Good morning everyone, and welcome to the Docebo Inc. Q4 and year-end 2021 earnings call. All participants are currently in a listen-only mode. Following the presentation, we will open the line for a Q&A session for analysts. Instructions will be provided at that time for research analysts to ask questions. We ask that analysts please limit themselves to two questions and return to queue for any follow-ups. I'd now like to turn the call over to Docebo's Vice President of Investor Relations, Mike McCarthy. Please go ahead, Mike.
Thank you, operator. Before we begin, Docebo would like to remind listeners that certain information discussed today may be forward-looking in nature. Such forward-looking information reflects the company's current views with respect to future events. Any such information is subject to risks, uncertainties, and assumptions that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected in the forward-looking statements. For more information on the risks, uncertainties, and assumptions relating to forward-looking statements, please refer to Docebo's public filings, which are available on SEDAR and EDGAR. During the call, we will reference certain non-IFRS financial measures. Although we believe these measures provide useful supplemental information about our financial performance, they are not recognized measures and do not have standardized meanings under IFRS. Please see our MD&A for additional information regarding our non-IFRS financial measures, including reconciliations to the nearest IFRS measures.
Please note that unless otherwise stated, all references to any financial figures are in U.S. dollars. Now, I'd like to turn over the call to Docebo's CEO, Claudio Erba.
Hi, everybody, and thank you for joining us on our 2021 year-end earnings call. With me today is Alessio Artuffo, our President and CRO, as well as Sukaran Mehta. I'm happy to share that Sukaran, who has been an incredibly valuable leader at Docebo since prior to our TSX IPO in 2019, has been promoted to CFO from interim CFO. Congratulations, Sukaran. Before I begin my prepared remarks this morning, I wanted to first take a few moments to express our concern and support for the people of Ukraine. While our business presence in the Ukraine and Russia is extremely small, as a global company with a European heritage and roots, many Docebians, including me, have deep ties to the people of the region.
We have made a corporate donation, and we are matching employees' donation to the International Committee for the Red Cross, which is helping people affected by the conflict and is supporting the work of the Ukrainian Red Cross. We will continue to support them where we are able. While we find ourselves in these volatile times, we understand the importance of continuing to deliver consistent operating results, and I think we successfully accomplished this in 2021. Revenue for the full year grow 66%, a significant improvement from the also strong 52% growth in revenue we generated in 2020. A big reason for our success has been the horizontal nature of our platform, which is industry and content agnostic. We are winning new logos that is both employee and customer-focused and setting the stage for our land and expand strategy.
We had record new logo performance which included 169 net new customers as the same momentum we saw from enterprise customers in the Q3 continued during the quarter. At the same time, our traditional sweet spot of mid-sized enterprises and departmental wins continued to be steady growth engine for us, accounting for more than half of our new logo business, focused on setting the stage for our land and expand strategy. In Q4, we signed a new customer agreement with the global medical device company, Align Technology. Align chose Docebo to provide external training for their orthodontic firm and also create customized learning experience for their internal teams. Dine Brands Global, the company behind IHOP and Applebee's franchises, selected Docebo to train the team members across their restaurant chain.
In the Q4 , we signed a new customer agreement with the NCAA to deliver a solution to scale its learning and development program for up to 40,000 athletes, coaches, and school administrators. Large implementation like this prove the scalability of our platform at the enterprise level, allowing us to serve some of the leading organization in the sport world. In addition to the strong new logo performance, we are seeing great success in our land and expand strategy. By leveraging our content offering, including Docebo Shape, we've expanded our relationship with BMW to train all departments at their manufacturing facility in Greer, South Carolina. We are pleased to have expanded our agreement with United Nations Global Compact, the world's largest corporate sustainability initiative. This expanded agreement will drive the training for more than 30,000 of its members.
We are also signing the new customer agreement with SolarEdge, a global leader in smart energy technology and developer of an intelligent inverter solution that changes the way solar power is harvested and managed. They will be using Docebo for both employees and customer training. In January, we signed as a strategic partner with Pavilion, the world's leading private membership community for high-growth professionals. As part of our partnership, Docebo will provide to Pavilion its full Docebo suite of products to create, deliver, analyze, and measure the impact for its 7,000 members. In 2021, we introduced new products and modules as part of the Docebo Learning Suite, many of which were launched in the H2 of the year. Some of these new products have exceeded expectations out of the gate, and with others, we are adjusting the formula.
Those are the types of learning we expected, and we are pleased to see new products now starting to contribute nicely to our ACV growth. Our product innovation have also received great recognition this year from a number of independent third parties. We were ranked first in the category of enterprise corporate LMS and leader Europe LMS on the G2 Crowd Winter Report, which is based on reviews from actual customers. We won nine Brandon Hall Group Excellence in Technology Awards, including awards for the Learning Suite, Learn LMS, Shape, Learning Analytics, and Learning Impact, with six of the awards being gold. With the addition of Rudy Valdez as our COO last fall, we continue to staff our team in a way that more closely align our core product development and research and development goals.
In January, we announced the addition of a new Chief Product Officer who had a change in personal circumstances and will not be joining us. Leadership of our product development will continue to be the joint responsibility of Rudy and our CTO and co-founder, Fabio Pirovano, and we will continue to invest in top talent to remain at the forefront of learning innovation. The general turnover in the labor market has presented us with challenges as well as opportunities, as we have been able to add seasoned sales and marketing professionals that will help elevate the next leg of our growth. North America was more than 70% of our sales in 2021 and grew more than 70% year-over-year. It is our largest market and continue to be our greatest source of growth.
We also see expansion opportunities for Docebo around the world that we intend to capture. In 2021, we established a new office in Germany, which is showing early traction. We believe Germany, in particular, can become one of our largest markets outside of the U.S. In January, we have also acquired Skillslive in Australia, a Docebo value-added reseller since 2018 that accelerates our time to market by immediately adding specialized talent and infrastructure to address the APAC region. Lastly, I have talked about the importance of ESG on past conference calls. We hope to have our first ESG report published by the time we speak to you on our next earnings call. That report will share some of the work we do to empower our people, maintain integrity for our stakeholders, manage our environmental footprint, and contribute to the community.
Docebo has an opportunity to make the greatest impact as a corporate citizen to innovate and provide learning technology that helps other organizations achieve some of their own ESG objectives. This is work we already do for many of our customers, and we will provide additional color over time. With that, I will now pass the call to Sukaran to speak about the financials.
Thank you, Claudio, and good morning, everyone. For those interested, a detailed breakdown of our financial results for the three months and FY ended December 31, 2021, can be found in our press release, MD&A, financial statements, which are now available on our website and are also filed on SEDAR and EDGAR. The slide deck accompanying this earnings call was made available on our investor relations website this morning. We were very pleased with our strong results for the Q4 and the FY 2021. This performance sets us up for another year of strong growth with a natural transition to positive adjusted EBITDA as we exit 2022. Total revenue for the Q4 grew to $29.8 million, an increase of 59% from the prior year.
Subscription revenues were $27.5 million, representing 92% of total revenue for the quarter and equating to growth of 64% from the prior year. Net new ARR was $14.2 million in the Q4 and is approximately 40% higher than the net ARR we added in the Q3 of 2021, continuing the robust trend of quarterly net new ARR additions, as shown in slide four. We exited 2021 with $117.7 million in ARR, an increase of 59% over the $74 million reported at the end of 2020.
With over 2,800 customers at the end of Q4 2021, our company-wide average contract value or ACV increased approximately $42,000, up 24% from $34,000 at the end of the Q4 of 2020. Claudio noted, we continue to see traction from enterprise customers as Docebo is being selected for more complex multiple use case deployments. This is reflected in the ACV for new logos and cross-sells added in the Q4 , which was close to $60,000. In addition, approximately 45% of the ARR generated from new and cross-sell logos this quarter came from deals valued at over $100,000, with no single transactions being recorded in excess of $1 million.
This growth in ACV from new logos tells only the beginning of the story with our customers because it captures the size of the relationship we have at the onset. As Alessio will tell you, once we establish a relationship with a great new logo, we are very well positioned to expand ACV by demonstrating value over time. The metric that best highlights ACV expansion after we land a customer is the net dollar retention rate. In 2021, we reported a net dollar retention rate of 113%, an increase from 108% in 2020. The investments we've made in our account executive and customer success teams are bearing fruit as our NDRR continues to expand. I would like to make two additional points on the NDRR.
First, we have continued to add more enterprise customers to our base, and these accounts naturally have more divisions and opportunities for upsells and cross-sells. Second, our upsell, cross-sell motion has been historically driven by expansion of the use cases for Docebo Learn LMS. Now with the launch of the Learning Suite, there are other avenues for expansion. Gross profit margin for the Q4 was 80% of revenue, which compares to 79% for the Q3 and 84% for the prior year period. As we have said in previous quarters, we made investments this year in our customer success and professional services team to facilitate the rollout of our multi-product strategy and to further enhance customer support.
We're starting to see leverage on these investments, resulting in sequential improvement from the Q3 , and we expect to maintain low 80% gross margin profit levels over time. On slide 6, you can see a summary of our operating expense lines. Total operating expenses for the Q4 increased to $26.7 million compared to $20.2 million for the prior year period. G&A has continued to decline as a percentage of revenue to 24.4% for the Q4 compared to 25.2% for the Q3 as we continue to realize efficiencies from increased scale. Sales and marketing expense increased as a percentage of revenue to 42.4% from 41.2% for the Q3 .
The sequential increase was in part the result of seasonal investments in marketing activities during the Q4 that included our annual Docebo Inspire conference. R&D expenditure was $5.5 million or 18.5% of revenue compared to 20.2% in the Q3 . In the Q4 of 2021, we also recognized a one-time year-end benefit from R&D tax credits of approximately $800,000. We reported an adjusted EBITDA loss of $1.5 million for the Q4 of 2021 compared to income of $0.1 million in the prior year period. We reported a net profit of $1.4 million for the Q4 of 2021 compared to $4.1 million net loss for the prior year period.
Finally, free cash flow was essentially neutral in the Q4 , and we continue to have a very healthy balance sheet with net cash and cash equivalents of $250 million. Looking forward into 2022, we continue to focus on growing this business as fast as we responsibly can, and we're continuing to recruit the high-performance talent we need to support our growth targets. However, like every other technology company, we find ourselves in a competitive market and are experiencing the same pressures from wage inflation. Notwithstanding this, we expect to reach a point where the growth in our revenue will naturally transition us into positive adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow as we exit 2022. As you would expect in a maturing company, we will continue to see operating leverage in G&A improve.
In terms of R&D, we expect our expenditure to remain within the 18% to 20% of revenue. Sales and marketing is an area that we will continue to invest as long as our unit economics remain attractive. Near term, we will likely run in the low 40% range. At these levels, our CAC ratio continues to be best in class, with $1 invested in sales and marketing generating $1 in ARR. For the full year 2021, we invested $43.3 million in sales and marketing and added $43.7 million in ARR, with nearly 80% of our new logo and cross-sell contracts being multi-year deals. That concludes my prepared remarks. I'd like to turn it over to the operator now to take some questions from the analysts.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now conduct the Q&A session. If you'd like to ask a question, please press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. If you'd like to withdraw your question, press star two. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any keys. We also ask that you limit your time to one question plus one follow-up before cycling back into the queue. One moment please for your first question. Your first question comes from Robert Young with Canaccord Genuity. Please go ahead.
Hi. Good morning. My first question will be around the sustainability of this strong incremental ARR add in the quarter. You said that there were no transactions over $1 million. So I guess that's implying that there's no materially large deals, but I'm curious if larger deals were a big driver behind the incremental ARR. Is it sustainable? Did that come near the end of the quarter? That's the question.
Hello, Rob. Alessio speaking. The mix of deals in quarter four was according to plan. What we're seeing, Rob, is a continued success in our strategy of adding a healthy mix across our three main commercial segments, those being Commercial or Small Business, Mid-Market, and Enterprise. It is no secret that we are seeing an uptrending success in the Enterprise segment. But our strategy has never been to try and do, necessarily, the very, very large deals upfront, because as stated multiple times, our goal is to win the customer and grow it over time with our new products. On a point of ACV mix. For the past consecutive quarters, 4 consecutive quarters, so for the entire FY 2021, our deals exceeding $50,000 in ACV remain well above 50% of our ARR in terms of units.
That, to me, is a metric that shows an incredible consistency in execution and an alignment of the entire go-to-market machine towards the average customer size, that we really like, which is that 50 to 100K average ACV. Still, we're investing heavily in enterprise, and we're seeing tremendous market fit. You should expect in the future that deals above 100K in ACV continue to become a recurring event, and those will continue to grow over time, thanks to multi-use case and multi-product.
Yeah, Rob. Rob, I'll just speak to Alessio's point just around that. You know, the number we talked about is almost half of the ARR coming in the quarter is from deals of $100K in ACV. We're moving nicely up the enterprise market. Yeah, what we also like is the consistency, right? Because there are no seven-figure deals, but there's a lot of deals that are above $100K that are adding almost 50% of what we have in the quarter. For me, as we think about consistency, this continues to show traction as we penetrate the enterprise segment of the market.
Okay, great. Nothing out of the ordinary for the quarter, just strong demand. My second question would be around the sales efficiency that you were talking about. You said it was $1 for $1 of ARR, but that was lower this quarter, despite I think you said that there was a seasonally higher level of sales and marketing spend. I get around $0.90 for each incremental dollar of ARR. Is that why you're trending towards positive free cash flow in 2022? Is there actually a little bit of a lower level of investment in sales and marketing? Or should we expect that to bump up through the year a little bit?
I'll speak to it first and then, Alessio, feel free to jump in. You're right. If you look at just Q4 in isolation, you know, the CAC ratio is slightly more efficient. Overall, you know, for the full year, the CAC ratio is around $1 spend to generate $1 ARR. You gotta take into account, as you think about CAC ratio, the seasonality, right? You have, you know, sales and marketing expense coming in, but you may have seasonality in terms of ARR performance between the quarters. I prefer to look at it from an annual perspective.
As we think about 2022, we would say that there are certainly investments we will continue to make to support this initiative as we penetrate the enterprise segment of the market, as well as the things that we are doing, and Alessio can speak to it around making sure that the 2,800 book of business that we have, the customers that we have, we have the right strategy and the right team in place from an account management and customer success perspective. Alessio, I'll leave it to you to kinda expand a bit more on that.
The strategy around extracting the maximum amount of value from the customer base, along with staying with high levels of performance of customers' happiness is core for our growth strategy. We've said it multiple times. Happy customers renew. Happy customers grow with us. We have made investments to ensure a good level, a really good mature level of relationship and ratio between our customers and our account management organization. This is going to bear fruits in the future because as we get a better picture of our customers' needs, we're also gonna see a return in the level of penetration of these customers, not only from an upsell standpoint, but also from a cross-sell standpoint. In summary, better ratios means better presence, means better intimacy and better unit economics in the future.
Thanks for taking the question.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Daniel Chan with TD Securities. Please go ahead.
Oh, hi, good morning. I'd like to discuss your geographic expansion plans. You acquired Skillslive to sell your APAC presence. Can you talk about your organic expansion plans internationally and what role partners play in this? I think some of your partners are also focused on expanding geographically. Thanks.
Yeah, Daniel, going through to Claudio. First of all, our first market is North America, and then Europe and Australia, New Zealand. Those are the core markets we are investing in for several reasons, especially because we can leverage our marketing and our sales machine in countries that have the culture footprint that is similar to our culture footprint that we can use in North America and in Europe. Let's say that Germany also geopolitically is stepping in with a lot of additional investment in almost everything in this geopolitical rebalance, and you know that we have opened an office in Germany six months ago, and Nordics are interesting markets. You're right. Other markets, especially in Asia Pacific, are covered by partners and resellers.
I want to stress that most of our revenues comes from Western countries and Australia, New Zealand, and this is where we are investing in, especially in direct sales. Alessio, do you wanna add something on that?
Sure. In addition to that, we believe the latest acquisition of Skillslive gives us acceleration. We've learned a lot out of spinning up offices originally initially in the U.K. after, of course, our North American presence and then Germany, and then even before then, during the forMetris acquisition, which also gave us the opportunity to establish physical presence in France. We've learned that organic building of a net new office takes time, hiring leadership, onboarding them, ramping them up, having them understand our product culture and everything takes time. The Skillslive team was just a tremendous opportunity of, A, phenomenal people, B, great learning and development professionals with a, an incredible network in the region, and C, like I said before, gave us access to already onboarded people that already had a network and relationships.
In just a matter of a couple of months, we have them already operating in our Salesforce instance. They're already reporting on pipelines. They're already developing business. We have a sales leader in place. This would have taken years. On the support and implementation flip side, it gives us the ability to spin up quickly a 24/7 coverage that remains a critical objective for our goals of, you know, global expansion and supporting enterprise clientele that frankly expect a 24/7 support as part of our capabilities, and we're now in a position to offer that.
Thanks. That's very helpful. I wanted to change gears a little bit. Throughout the pandemic, you provided some metrics that showed customer engagement was elevated. Just wondering if you can give us an update on some of those metrics. Have customer engagement with the platform remained at that level even as things start to normalize? Thank you.
Claudio speaking. I'm not sure we can share this data on a number basis, because I mean, we shared anecdotally during the pandemic. I'm not sure if we shared with the specific numbers. That said, the usage of the system is becoming more sophisticated because our user now is used to use e-learning more than the pre-pandemic level, more use cases, more way to learn, more synchronization and data exchange with other systems. It's not only a matter of how many users are logged in the system, but the way they use.
For example, the usage of a learning impact system to assess not only the usage, but the quality impact of learning is an example on how we measure the adoption of the learning, not only from the quantity perspective, but also the quality of the training that our customer deliver. Let's say that, we can provide the post-call some of the data if necessary.
Thanks. That's helpful.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Richard Tse with National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.
Yes, thank you. As you guys make incremental gains into the enterprise, does it change how you operationally organize the business when it comes to functions like R&D and sales and marketing?
Claudio speaking. 100%. I mean, the more we create new products, the more we approach different markets and different industries with different needs require a transformation, a continuous transformation inside the organization. When I say continuous transformation, Alessio is working hard on the sales and marketing team, on better covering vertical use cases and vertical industries and vertical products. Because you can imagine, and this is something we are also learning on our own, that selling a learning analytics products require different skills than selling learning management system. On the product side, the same. We require different leaders, in terms of different skills, different product line manager for different products because they require different expertise.
At the same time, you need to imagine that those two main clustering organizations, meaning silos, sales, marketing, and product, require communication channels between them in order to, you know, work better together, catch market needs, and be synchronized and aligned on what to prioritize, and what not to prioritize. Absolutely, yes. I think that once we have, you know, reshaped the organization to cover the multi-product, multi-industry needs, we will reshape again the organization because there will be another layer of complexity. Alessio, I don't know if you want to add something.
Yeah. Claudio, just in addition to that, you know, the question from Richard was about sales and marketing and R&D. I would add to that, Richard, also our general posture with regards to support and implementation, which are just part of the overall supply chain. There's certainly a adjustment in methodology of selling. There's specific investments and techniques in marketing, say ABM as a reference. But then when it comes to implementing the customer, you have to have methodologies that are adapted to implementing large org, which may have a different phased approach than you would do on a more turnkey, and if you will, accelerated small customer. We understand that, and we had to develop playbooks to satisfy that.
In addition, an enterprise organization, you know, Fortune 1000 level of support expectation is just different from a smaller sized one. We all understand that. What we're doing there to support this trend is also creating best-in-class support services as incremental value to our professional services that will allow us to also improve our unit economics for these customers. Similar to, you know, the best-in-class companies like Salesforce, we're designing dedicated elite support services, which not only provide 24/7 but go to a deeper level of support to customers. We certainly expect this service to be a paid service in the future, and we're working hard to staff for that, and the work is well in progress.
Okay, great. My second question, maybe it's a bit related, is that you guys are obviously adding a lot of new logos here. Can you maybe talk about, you know, the source of these new wins or the. You know, traditionally, you've been extremely effective, you know, with your web campaigns, but as you get, you know, bigger enterprise customers, like how are these logos finding you in terms of generating these wins?
It is a mix. Our strategy, we look really quarterly at the balance of our channels of sourcing. Those vary frankly across the various segments. The strategy of demand and lead generation varies depending on the markets, on the geos, on the commercial segments. However, we can oversimplify it by saying that a significant portion of our traffic remains inbound, which is what you're referring to. We're boosting significantly our outbound efforts. That means we're growing our outbound capabilities and integrating those capabilities with more account-based marketing logics, those are more fruitful and calibrated to target accounts specifically in the enterprise segment. Channel is another great contributor of pipeline, of sourcing.
As we continue to work with organizations to grow our OEM book of business, we also have a rather large referral and bar program, and that allows us to become very granular geographically, even where our brand may not be as strong in regions where we're not physically present, to gain market advantage and to position our brand. Finally, there are certain alliances we announced for quarter four that are extremely strategic in certain markets. I mean, Pavilion is a phenomenal organization that has established itself as the point of reference for every revenue growth professional in North America and possibly really worldwide. You know, it is no secret that we were very interested in that partnership because the large majority of the thousands of members are buyer personas for us.
You can see how the mix of sourcing is very varied. Our marketing strategy is pretty complex and articulate, and it ranges across all market sizes.
Ale, I think that's another point here. Docebo during these last two years has been recognized more and more as best of breed in the industry. I'm not saying that being recognized as the leader is something that makes Alessio's life easy. I can imagine his face now when I say this. Large enterprise are usually buying the best of breed, I mean, the most recognized vendor. Actually we are competing with what we're you know recognized in the past as best of breed. Anecdotally, in the past six months, we have been reached by big vendors in other spaces asking for integrations with us, based on the fact that many of our customers they say are your customers as well and we need deep integration.
This happened more and more over the past six months, and this is a good signal. It is also proven by the fact that our enterprise segment is growing faster than others.
That's great. Thank you very much, guys.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Christian Sgro with Eight Capital. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning, everyone. My first question today, I wanted to ask, when you think about, let's say, a typical or ideal enterprise win, $100K or larger in ACV, you know, what's the best type of win that you guys like that sets you up for land and expand? Is that just one department at the beginning or is that just the core, you know, Learn LMS? Like, what's the best way to get out of the gate to set you guys up for expanding?
Christian, thank you for the question. There are a couple of answers to your question. When we enter an enterprise customer where we believe we have a unique proposition and where our product wins at a very high win rate, is when the organization wants to implement what we call a hybrid use case or blended use case strategy, where the goal is to consolidate efforts or platforms and technologies that may already exist or don't exist yet to satisfy both internal and external use cases. The capability of giving both capabilities in one platform, the data shows that we are incredibly strong at that.
When we enter a customer, our goal is to understand what the state of their technology is from a learning delivery standpoint, and understand if there is a possibility to, at time zero, approach both use cases or, to approach one by positioning already from day one our capabilities of satisfying two. That gives a great level of comfort to buyers, knowing that they can grow with us. The second answer is, an organization, and this is more recent, and that's what we're working on, the ability to position our products, new products from the get-go. They may not be ready to adopt more sophisticated views of the learning programs that, for example, impact and analytics offer.
Knowing that we can grow with them in that direction is, it just gives them the comfort that we are the provider of choice for the long run. Finally, I will add, we're seeing recently that two add-on products like Docebo Connect and Docebo Content give us the opportunity to tell a story of integration that other competitors don't tell in the same way. Docebo Content gives you the opportunity to not have to establish another contract with another content vendor and have a single relationship with Docebo. Docebo Connect gives you the opportunity to know that when you buy Docebo, you can grow with it and integrate it with multiple systems without the hassle of custom integrations, expensive and mechanical SOWs.
I hope that answers.
Yes, it's very helpful, Alessio. I'll ask just one more question this morning. I guess when we think of the OEM partner program, and maybe I'll ask about that channel, just any update from your end? It's something that, you know, I think you've tempered us all on. It's gonna grow over time with a lot of, say, new partners this past year. But is there an update you'd give us on how some of the newer partners are trending? And thanks for taking my question.
OEM remains a growth vector for us. We've said this multiple times. We've doubled down our investment in building OEM and strategic alliances. We're extremely confident that there will be a steady pipeline of partnership business in the future. One thing that we've learned in the past 12 months in particular is not very surprising, is that very small organizations can be very excited at first to integrate a new capability, a new SKU. It becomes harder for these smaller organizations to bring it to market because they have to juggle many priorities at once. Our strategy with our bigger OEM team is to focus on more mature organizations that have either already OEM'd before or have the resources to get going and execute on a joint market plan with us.
With that said, Ceridian and MHR not only continue to deliver incredible performance, but we are confident that we're gonna be able to grow that performance in the future by giving them access to capabilities that in the meantime we have developed. That's one. Two, and final, we have a lot of exciting leads in the OEM sector. They are more aligned with our ideal OEM profile, and I believe that we will be able to report to you once material and results come to the table, more information OEM in the future.
Perfect. That's all very helpful, Alessio. Thanks for your time.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from Paul Steep with Scotia Capital. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Morning, I'll be quick here. Just on staff growth. Sukaran, you talked about growing staff. Can you maybe just give us a little bit of a thoughts around the balance between wage inflation as well as maybe the pace of hiring? We've seen strong hiring performed by the company over the last couple of years. Then I've got one quick follow-up.
Yes. Morning, Paul. I would say, you know, that there's no secret out there to anyone that wage inflation and this is probably one of the most competitive labor markets out there. As every other tech company, we're facing the same here. I would say that in terms of adding folks into the organization, we'll continue to invest, you know, as we spoke about earlier in the sales and marketing engine to support the enterprise account management space. As we expanded the enterprise segment, we have doubled down as Alessio talked about in the ABM with OEM sides of business.
If you think through, you know, the support segment of the organization, whether it's professional services, customer support, we need to continue to staff that as we grow the business. You know, we'll continue to add, you know, maintaining, I would say, the kind of ratios that I've kind of spoken to in my prepared remarks.
You know, all that said, as much as this is, you know, the competitive landscape from a talent perspective, it also gives a tailwind from customer perspective where, you know, it is, you know, the LMS being one of the best tools to re-engage your employees, retain your employees, and continue to use our platform to make sure that they can manage attrition in this market. You know, challenges from a labor perspective that we manage, but also, you know, we have some momentum as a result of what's going on in the labor market right now.
Sorry. I'll try it a different way, and I'll skip the other follow-up. Should we think ARR, you know, growth in employees was below in sort of 2020 ARR year-on-year growth. If we look to 2021, we saw you slightly over-index on employee growth versus ARR growth. Should we just think of 2021 more as a catch-up year in terms of big investment? You're gonna sustain that growth, but it's not gonna maybe match ARR growth going forward. That was a better way to maybe phrase it.
Yeah. That's a good point. I would say you're right. In 2020, we did pause as you know, as COVID started, and then there was a catch-up perhaps was probably the word you used, is what we started in terms of hiring in late 2020, early 2021. As we think about 2022, it shouldn't be at the same levels, but I would say there is certainly a maturity in level hiring that we're doing in terms of staffing, you know, at the right levels, whether it's VPs and SVPs at the sales marketing R&D organization, where we'll need to make sure that the company is structured in the right fashion to move forward and continue to grow for the next leg of our journey.
To answer your question specifically, yes. I mean, 2020, 2021 was much higher growth, hiring compared to what we'll see in the future.
Push my luck with one last clarification. Just on the older cohorts, Sukaran, you now actually had the data to be able to capitalize the contract costs for sales over five years, which we didn't have in the past. Can you just, I know we've got net expansion, but can you maybe just speak to the experience that you've seen in those early cohorts and how you're thinking about the long-term uptake and renewal? I'll leave it there. Thank you.
Paul, the question is about renewal rates. Sorry, I just wanted to clarify the question.
Yeah. It's just the renewal on those early cohorts, because obviously you've now got the data. Before you weren't able to. You just did it over the initial term of a contract for the sales, capitalized sales contracts, and now you're saying it's at least five years. I'm just going back to what have you seen in those cohorts in terms of renewals and how that sort of plays out as we, you know, look at the waterfall going forward?
Yeah. I mean, I think we don't specifically break out renewals, but I'll give you some color on it. We've talked about net dollar retention ratio, but then it also gives you a flavor on renewals. Net dollar retention ratio is a number that you know includes expansion with churn and downgrade embedded in it. As that has improved, which includes the cohort of customers historically as well as the ones which we had you know come on board in 2021, you are seeing that book of business continue to expand, which effectively is telling you that the renewal or the churn rate in the business is below you know it's continuously improving. It's below industry standards.
I mean, that probably give you enough color, but we don't specifically break out renewal rates.
No problem. Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Suthan Sukumar with Stifel. Please go ahead.
Good morning, gents. A couple questions for me. First I just wanna kinda touch on the pipeline and some of the momentum that you're seeing in the enterprise segment. Has there been any change in the type or profile of the prospects that you are seeing now and what they're looking for? You know, I think you guys said in the opening remarks. I think you talked about seeing more complex requirements come in, so just kinda curious on what you're seeing with respect to how demand is evolving here for you guys.
Um-
Hello, Suthan.
If-
Hi. Go first.
Okay. Take it, Alessio.
Suthan, hello. With regards to pipeline, of course, we don't provide financial guidance at this time, but I'm happy to share a few thoughts with regards to forward-looking pipeline at a high level. In terms of momentum and demand, we remain extremely confident in our ability to deliver in the future. We continue to see demand being strong and meeting our expectations. In terms of complexity or, if you will, type of customer that we're dealing with, in your reference to our messaging of more complex use cases, it is very consistent with what I was sharing before in my explanation of multi-use cases.
What we're seeing, particularly in the enterprise segment, is that organizations are in need of consolidating their learning strategy and, in some instances, reducing the amount of vendors they work with towards a more holistic solution that is capable of addressing both internal and external needs. When this happens, we're uniquely positioned because our product is so modular and so designed to meet this multi-use case capability, and we find that our win rates in that scenario are incredibly positive, well above any industry standard. With regards to complexity and changes in the makeup or constitution of the pipeline, nothing really specific to signal other than, and this is a result and it's a managed consequence of our focus on enterprise segment. Our commercial segment remains strong. Our mid-market segment faces pressure from the commoditized point solutions that are in the market.
Our enterprise segment grows wonderfully, and we are well-positioned to win the business there. I believe we're leading right now and probably seen as the strongest vendor in that very market for the needs of external and internal training combined.
Yeah. Alessio, this is a kind of, you know, self-fulfilling prophecy. I mean, it's not that our customers. The more we go upmarket, the more the use case is complex, but the customer are choosing us because we are capable to support very complex use cases. It's a little bit of the opposite.
Okay. Great. No, thanks, guys. That's helpful. Last question for me quickly is, you know, just kinda curious how, you know, really on the expansion opportunity with the new product suite, can you talk about, I mean, it's clear that this is helping influence demand and you're seeing, you know, good, I guess, uptake from your new customers. I know it's early days, but can you speak about what the traction has been like with the expansion opportunity within your existing base from the new product suite? Just curious what the attach rates have looked like with your existing customers.
Sure. Suthan, as you know, we don't disclose attach rates. However, I can give you a general sense of where we are, you know, satisfied, where we are ecstatic, and where we feel like we have more work to do. Those really reflect then, you know, have an impact on the attach rate itself that you were asking about. We're satisfied with most of new products in, that we have released. By satisfied, I mean, we had an hypothesis, and that hypothesis is holding true. We're ecstatic with regards to capabilities and add-on products, established ones like the extended enterprise suite of use case coverage, that's doing wonders for our company. You should expect our intent to bolster that even further.
Additionally, we believe that the maturity of our product, called Docebo Content, is giving us incredibly good metrics from an attach rate standpoint. It's early days and early signals, Docebo Connect, as I mentioned before. We're extremely satisfied with what we're seeing. Gosh, we only have one quarter of data in our historical data, and you understand how little that is. We have more work to do on our learning analytics product. That doesn't mean that things are not going well, but this is a more complex solution. It has been in the market for circa only six months, but we're very, you know, focused on product market fit and on evolving the roadmap and learning what we hear from the customers and adapting it.
We believe that once we do that, our attachment rates, even on that product, will continue to grow exponentially.
Yeah. Guys, anecdotally, you have to remember that, Docebo Coach and Share, old name of the Discover, Coach & Share, took two years to ramp up after we launched it in 2016. Launching new product is a journey, is a learning journey, fine-tuning the offering, fine-tuning the positioning. It's an art, and it's not something you can get in, like, two quarters.
Gotcha. Great. Guys, thank you for the call here and congrats again on another solid quarter. Excellent.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Gavin Fairweather there with Cormark. Please go ahead.
Oh, hey, good morning. I just wanted to chat for a second on net dollar retention rate. We saw a nice 5-point acceleration in 2021 to 113%. Given your, you know, enhanced focus on customer success and enterprise customers, curious if you see some nice, you know, headroom to accelerate that further in the years ahead.
Yeah. I'll start with that.
One sec, Alessio. Guys, you are never happy. I mean, we have grown this for three years in a row, and thanks, Gavin, to push us over the limit. I'm kidding.
Gavin, that's just on the net dollar, I'll come in first. You know, I think if you think about 2021, net dollar retention rate is, you know, we've talked about in the past, it's primarily being driven through the land and expand, Learn LMS, being the engine that continues to grow the business. We expand our book of business with whether it's, you know, increasing monthly active users, whether it's landing and expanding subdivisions of other companies, et cetera. Today, the new products and modules that we, you know, we launched in 2021 that were more towards the latter part of the year, you know, are not meaningfully contributing to that number.
To your point, you know, as we move into this, you know, this posture of helping our customers through Docebo Learning Suite and helping their learning needs with the new products and modules over time, including 2022, we would expect NDRR to. Our expectation is NDRR should move up, as we do both, not only land and expand and help you know sell to other subsidiaries of the companies as well as the new products and modules adding to that expansion story.
Thank you. Just to clarify, I am very happy, Claudio.
Thank you.
Maybe just secondly, seems to be more buzz about, you know, software user training and embedding training for users inside software. Can you just maybe speak specifically around Docebo Flow and how you view your competitive positioning as this trend starts to take off? That's it for me. Thank you.
Philosophically speaking, I see learning technologies as building blocks that can be, I'm using old school word, installed, implemented, deployed inside every single software. I mean, training is everywhere. Training happen in your partner portal, training happen in your customer academy. Training happen because company want to train students to nurture the future employees pipeline and so on and so on. There are many ways to do this. We are now implementing in three main ways. One is the LMS-centric platform where people can log in and learn. Second is OEM, where portion, pages of LMS is embedded inside another software, but it's still an independent page, an independent function, an independent feature.
The third part is Docebo Flow, which is a building block that can be installed inside other functions or pages or apps. Let's say that our comfort zone is the LMS plus OEM, where technology has been proven to be successful and scalable. Docebo Flow is a new product, and we are learning how to implement, how to deploy it, and so on. Docebo Flow is not a substitution of an LMS, but is another option on how to consume and digest content, which is an alternative of entering inside the LMS or learning inside a web page.
Thank you. Due to time constraints, we are taking the last question from Martin Toner with ATB Capital. Please go ahead.
Thanks very much, gentlemen, and congrats on another good quarter. Is the comments around free cash flow, EBITDA positive by end of year? Does that indicate a philosophical change?
Martin, good morning. I'll take that first. Claudio, I think it's no philosophical change. The way you wanna think about it is that the business is naturally and as we positioned previously, is naturally transitioning through the revenue growth that we have and the operating leverage we're seeing within G&A and other areas specifically that I talked about will just get us to a point where as we exit 2022, we will just transition into free cash EBITDA positive. No change in philosophy, more just business driving it to that point.
Excellent. Thank you very much. I was hoping Claudio might be willing to expand on the comment that new product launches is an art. Just wondering what you mean by that.
I mean that when you have an idea and you build one product you can do all the market validation you want but the product you will launch and the organization that support this product will not be over the two years the same that you have thought in the day you have launched the product. I mean launching product require fine-tuning from a product perspective from a pricing perspective from a sales model perspective until you don't find something that is way better than the idea you have had in day one. This is what we have done with Docebo Discover, Coach & Share. We have launched priced it in a way then we changed it a little bit. At the end of the day we have bundled it completely inside Docebo almost inside Docebo elements.
Thanks so much, Claudio.
Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. Mr. Erba, you may proceed.
Yeah. Thank you everyone for staying with us again in this quarter. This is our probably 9th or 8th earnings call. Thank you for staying with us. Stay safe. Speak in May. Bye-bye.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your lines. Have a great day.