that can easily be deployed frictionless to a remote workforce as well as on-premise or cloud workloads, and there is a strong demand from the partners. There's a lot of inbounds from partners looking to move their customer base to us as Symantec and Broadcom abandon many of the customers that are out there. So, they want to make sure their customers are taken care of, and obviously we've continued to evolve and mature our partner program and whether it's a managed service provider, whether it's a traditional reseller, whether it's any number of partners that we have, they are certainly looking to be with a market leader and someone who can solve their problem. And just given today's environment with the remote workforce, it's hard to set up these on-premise systems and -- except service and things of that nature remotely, so we've definitely seen an uptick in the remote workforce being provisioned and rolled out to organizations who their workers are actually at home, and I think we're in perfect position to do that.
- Saket Kalia:
- Makes sense. Maybe for my follow-up for you, Burt, nice job hitting positive operating cash flow, I think, faster and greater magnitude than most of us thought. As the business continues to scale, how do you think about cash flow vis-a-vis ARR or revenue? Are there any sort of rules of thumb that you have us think about with respect to either operating cash flow or free cash flow as that recurring revenue base kind of continues to grow?
- Burt Podbere:
- Hi, Saket. First, let me remark just on your comment about hitting positive cash flow faster than most of you thought. I think the first thing that I just want to comment on is the fact that we did have a strong outlook performance in the quarter. The other things that kind of related to that, we had strong gross margins, we had strong operating leverage, and we also had strong collections in the quarter. So, it all contributed to reaching cash flow positive than we originally thought. As it goes to with -- as your comment goes to how do we think about it in the future, I think I want to just reiterate the fact that, hey, we've said to the world that we're going to be free cash flow positive next year. On a quarterly basis though, there are going to be some quarters where we have negative cash flow, specifically in Q2. So, as we think about seasonality, it is in the business from both cash flow as well as ARR. With respect to ARR, Q4 going to Q1, we had commented on the fact that we're going to see a dip which is consistent with what we've seen historically. So, as we think about cash flow and as we think about where we're going to end up, right now we feel that we're in a really good spot with respect to our cash position. We've got $912 million on the balance sheet, and we have an additional credit facility of $150 million as well. So, combined we've over $1 billion in available cash. So, I think we're in a pretty good spot. And I think that we've got a good handle on where we see the cash flow going from here as I've just remarked.
- Operator:
- Thank you. And our next question is from Brad Zelnick with Credit Suisse.
- Brad Zelnick:
- Great. Thank you so much and congratulations on a really nice finish to the year. My question, I know I hate to keep piling onto this, but as it relates to COVID-19 and the impact to the business, specifically, I wanted to ask about small businesses, because I mean the headlines are passing all of our screens in real time. We are seeing certain sectors of the economy just getting obliterated, whether it'd be restaurants, airlines, lodging etc. It seems to really be hurting right now. How does this change your thinking, if at all, about investing down market for growth at this point?
- George Kurtz:
- Well, thank you for your comments and I don't think it changes our investment at all. We've seen an acceleration in the SMB market, obviously with the trial-to-pay and sales motion that just encourages organizations to come to us and try it out, we've been very successful. And in fact, we've seen definitely an uptick in smaller businesses coming our way, because they just -- they are not prepared for what's happening. Obviously, with COVID-19 it's a serious situation for them. And at the same time, they still need to keep just running. And I think one of the big drivers that we've seen is ransomware. There is so many small businesses that have been just obliterated by ransomware as they continue to use traditional signature based AV. So I think we've been very successful in helping companies migrate away from that and deal with that problem at the same time now they're struggling with just keeping open. And I think as a company we've done a good job in helping organizations, see the value and basically provide the outcome they are looking for, keep up and running, not have to worry about security. In many cases, they don't actually have the personnel to deal with it and with our Falcon Complete, it's been an absolute home run in the SMB in the corporate market because we're able to deal with kind of human issue for them as a force multiplier. So we continue to invest there. I think from a security perspective, it really is a foundational element. They can't do without it. They can't keep their businesses up and running and we're going to continue to support them in any way we can.
- Brad Zelnick:
- Thanks very much, George. And maybe one for Burt. Burt, in your prepared remarks you talked about seasonality in ARR from Q4 to Q1. Can you maybe put a finer point to that of how we should think about ARR seasonality throughout the year? And if at all we might expect COVID, at least here in Q1, to be exceptional as we think about what -- otherwise what it looks like if we were talking a month ago? Thanks.
- Burt Podbere:
- Sure. So, as you know we don't guide to ARR, but we do talk about revenue in the guide. We feel that we've appropriately guided for Q1, taking into consideration everything, including coronavirus. I think about the seasonality in ARR being fairly consistent with prior periods. Again the dip that we see -- that we're likely to see in Q1 is consistent with what we've seen in prior periods and then there is an uptick as we go through the year.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Our next question comes from Joel Fishbein with SunTrust.
- Joel Fishbein:
- Good after noon everybody and congrats again on a great quarter. I have a quick question on Fed. Just in this environment, I know it might be a little premature, but the Fed ramp and how the Fed is adopting CrowdStrike? I'd love to hear George, how that's going that you didn't really call it out. Then I have a follow-up quickly for Burt.
- George Kurtz:
- Sure. It's going really well. Fed is part of our overall state, local and Fed operation. And in general, just the Fed pieces up over 200% year-over-year. Customer acquisition is up. And when you look at the concern in the federal government, you look at the various hacks that have been out there, Fed government is increasingly calling on CrowdStrike to seek guidance and understand the threat level and certainly adopting our technology to help protect against those many persistent threats that are out there. So it's still a relatively small business for us as we just got the FedRAMP certification a while back, I guess a short time ago over the last 18 months or so and we continue to grow that. So that's a great market for us. And then as you expand that out in the state and local, we've got many states that are CrowdStrike customers. They continue to adopt us. Again ransomware is a big issue for some of these small municipalities or even some of the larger state governments and CrowdStrike has been a real critical part of their overall operation.
- Joel Fishbein:
- Thanks, George. And Burt, real quick follow-up for you. The message has been look, you guys are growing, very, very fast. You're gaining big customers at a very fast clip. I think the one concern out there is for companies that aren't cash flow positive, and you actually shown cash flow positive this quarter that in the event of things do go south, maybe you just talk about what levers you can pull if necessary to make yourselves more profitable and if things did go south? So give investors a little bit of confidence there.
- George Kurtz:
- Yeah. Thanks, Joel. Yeah. So, as a reminder, we've been free cash flow positive for the last two quarters. And similarly, what I said on an earlier question is that we have a really strong balance sheet at the moment, right. $912 million on balance sheet and cash, cash equivalents and we've got an additional credit facility of $150 million. We see this, even if things go south or continue to go south from a macro perspective, we still believe that we've got great unit economics. We've got the business very dialed in. We've got opportunities to continue to go after in an environment that's opened up to us with respect to our competitors. So we're in a really good spot in terms of being able to withstand any continued downturn in the environment. And the good news for us is that we've seen several consecutive quarters of improving leverage. So we're not going to stray from looking at our unit economics as we continue to invest, even when there is a continued downturn in the macroeconomic environment.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Our next question is from Alex Henderson with Needham.
- Alex Henderson:
- Great. Thank you very much. Just a quick bookkeeping, if you guys were profitable, what would your share count be for evaluation purposes? The question I wanted to ask really was around the pricing side of things or the demand side of things. To what extent have you seen any of your customers implement broad spending freezes and to what extent are you seeing your product line and your -- and security in particular against that backdrop be exempt from that spending freeze? If you could help us out understanding that differential between the actions broadly that the companies are taking versus what they're taking relative to security that would be really helpful. And then one other question well that was added just going back for Burt, the decision to continue to invest, I assume you're still adding salespeople at a pretty aggressive rate. I assume that they become more available in this environment. Can you give us any sense of the rate of staffing up in the sales and marketing side of things? And thank you very much.
- Burt Podbere:
- Thanks, Alex. First of all comment on your question about share. So basically, for valuation purposes I would use 233 million shares. With respect to the sales heads, we're continuing to invest for sure. Yeah, in this environment there is going to be more that's going to be available in the group that we look at to hire from. So we're going to obviously take advantage of that and take advantage of the current landscape. But having said all that, again I want to go back to the point that I've been making all along, which is we're going to be investing prudently. We're going to continue our strong unit economics, we're not going to do anything that's unnatural. And so I think that with the model in place the competitive landscape, I think we're in good spot to continue to go after sales reps. With that, I'll turn it over to George.
- George Kurtz:
- Okay, great. Well, thanks, Alex. And I think when we look at security in general, we have to put it in perspective, it is mission critical and in the corporate hierarchy of needs cyber security is equivalent of shelter, it's fundamental, it's a basic need and you can't live without it. And obviously there is going to be industries that are more impacted than others, but at the end of the day they're going to need security. It's a compliance mandate for many, many large companies even not large companies right from a data privacy perspective, whether it's a state or federal government or any other government around the globe. And they're going to still need to be able to purchase that. I think again when they come to CrowdStrike, a big part of what we do is we help them consolidate what they have. We can show them that three times or better return on their investment. And in today's environment obviously where there is going to be tremendous cost pressure on these companies, I think we're the perfect solution to help optimize their head count, help optimize their spend on hardware and software and security and people and putting all that together, it's a very compelling offering that we have for them in a time of need.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Our next question comes from Gur Talpaz with Stifel.
- Gur Talpaz:
- Okay, great. Thanks for taking my questions. Well, first off, congrats on a really strong quarter here. George, you alluded to a shift in demand here for Falcon Complete. I think in the face of all that's happened over the past few weeks, how do you think about the nature of the conversation around Complete today, especially within the large enterprise?
- George Kurtz:
- Well, it's amazing because when we originally -- so first thank you, Gur. Thanks for your question. When we think about Falcon Complete and we originally constructed it for organizations that might have been in the corporate space, a reasonably sized organization but not enterprise or even SMB, we had no idea the adoption would be so broad in the enterprise space. And we have many, many large enterprise customers that use us because the offering is so compelling to be able to kind of take that Tier 1 triage off their hands, to be able to remediate any issues that come up with automation, to be able to offer a warranty on what we're doing and the technology is very, very compelling. And I don't care whether you're in enterprise or whether you're in corporate SMB, everyone is looking to increase their overall efficiency in their operations and reduce the cost. And when you look at the return of the Falcon Complete, they could never do what we do.24 by 7 with the expertise we have around the globe for anything close to what we're charging them. So it really is a force multiplier for them and it really has been adopted widely whether it's a small SMB all the way to a very large enterprise.
- Gur Talpaz:
- That's very helpful. And then, Burt, maybe one for you. Non-GAAP gross margins here continue to rise I think despite really nice growth in customers and cloud transaction volumes. Can you just walk us through the inputs again here as to why that's the case? And then I think more importantly, have you seen an increase in gross margin at land now given the rise in customer as you see them at land?
- Burt Podbere:
- Thanks, Gur and thanks for your questions. So with respect to gross margins, I mean it continues to be the same story with respect to improvements on the operational side, efficiencies and using both private and public clouds. Two, it's the module expansion. As we add new modules after the first module is sold to a customer, virtually every other module after that is pure gross margin. Those are some of the key drivers and they've been consistent throughout the last few years in terms of seeing why our gross margin has expanded. In terms of the gross margin and how we think about it going forward, I think right now we're in the middle of our long-term non-GAAP gross margin projections and I anticipate that we're going to stay within that band. And in the long term we see us going over that 80%-plus from the standpoint of a non-GAAP gross margin basis. So we're going to continue to do those things that we've been doing well. On the optimization side, we're going to continue to bring in new modules into our platform. Those two things combined will lead us to where we want to go.
- Operator:
- All right.
- Maria Riley:
- Operator? Yeah.
- Operator:
- Yes.
- Maria Riley:
- We can take the next question.
- Operator:
- Thank you, ma'am. Our next question is from Andrew Nowinski with D.A. Davidson.
- Andrew Nowinski:
- Great. Thank you. Congrats on a great quarter. Just two questions for me. So it's great to hear that you're offering programs to help customers work from home. And what we're hearing from resource and CIOs is that companies that are not cloud-centric yet, that are still running these legacy hub-and-spoke architectures are quickly realizing how inadequately prepared they are. So when people start returning to the office, which is hopefully soon, do you think that could trigger an uptick in spending from these companies as they work toward transforming their infrastructure?
- George Kurtz:
- Well, thanks Andy. And the answer is yes. I think if you look at what has taken place, which I think many of us would agree, we've never seen in our life, hopefully we won't see it again, but it's definitely going to transform the way people do business, and everyone implemented emergency plans, everyone implemented emergency spending. And if you're working from home on Zoom you still need to be protected, right. So I think what they figured out very quickly is kind of pushing update, signature files through VPNs or overloading things, it's just -- the whole management doesn't work. And I think by leveraging something like CrowdStrike they see how easy it is, it's seamless, it doesn't even have to go through their own network in terms of what we do and how we communicate with those endpoints, I think their eyes are wide open. So not only do I believe we'll see an uptick in the remote workforce and this is going to be part of people's resiliency plan, it is not going to go away. So we're going to see that. We see CIOs are going in for emergency spending and relief and they have to solve this problem immediately. But then they're going to look at their overall business resiliency, their overall architecture and they realize that just trying to jam everything through VPN back to the mother ship is not going to work. You'll see more and more of Zero Trust which were perfect fit in their overall architecture. And I do think it's going to fundamentally change the way people work and consume technologies, including security technologies.
- Andrew Nowinski:
- Great. Thanks, George. And then in that same vein, as more companies are forced to adapt to this remote workforce, I was wondering if you've seen an uptick via the AWS channel as companies look to push more infrastructure to Amazon versus trying to maintain an on-premise infrastructure? Thanks.
- George Kurtz:
- And the answer is yes. We've got a great partnership with AWS. It cuts the sales cycle down when we use the AWS marketplace by almost 50%. And just a quick step add from an ARR perspective, just in Q1 we were up 32% quarter-over-quarter with our AWS marketplace deal. So it's been an amazing channel for us. And at the end of the day, I think people as they are remote, as procurement is not around, it's a great channel for them. The terms are pretty much negotiated. You can get a deal done very quickly and it slots right in into their overall environment. And by the way they can buy it and still use it on their on-prem environment, doesn't have to be used just in the AWS cloud. So it's been really a great channel for us.
- Operator:
- Thank you. And ladies and gentlemen, in the interest of time please limit your questions to one. Our next question is from Matt Hedberg with RBC Capital.
- Matthew Hedberg:
- Hey guys. Congrats on the results. George, you highlighted a number of reasons why CrowdStrike can do well in times of uncertainty. I think it's really helpful for us to consider. One of them is your ability to not only keep customers safe but also save them money. And I guess on that point, can you give us a glimpse into what CIOs or CSOs are saying right now about their security spend? And if additional mind share comes your way from share shift, beyond Prevent or Insight, what are you sort of most excited about from a new product attach perspective?
- George Kurtz:
- Sure. Well CIOs and CSOs, but in particular CIOs, are looking for anything that will consolidate their footprint and reduce cost and complexity and we slot absolutely right into that. I can tell you from when we started the Company to where the conversation was, it wasn't at the CIO level to where we are today as a true platform. Almost every large deal involves the CIO. So they are looking for this. And as you pointed out beyond just the next-gen AV and EDR piece, we have things like Discover with real time response. We've added a tremendous amount of automation at RSA. You might have been there. We showed how we can deploy emergency patches, we can basically pull data, bring the system back to health. And increasingly, we're seeing the IT ops team leveraging the CrowdStrike technology, which is always great because you want the IT team to be excited about security technologies. They get what they need, the security team gets what they want, and overall we're solving and we're selling an outcome, which is basically keeping customers from being breached, but at the same time giving them the consolidation and efficiency they need and save you money. So you wrap that all together, that's an incredibly compelling offering. And in some of the earnings calls this one and some of the prior ones I've talked about the consolidation, five, six, seven different technologies we've been able to consolidate out. Things like Spotlight, we have new release come out at the end of Q4, broader coverage and we've seen the adoption pick up very rapidly in that module and customers really liking it. So whether it's that, Falcon X, across the board, I mean we have strong module adoption. I continue to come back to Discover and Spotlight though. These are real two gems that the IT team can leverage. Tell me what the patch, here you go, and help me automate my systems with Discover, it's a great one-two combination.
- Matthew Hedberg:
- Super helpful, George. Well done, guys.
- Operator:
- Thank you. Our next question comes from Rob Owens with Piper Sandler.
- Rob Owens:
- Great. And thanks for taking my question. Want you guys to drill down a little bit and add color to some of the commentary around hiring potentially. And have you changed your hiring plans as you are a remote company, your ability to hire virtually and how you see this playing out both in the next quarter and this fiscal year? Thanks.
- George Kurtz:
- Yeah. Thanks, Rob. Since I started the Company, a big part of the overall thesis was we needed the best people wherever they were and that's what we started with when we had the first 20 launch employees. So we've been able to grow up as a remote company, we've been able to figure out how to make that work, we've been able get people in lots of different places. And I think we will continue to do that. We don't have any plans to change our hiring. It's certainly competitive environment out there, but when you're in the cutting edge with our data science teams with handling 3 trillion events at scale on a weekly basis with using the latest and greatest technologies we need the very best people. I believe we have the best people in the industry. And what they've been able to do in a short period of time in a very stressful environment is just Herculean. So I can't say enough about the great people at CrowdStrike and we're going to continue to hire those folks around the globe and it's really important to have the very best people to make sure our customers are protected.
- Operator:
- Thank you. And our last question comes from Gregg Moskowitz with Mizuho.
- Gregg Moskowitz:
- All right. Thank you for taking the question. George, it's hard not to take notice when someone like yourselves say this is the best competitive landscape you've encountered in your 27-year career and you spoke on in your prepared remarks around interest level surging post the Broadcom-Symantec integration. But I'm wondering that was whether you've seen any changes in the rate of displacement activity around Symantec over the past few months or is that not yet actually kicked in?
- George Kurtz:
- Well thanks, Gregg. I think it's both. Again, as I said in the past what we've seen is a compression of someone who may be out a year in terms of renewal and now coming to . In many cases they've been hit with some ransom or something that really has accelerated while they're coming to us. In other cases, they've just not happy with support. They're not on the named list and they basically have come to us and said, okay, maybe we'll run out one part of the Symantec license, but we're going to pick some pieces of your suit up, we'll get that up and running now. And then when these things start to run out, we'll ultimately just move everything over to you. So it -- Gregg, it's really a little bit of both.
- Operator:
- Thank you. And this concludes our Q&A for today. I would like to turn the call back to George Kurtz, President and Chief Executive Officer for his final remarks.
- George Kurtz:
- All right. Well, thanks to all of you for your time today. Obviously, it's a very trying environment and our hearts and prayers go out to all the folks that are affected by this virus. We certainly appreciate your interest and we look forward to speaking with you next quarter. Thank you so much and please stay safe.
- Operator:
- And with that, ladies and gentlemen, we thank you for participating in today’s program. You may now disconnect. Have a wonderful day.
Other CrowdStrike Holdings, Inc. earnings call transcripts:
- Q1 (2025) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q4 (2024) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q3 (2024) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q2 (2024) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q1 (2024) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q4 (2023) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q3 (2023) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q2 (2023) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q1 (2023) CRWD earnings call transcript
- Q4 (2022) CRWD earnings call transcript