MongoDB, Inc.
Q4 2021 Earnings Call Transcript

Published:

  • Operator:
    Good day, and welcome to the MongoDB Fourth Quarter Fiscal Year 2021 Earnings Call. Please note that this event is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to Brian Denyeau from ICR. Please go ahead, sir.
  • Brian Denyeau:
    Great. Thank you, Carl. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today to review MongoDB’s fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2021 financial results, which we announced in our press release issued after the close of the market today. Joining me on the call today are Dev Ittycheria, President and CEO of MongoDB; and Michael Gordon, MongoDB’s COO and CFO.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Thank you, Brian, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. I will start by reviewing our fourth quarter results before giving you a company update. Looking quickly at our fourth quarter financial results, we generated revenue of $171 million, a 38% year-over-year increase and above the high end of our guidance. We grew subscription revenue 39% year-over-year, Atlas revenue grew 66% year-over-year and now represents 49% of revenue and we had another strong quarter of customer growth ended the quarter with over 24,800 customers. I believe we will look back at 2020 as the year that put an exclamation point on the need for businesses to reinvent themselves using software and data. As the world increasingly becomes digital first, there’s no off the shelf software that organizations can buy to differentiate themselves against their competition. To be blunt, you cannot buy a competitive advantage, you have to build it yourself. And to build your differentiated future using software and data, you have to maximize the productivity of your developers. Managing data is a developer’s most challenging problem and the biggest drain on their productivity. Legacy platforms are not designed for how developers think and code, nor they designed for performance and scale. This problem only gets worse at the data intensity and performance requirements of modern applications increase. Consequently, developers spend an enormous amount of time working around the limitations of existing solutions versus spending time building better applications and user experiences that drive a competitive advantage.
  • Michael Gordon:
    Thanks, Dev. As mentioned, we delivered another strong performance in the fourth quarter, both fiscal financially and operationally. I'll begin with a detailed review of our fourth quarter results and then finished with our outlook for the first quarter and full fiscal year 2022. First, I'll start with the fourth quarter results. Total revenue in the quarter was $171 million up 38% year-over-year. Subscription revenue was $163.9 million up 39% year-over-year and professional services revenue is $7.1 million up 24% year-over-year. As Dev mentioned, we're very proud of our execution in this difficult and uncertain environment. In particular, we had another stronger than expected quarter in terms of closing new business.
  • Operator:
    We will now begin the question-and-answer session. And our first question today will from Sanjit Singh with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
  • Sanjit Singh:
    Thank you for taking the questions and congrats on a great fiscal year 2021 and a strong Q4, it was really great to see the Atlas accelerating the 66% growth. And so maybe the first question is to start on Atlas. Dev, could you sort of give us some of the trends you're seeing within Atlas, as it relates to growth coming from app modernization or relational – the relational displacements versus net new, how that sort of mix play out in Q4 versus what you've seen on for the balance of the year?
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Yes. So Sanjit, I'd say a couple things. One, I would say that obviously, there's a big secular trend about the move to the cloud, but what's happening is that people are recognizing that just lift and shift is not the right approach and that I would more frame it as lifts and transform. And that's where MongoDB comes in. People recognize the benefits of our flexible data model through the document model. They recognize the benefits of running and using multiple use cases because of the versatility of the document model. They also appreciate the scalability and performance of our distributed architecture and even more pronounced because Atlas basically automates all that. What we're also seeing a new trend is the increasing importance of multi-cloud and customers are more and more interested in multi-cloud and being able to deliver a multi-cloud solution for either resiliency or other reasons. And so we see customers building new apps on Atlas and re-platforming existing apps on Atlas. So we've seen trends across the board making Atlas a very attractive definition for app development.
  • Sanjit Singh:
    That's really helpful. And then that's my follow-up, as I think about guidance for fiscal year 2022 and some of the things that could come online, I want to just get a status update on partners and which ones you think are the most material in terms of contributing to growth and which ones are more earlier stage as it relates to, you just sign on with Tencent, Alibaba, as couple of years in the making a closer relationship with Google, if you just sort of like walk through some of the progress with the strategic partners and which one you think is that more than material scale on that this juncture?
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Well, I start with the hyperscale vendors. First, the U.S.-based ones, we have deep relationships with all three and we're doing well across the board. I think it's coming down to, one, MongoDB is incredibly popular on all the three platforms. Two, I think customers can separate the difference between some of the ambulation offerings versus MongoDB Atlas. Three, I think people are getting more and more comfortable with the – our document architecture and how versatile it is and how it really enables innovation to happen very, very quickly. And I would say that so that – so we're partnering a lot in the field with the cloud vendors where the Tencent relationship is fairly new. So I think that's going to take a little bit of time for it to take home. But the fact that we now have relationships in both Alibaba and Tencent and one of the largest markets in the world, we feel really good about. And then I would say the other partnerships in terms of the global systems integrators are also paving the way. We're seeing a lot of activity as they're bringing us into deals or we're using them or customers are using them as to augment their development capacity. And we're also working with some boutique asides. We have some real domain expertise for MongoDB to help accelerate customers’ time to market for their needs. And so I would say, we're seeing – there's not one partner that's, I would say moving the needle more than anyone else. We're basically seeing broad-based help across the board, across our partnerships.
  • Sanjit Singh:
    Appreciate that. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    And our question will come from Brad Reback with Stifel. Please go ahead.
  • Brad Reback:
    Great. Thanks very much. Maybe sticking with Atlas, the sequential acceleration in the business is pretty impressive even with acceleration of digital transformation out there. Were there any one-time items that positively impacted the quarter? Is this just normal usage trends?
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    No, I would describe it. It was a good quarter, Brad. Thanks for calling that out. We've talked about sort of some of the trends that we were seeing during COVID. We mentioned in Q3 that the cohorts were back to sort of pre-COVID expansion levels. We've continued to see that. And so I think there's nothing particularly worth calling out one-time. There are obviously always like one-time puts and takes in any quarter, but nothing sort of outside of the normal. It was a good quarter across the board, but particularly within Atlas, within self-serve, we saw some nice expansion, but overall, just really strong and not a lot of businesses that north of $300 million run rates growing north of 60%.
  • Brad Reback:
    Impressive. Thanks very much.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Brent Bracelin with KeyBanc. Please go ahead.
  • Brent Bracelin:
    Thank you, and good afternoon. I guess I wanted to talk a little bit about new customer lands. If I look at the last two quarters, I think you've added more customers in the last six months than you added all of last year, as you think about the momentum here, this a signal of just kind of broader Mongo to be brand awareness. Is this a sign that maybe there's an industry acceleration and the appetite to build new apps? And then just if you could just share, is the profile of new customers changing or is it still predominantly being led by developers? Any color that'd be helpful.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Right. So I mean I would say, it's – there's a few factors at play. One, I think it's become clear to everyone that MongoDB is a very viable, mission critical platform in contrast to and as a viable alternative to relational databases. And frankly, we don't hear anyone in our customer base is talking about growing the SQL server, Oracle or DB2 estates. So people are definitely moving off their legacy platforms. And then when they think about building on a new platform, they quickly understand the versatility and the flexibility of the document model. They also appreciate the performance and scalability of our architecture. And what's interesting now is, as I mentioned earlier, multi-cloud has become an increasingly important consideration. Some customers want a cloud provider resiliency in a single country where only – collaborator only has one region. Another reason for multi-cloud is that customers are often maybe acquire other companies. And so they start, beginning question is, should I put everything in one cloud? And then the third reason is that they want to take advantage of different capabilities offered by different cloud providers. And so we see a whole host of reasons why we're acquiring new customers. And I would say, a lot of it's just a function of MongoDB just emerging as truly the pre-eminent application data platform.
  • Michael Gordon:
    Maybe just quickly, I'd add onto that to the second part of your question, Brent. Clearly, large market and we're early on in their penetration. So that's great to see. In terms of the customers and the customers that we're adding here and sort of how do they compare to historic customers? Maybe I'll just say a couple of quick things, first of all, obviously it's early, but we do have a couple quarters of data and I'd say the initial signs are certainly encouraging. Obviously, ultimately, the long-term quality will depend on the expansion over multiple years. But so far what we're seeing on an apples-to-apples basis is the cohorts are broadly in line from sizing growth characteristics versus the prior cohorts. I'd say, they're probably two important mix components to keep in mind though. The first is that some of the go-to-market optimizations that we've talked about in the last couple of calls that we've made – sort of made – reduce the friction, made it easier for customers to come on board, and disproportionately helped the mid-market, and the mid-market customer spend meaningful less on average than an enterprise customer, so just to keep that in mind. And then secondly some of the acceleration in direct sales customers are customers who are previously self-serve, who we've gotten better at identifying the signals for those – for whom we'd benefit from a direct relationship with. And that sort of is accretive to their future growth, but that's not net revenue change in the period. And that's not – that's shifting channels if you will, in terms of customer accounts. So those are probably two important mix things to keep in mind as you're kind of looking at or trying to extrapolate.
  • Brent Bracelin:
    Super helpful there. I think even my dog got a little excited by. Thanks for the color.
  • Michael Gordon:
    Thanks, Brent.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Mohit Gogia with Barclays. Please go ahead.
  • Mohit Gogia:
    Thanks for taking my question and congrats on the really strong Q4. I just want to stay on that topic. So the land and expand motion wipes. So we saw the land motion really do well despite the pandemic and you discussed the drivers there. But if I look at the expansion rate and the expand motion looking ahead to fiscal quarter two, can you help us understand as to wave like – how do you think about, so obviously we are hopefully putting COVID in the background here, right? So and one of the headwinds on the business would having an expansion site, where maybe some applications that were in the pipeline would be put on hold, right? So I'm just curious as to how you're thinking about that trajectory of the expansion rate for fiscal 2022 and how have you factored that into guidance. And then I have another follow-up question. Thank you.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Yes. Mohit, what I would say is, as we mentioned in the prepared remarks, even in a large accounts, we still believe we have a very small percentage of their data – total database spend. Now I do want to make clear, MongoDB is not a product that you just buy and then start using. You have to actually build an application on top of it. So this is a certain rate and pace of app development, whether you're building new applications or replatforming existing applications. But what we've seen and as we mentioned, once we get into an account, we find it reasonably, easy to expand into adjacent opportunities. And the adjacent opportunities tend to be bigger than the initial deal. And so we don't see that they'll – we don't expect to be a meaningful change in that this coming year. And while the world may start opening up and people may be potentially building new apps faster. We think that that can only help our business, but right now we feel that we're really well positioned for the operations that we've already uncovered in these new customers. And we're still continuing to seek new customers going to this year, so that we continue to build a healthy pipeline of a large customer base.
  • Mohit Gogia:
    Thank you. And my follow-up question is on the go-to-market investment sides. So, I mean, this is typically the time of the year when companies sort of like evaluate all their sales motions and sales structures spend looking ahead. So as you scale the business, right, so obviously, very healthy growth at scale. As you scale, and as you make these go-to-market investments, is there anything you should be aware in terms of sales structure changes or anything of that sort? That's just on my end. Thank you.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Yes. So I think we've talked about it in previous calls, but we've been very pleased with the success we've been seeing with our execution through our sales channels. And so we're essentially doubling down on what we did this past year, the sales organization and our marketing organization executed really, really well. And that – and we're also seeing benefits of a flywheel effect between our self-serve channel and on our sales channel. As Michael mentioned, our sales authorization is getting better and better at understanding product usage signals to figure out which customers would benefit from having a more direct relationship. And the self-serve channel becomes a very easy channel for us to acquire new customers. So that's paying dividends as well. So I think you'll see us continue to refine the model, but you're not going to see any major changes. We'll probably get more sophisticated around segmenting certain parts of the markets. And the certain parts of the market that we still have a very poor geographic coverage. They'll see us expand our sales reach in markets where we feel like that could benefit from adding more people in the region.
  • Mohit Gogia:
    Thanks guys.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Thank you.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Tyler Radke with Citi. Please go ahead.
  • Tyler Radke:
    Thanks very much for taking my question. I wanted to ask about your investing in FY2022. Obviously, the guidance implies that you're continuing to spend a lot on growing the business in FY2022. So curious where the biggest priorities areas are for you and then within the direct sales side, are you kind of investing more in the mid-market side, where you've may seen really nice kind of net adds there? Or is it more on the enterprise? Thank you.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Yes. So we see the bulk of investments going in two areas, one in product and the other is and go-to-market. Obviously, on the product side, we're really excited about the market opportunity we're going after. The market just seems to be bigger and bigger. The more we spent time in it. And we're clearly getting a lot of traction and our customers are asking for more and more capabilities. We talked about some of the new products, we launched last summer they're starting to get very healthy traction. And so that gives us even more confidence about other things that we want to build based on customer feedback, as well as our own strategic insight in terms of what we think the market needs. So and by the way, I think we have a first-class engineering and product organization. So it makes that decision that much easier. The second point, I'd make is to the earlier question, we've seen a lot of success in sales. So the classic thing is when you see success, you continue to invest. Our performance is broad-based and we're seeing performance – great performance, both in through our field organization, as well as our inside sales team. And you're going to see us invest aggressively in both areas. I think you can see us, as I said probably do a little bit more refinement of how we go-to-market a little bit more segmentation across the market, a little bit more focused on hunting versus farming. Perhaps even a little bit more focused in the mid market to what you implied. But it's all about just going out and capturing more of the market because the market is so large and leveraging all the lessons we learned so far in terms of how we build our sales processes, how we generate pipeline and how we prosecute deals.
  • Tyler Radke:
    Great. Thank you. And just a quick follow-up maybe for Michael, I wanted to kind of clarify one of the dynamics you referenced in terms of the Atlas – of the Atlas cohorts. So I think it's been about a year since you made the go-to-market changes to kind of reduce the friction in terms of new customers coming on board with a lower or no commit. But maybe just in – now that you look back at the past year, like, how has those spending levels trended relative to kind of the old approach, I think you might have noted that the spending levels were kind of consistent with the so-called old approach, but just wanted to clarify that. Thank you.
  • Michael Gordon:
    Absolutely. Yes. So I think it's important to look at sort of like kind customers. And so if you look meeting sort of a mid market versus an enterprise customer or something like that as opposed to comparing everyone to the average, because mixes do matter here. But yes, that's exactly right. If you look sort of like a kind of apples-to-apples basis, we're seeing fairly comfortable behavior from cohorts in terms of size and growth rates and expansion rates et cetera, et cetera. Obviously, we don't have years and years of data. So we'll have to see that, but certainly the initial signs are encouraging and consistent with the theories and the initial observations.
  • Tyler Radke:
    Great. Thank you.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Rishi Jaluria with D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.
  • Rishi Jaluria:
    Dev and Michael, thanks so much for taking my questions and nice to see continued strong execution throughout the end of the year. Wanted to maybe start, Dev, with a comment that you made in your prepared remarks, which is, just how under-penetrated you are even in the existing customer base. What is it going to take to grow that footprint within the existing customers? Is that just a matter of capturing new workloads and new apps and there’s just a natural mix that happens over time? Or is there anything that you’re doing and can continue to do to accelerate the migrations and as you talked about the lift and transform strategy and then I’ve got a follow-up.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Yes. So what I was trying to convey in my prepared remarks is that growing an account takes time, you go through a set of stages. The first stage is landing a deal. The second stage is using the early success of your initial when to expand into adjacent opportunities. And then as you get promulgated across the organization, you end up becoming declared a standard. What that really implies is when you become a standard, is that you’re essentially giving the development teams free reign to use MongoDB for pretty much any use case. And so it becomes that much easier for the organization to deploy new workloads of MongoDB. But the act of actually building and writing an app and then running it, whether it’s on-premise or in the cloud still takes time. It’s not like these apps magically create themselves. So there’s still, obviously some effort required from the development teams to build those applications. So there’s a certain rate and pace by which you can expand the workloads on your platform. But by definition, as we grow, as people get more and more comfortable using MongoDB, as we have more and more proof points now with nearly 25,000 customers, we have proof points almost across every potential use case, every industry, every geography and so it gives customers a lot of confidence to better MongoDB. And so that becomes largely that much easier to win the next incremental workload. And so, but it does take some time. It’s not like magically, you can replatform 1000 apps from MongoDB overnight.
  • Unidentified Analyst:
    Got it. Dev, thanks that’s super helpful. And then I wanted to maybe ask a little bit about future opportunities for M&A. Obviously, Realm seems to be, have been a pretty successful product and technological expansion. Given the kind of cast balance you have and the dry powder you have to put to work, where should we be thinking about future opportunities for you to do more of those smaller technological acquisitions and expand the platform? Thanks.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Given the nature of our application data platform, you typically will not see us do some major acquisition and kind of try and bolt-on some other solution onto our platform that becomes very hard to do. If you look at our history, what we have done is made some surgical acquisitions. You mentioned Realm, earlier we made an acquisition of WiredTiger, which really allowed us to deliver on some enhanced performance capabilities around right intensive use cases announced the underlying storage engine for our core database server. We also did an acquisition of mLab, which was kind of accelerated expansion into offering a MongoDB as a service offering. But there were I would say more surgical acquisitions. I don’t think you’ll see us go do some massive mega acquisition, but we will obviously, whenever if you see something that potentially allows us to accelerate our product roadmap in a certain way, I think you’re right. We have the resources to go do those kinds of things, and we’re constantly kind of talking to people in the marketplace.
  • Unidentified Analyst:
    Wonderful. Thank you so much.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Ittai Kidron with Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.
  • Ittai Kidron:
    Thanks. Good numbers guys. A couple for me, Dev, maybe I want to kind of double-click on Atlas a little bit and get a better understanding of the overlap between customer usage and your large customers. When you talk about the $1 million and $100,000 customers, what’s the penetration of Atlas into those customers right now? And how do I think about the size of the Atlas deployments?
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    I would say a big percentage of our seven-figure accounts are already using Atlas, but there’s definitely some seven-figure customers who are EA only. So there’s a mix, but there’s a broader base of Atlas customers. And as I said, we have a lot of customers who are moving more slowly to the cloud, but view MongoDB as a very attractive platform because they will never have to rewrite the application as they transitioned from on-prem to the cloud or from one cloud provider to another cloud provider, which makes it a very attractive future-proof platform for customers.
  • Ittai Kidron:
    Got it. And then Michael, just a follow-up for you. You’ve talked about expansion rates kind of coming back to normal, but you also talked about COVID headwinds that still remain. So maybe you can fine tune for us exactly where and how do you still see impact from COVID on your business?
  • Michael Gordon:
    Yes, sure, absolutely. I think the key thing in terms of COVID impact is just the new business environment. I think what we’ve seen in terms of the Atlas cohorts is a resumption of the pre-COVID cohort behavior. So it’s really more about new business and it’s very consistent with what we talked about last quarter, which has sort of bigger deals, multi-year deals, getting extra scrutiny, that kind of stuff. The overall, just uncertainty of the background virus, does have an impact on new business.
  • Ittai Kidron:
    Okay. Well, you just had like great two record breaking quarters in new add, so I’m just trying to understand it’s just a number of new adds or they just start with a smaller side.
  • Michael Gordon:
    I think as it relates to COVID specific, I think it’s more about magnitude than quantity of account.
  • Ittai Kidron:
    Okay. Very good. Good luck guys. Thanks.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Jack Andrews with Needham. Please go ahead.
  • Jack Andrews:
    Thanks for taking my question. I want to see if you can provide an update in terms of some adoption trends you’re seeing for your newer products, like Search and Data Lake. And how should we be thinking about any uplift in consumption rates for customers who are adopting these types of products?
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Right. So again, just as a reminder for people, we had three products last summer Realm, Atlas, Data Lake, and Search. And let me go one by one. So we’ve seen solid reception of Realm, especially now with the availability of Realm Sync, which really enables developers to build very sophisticated mobile applications and synchronize the data at the edge with data at the core that saves developers an enormous amount of time and effort. And it’s something that’s quite complicated. And so we’re seeing a lot of interest there. And so we’re quite pleased with the traction. I would say with Atlas Data Lake, one of the most popular use cases is data tiering, allowing customers to manage large volumes of data while retaining the ability to access and query that data. And emerging use cases, being able to do federated queries using ADL as a mechanism to transform data within our platform and then create across multiple databases and storage locations. And so that’s really exciting. And then on Search, we’ve made some enhancements, including a visual index builder, which has really accelerated adoption. And what we’re seeing is customers like the fact that they don’t have to use solar or elastic in conjunction with MongoDB, but that they can do everything in MongoDB. It really simplifies their life and their data architecture. And so we’re quite excited about the traction of all three products. I do want to remind everyone that the revenue does not show up as individual skews, but as Atlas revenue and these products do have multi-year journeys and you’ll see us continue to refine and enhance these products. And we expect them to have a strong ROI over the next coming years.
  • Jack Andrews:
    Great. Thanks and congratulations on the results.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Thank you.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Fred Havemeyer with Macquarie. Please go ahead.
  • Fred Havemeyer:
    Hey, thank you very much for this. I’d like to ask during some of our work we’ve been picking up that ISVs are incrementally interested in MongoDB Atlas, and that we’ve seen a couple just in our work also scaling on top of it. So I would like to ask generally speaking, how do you see the ISV ecosystem around MongoDB and perhaps specifically MongoDB Atlas evolving. And where do you think that this stands in terms of maturity today?
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Yes, that’s a great question. So we’ve had ISVs since the early days of MongoDB build – use MongoDB as the underlying data store for their product. And obviously the early days is more front end applications, what’s happening now is we’re starting to see the vertical specific deepened our back office ISVs, financial services, insurance in telecom, et cetera, who are looking to replatform, obviously customer buying behaviors change. People want to consume software as a service. Those ISVs also want to stop paying the Oracle tax. And also ISVs are quite attracted by the flexibility and agility of the document model, as well as the scalability of our architecture. So it allows them to serve global needs quite easily. And so we’ve actually have a small team focused on the ISVs. And there, it’s almost like a two-step process where we are essentially selling to the CTOs, the VP product, sometimes the CEO, depending on the size of the ISV and then helping them, build or replatform their product on MongoDB, and then helping them generate the first set of customers. And I should also add that ISVs typically don’t want to use a cloud proprietary database because by definition, that will limited them to only one cloud and customers do care about multi-cloud. And so the fact that MongoDB runs across all the major cloud vendors and the fact that they can offer capabilities in a multi-cloud environment makes MongoDB, even that much more attractive.
  • Fred Havemeyer:
    Thank you for that. And then I’d like to follow up, I think touching on something you were also referencing in some of your prepared remarks around the multi-cloud cluster capabilities on MongoDB Atlas. Now it’s something that is fairly to their unique in the database as a service marketplace to have essentially like one click multi-cloud deployments. So I’m curious, you referenced one specific customer, but I’m wondering if you could more broadly speak about how your customers are approaching the multi-cloud MongoDB Atlas capability and whether that’s something that is bringing more customers to the table, or perhaps also bringing more of your enterprise customers also back in to speak to you about what Atlas can do.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Right. So in concept, platform, independence is something that customers care a lot about. In reality, the onus was on the customer to try and figure out how to make it work. They had to figure out how to extract all the differences between the different cloud providers, deal with all the integrations, deal with different authentication schemes and so on and so forth that made it quite challenging for customers to do it themselves. What MongoDB Atlas does is actually make that very easy. So when we show customers, we do demos for customers and show them that literally with a few clicks and a few minutes, they can provision clusters across two different cloud providers and do it very, very easily. They’re shocked. And because they know how much effort it would take them to try and do that themselves. So the other point I would make, which is what I said in the prepared remarks. We increasingly find senior level stakeholders, they care a lot about platform independence not just for lock-in, but they want for resiliency. They want to be able to take advantage of different capabilities on different cloud providers. And so being able to use MongoDB to do that becomes very, very attractive. And so you’re right, it is definitely bringing more enterprises to look at us as a very viable mission critical platform.
  • Fred Havemeyer:
    Great. Thank you for the color. I appreciate it.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Thanks, Fred.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will come from Pat Walravens with JMP Securities. Please go ahead.
  • Joey Marincek:
    Great. Thank you so much. This is Joey Marincek on for Pat. Just two from our end. So first, on those large customers, particularly the ones spending over $1 million, I’m just wondering, how do those conversations evolve over time? And then secondly, how are you guys thinking about return to work? You view MangoDB as a work from home company, long-term. Thank you guys.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Sure. So with regard to large customers most of our large customers start as small customers. They could be 500 or 600 customers, and then they evolve into seven-figure customers. On the rare occasion, we might have a customer that quickly becomes a seven-figure customer. And that’s typically because they have one use case or one workload that grows very, very fast. But in most situations it’s basically customers adding more workloads to the MongoDB platform. And so obviously it takes some time. As you said, once you get in and win a deal, depending on the size of the account, it could be multiple years as we are in the expansion phase of winning more and more business. And at some point in time, when you start talking to senior level stakeholders, they see how popular we are with their developers, they see how widely spread we are across the organization, and they want to build a more strategic relationship. And for us, we want to be declared a standard where by definition, a developer doesn’t have to seek permission to use MongoDB. So it’s really a function of leveraging our successes early on, proving out the scalability and flexibility of our platform. And then, really showing them that MongoDB can be truly a versatile application data platform, not just for on-premise but across all the major cloud providers as well. And then in terms of your second question, return to work. Yes, I mean, obviously today we’re all working from home. What we have told our employees that we don’t expect to be 100% remote organization. We do believe that there’s value in our people coming together. There’s value in coming together for team meetings, for planning sessions for the social benefit of connecting with people. We also believe that employees earlier in their career will benefit from more direct mentorship from the managers and more of a direct contact basis versus over some sort of remote environment. But we also believe that we’ve learned a lot of lessons that you can run a business of our scale and size remotely. And so we’re not going to force everyone to come back to the office. We’re going to re-imagine our offices and create more multi-tenant environments where people can have a shared desk and come in maybe two, three days a week. Some people may have work remotely for 80%, 90% of time and maybe come to the office once in a while for key meetings. And so this also gives us more flexibility to look for talent and markets that we may naturally not have considered, because we now have seen how working remotely can be quite effective. And so we’ll be more aggressive in sourcing talent from markets that we typically did not seek in the past.
  • Joey Marincek:
    Super helpful. Thank you so much.
  • Operator:
    And our next question will comes from Jason Ader with William Blair. Please go ahead.
  • Billy Fitzsimmons:
    Hey guys, this is Billy Fitzsimmons on for Jason Ader. Congrats on the solid quarter. Over the last several quarters, you’ve expanded both new features and new add-on products, such as Realm, Realm Sync, Data Lake, Charts, multi-cloud functionality. I guess, are any of these standing out over others in terms of customer adoption or in terms of generating customer excitement? And then how would you think customer conversations have kind of evolved at recent quarters versus a year or two ago, both in regards to these new features or just how customer demand has changed recent quarters?
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Yes. I think what you should think about these new capabilities is really adding to the richness and competitive and comparative advantage of our platform versus like trying to be standalone products that we just position in markets independently. And so what it means is that people can run more and more use cases in MongoDB have a much more simplified architecture, rather than having a bunch of bespoke, implementations for every use case that they potentially want to implement. They can obviously create that data much more easily, manage their infrastructure more easily. The developers only have one interface to learn and essentially they can run those workloads anywhere. They can run on-premise as well as they can run it on any cloud or across clouds. So that’s the real benefit of the expanding capabilities that we’re adding. And we’re seeing traction across the board. So I would say, again, all these products where at G8 last summer, we’re still in the early days. But we’re really excited and really proving out the platform strategy. And as we noted that we already have some nice set of customers are using the new products and they’re very sophisticated customers as well. So we feel good about the reaction we’re getting.
  • Billy Fitzsimmons:
    Thanks, Dev, appreciate it.
  • Operator:
    And this will conclude our question-and-answer session. I’d like to turn the conference back over to Dev Ittycheria for any closing remarks.
  • Dev Ittycheria:
    Well, I want to thank everyone for joining us today. I just want to make kind of summary, a couple of points. One, I think it’s clear that enterprises everywhere are feeling an extraordinary sense of urgency to reinvent themselves and that to do that using software and data. Second, we’re seeing great success in building more strategic partnerships with our customers as evidenced by the growth of our six and seven-figure accounts. And lastly, I would say that the accelerating secular trends and our track record of success give us increased conviction to aggressively invest in order to maximize our long-term potential. And that’s what we’re doing. Thank you for joining us. And we look forward to speak to you soon. Take care.
  • Operator:
    The conference is now concluded. Thank you for attending today’s presentation. At this time, you may now disconnect your lines.