Good morning, everyone. Welcome to Tecsys fourth quarter and fiscal year 2024 results conference call. Please note that the complete annual and fourth quarter report, including MD&A and financial statements, were filed in SEDAR+ after market close yesterday. All dollar amounts are expressed in Canadian currency and are prepared in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards. The company has added a companion presentation to today's call, which is available on their website at www.tecsys.com/investors. Some of the statements in this conference call, including the question and answer period, may include forward-looking statements that are based on management's beliefs and assumptions. Actual results may differ materially from such statements. I would like to remind everyone that this call is being recorded on Friday, June 28th, 2024, at 8:30 A.M. Eastern Time. I would now like to turn the conference over to Mr. Peter Brereton, Chief Executive Officer at Tecsys.
Please go ahead, sir.
Good morning. Joining me today is Mark Bentler, our Chief Financial Officer. We appreciate you joining us for today's call. As most of you have likely seen in the results issued last night, fiscal 2024 has been an outstanding year for our organization, marked by significant achievements and strong organic growth. Our year-over-year SaaS revenue is up 39%, and our RPO continues to grow up 43% over last year. Our momentum continues across the board with emerging opportunities in new marketplaces and a clear path for sustained performance. Our vision for growth is sharper than ever, supported by investment in technology and an obsession with customer success. I'd like to take a moment to summarize the key events of our Q4 and full-year results for fiscal 2024.
Mark will then walk us through the financial results in more detail, and finally, I'll comment on our outlook, followed by a Q&A session. If you're following along in the companion deck, I'll be speaking to slide three. Q4 has been a fantastic capstone for the fiscal year as we continue to break our own records. We achieved the highest quarterly revenue in our company's history, and we achieved the highest SaaS bookings in our company's history, including migrations and expansions across verticals, and we welcomed two new healthcare IDNs. Our bookings this quarter were up 108% over last year and 37% higher than our best quarter ever. While we hardly expect this to be the new run rate, we're very happy with this high watermark in quarterly bookings, which brings our fiscal year bookings to a 13% increase year-over-year. On to RPO.
Due to strong bookings, as well as extensions and renewals in fiscal 2024, our SaaS RPO is growing at a healthy clip, up 43% to CAD 197 million compared to the same time last year. Just thinking about that a bit, that means that over the last few years, we have built a backlog of SaaS that has something like CAD 130 million of contracted but unrecognized gross margin contribution that will flow through in the years ahead. That is pretty exciting stuff. In terms of milestones, a year ago, we announced that we crossed the 50% threshold of our recurring revenue being SaaS revenue. A year later, we're now looking at SaaS revenue representing 64% of our recurring revenue. It's worth mentioning that our positive momentum and growing SaaS customer base is underpinned by very robust gross and net retention levels.
We are cementing our position as the system of choice for organizations grappling with supply chain complexity. From the Texas Children’s Hospital, the largest pediatric facility in the United States, to Baptist Health, the major health system embarking on a consolidated pharmacy service center, and from Truepill, the pioneering digital pharmacy provider, to Roche, which I mentioned in a previous call, we are adding top-tier organizations to our customer list that recognize the value that Tecsys delivers. This value is reinforced by organizations like Nissan, Intermountain Health, and Mayo Clinic, who are sharing their experiences in panels and presentations like those at our user conference last September, as well as at regional workshops through the year, or in industry publications like Becker’s Hospital Review and Fortune. With this customer growth comes an expanding white space opportunity.
In healthcare, this is especially significant because we often enter an account in a single department or with one solution. As we prove out the value of that solution, our end-to-end healthcare offering now gives us a lot of flexibility into how we can penetrate further into each account. Earlier this year, we gained traction around the CPSC, or Consolidated Pharmacy Service Center model, essentially replicating a successful model that we brought to a health system's Med-Surg supply chain and adapting it for the pharmacy. With engagements at St. Luke's, Parkview Health, and Baptist Health, we're proving out the model and significantly increasing the white space in our existing base and the total addressable market within an industry where we already have a solid foothold. We seem to be again emerging as the market leader in this CPSC space, and we're very quickly securing wins with major IDNs.
We're also continuing to build and strengthen our partner ecosystem throughout this fiscal year. This effort is proving valuable, with 26% of our deals and half of our new logos being partner-influenced. As part of our partner program, we became the only WMS provider to achieve AWS Supply Chain Competency in three categories, which was announced in January. As previously discussed, we initiated a major restructuring in the fourth quarter to boost long-term profitability. I'm pleased to confirm that the end results came out fairly closely with what we had anticipated. Our expectations regarding the impact on our run rate and the cost we expected to incur were quite accurate. This restructuring was an important step for us as we continue to increase our investment in areas of growth.
As we continue to invest in the products we sell and the manner in which we sell them, Tecsys has proven to be among the best cloud-based solutions available in the markets we serve. The steady growth we have experienced affirms our vision and strategy for shareholder value. Mark will now provide further details on our fourth quarter and the full fiscal financial year results, as well as financial guidance on several key metrics.
Thank you, Peter. We're very pleased with the strong performance in our fourth quarter ended April 30, 2024. I'll start with slide four and focus first on SaaS. SaaS revenue continues to be the key driver for our growth, and we believe the key driver for value creation. SaaS revenue growth is driving our recurring revenue, and during the fourth quarter, SaaS revenue growth was 27% compared to the same quarter last year, reaching CAD 14.2 million. The big news, as Peter mentioned previously, is our record-setting CAD 8 million of SaaS bookings in Q4. Our higher growth SaaS revenue is now poised to overtake professional services revenue as our largest single source of revenue, and we expect this to continue to play out in fiscal 2025 and beyond. Total revenue for the quarter was a record CAD 44 million. That's 7% higher than the same period last year.
On a constant currency basis, total revenue growth was 5%. Professional services revenue for the fourth quarter was CAD 14.4 million. That was down 2% from CAD 14.6 million reported for the same quarter last year, but up 11% on a sequential basis from Q3. Professional services backlog continues to be strong at CAD 32.1 million as of April 30th, 2024. For the fourth quarter of fiscal 2024, gross margin was 47% compared to 45% in the same period last year. Combined SaaS maintenance support and professional services gross profit margin for the three months ended April 30th, 2024, was 50%. That's up compared to 47% in the same period of fiscal 2023. SaaS margin expansion was the driver, and we're pleased to report that this continues to track as planned. Net profit in the quarter was relatively flat at CAD 259,000 compared to CAD 446,000 in the same quarter last year.
Net profit in the quarter was negatively impacted by CAD 2.1 million restructuring charges, and this was broadly offset by positive comparable impact from foreign exchange and income tax attribute recognition in the current quarter. Adjusted EBITDA was CAD 2.8 million in Q4 of fiscal 2024 compared to CAD 2.4 million in the same period last year. I'm going to turn now briefly to our results for the full fiscal year 2024 and move to slide five if you're following along in the deck. Our total revenue was CAD 171.2 million. That's up 12% compared to CAD 152.4 million in the same period last year and up 9% on a constant currency basis. SaaS revenue for fiscal 2024 was CAD 51.9 million, up 39% from CAD 37.5 million in the same period last year, and that was up 35% on a constant currency basis.
Our adjusted EBITDA for fiscal 2024 was CAD 9.6 million compared to CAD 9.5 million in the same period last year. Basic and fully diluted earnings per share were CAD 0.13 in fiscal 2024 compared to CAD 0.14 in fiscal 2023. We ended Q4 fiscal 2024 with a solid balance sheet position. We had cash and short-term investments of CAD 35.6 million and no debt. Operating activities provided CAD 4.9 million of cash in fiscal 2024, and during the year, we used CAD 7.2 million to repurchase shares under our NCIB. Additionally, the board yesterday approved a quarterly dividend of CAD 0.08 a share. With respect to financial guidance, and now moving to slide 6, we're providing full year 2025 guidance as follows. Number one, total revenue growth between 7% and 9%. Number two, SaaS revenue growth between 30% and 32%. And finally, adjusted EBITDA margin between 8% and 9%.
Additionally, we're providing adjusted EBITDA margin guidance for fiscal 2026 of between 10% and 11%. I'll now turn the call back to Peter to provide some outlook comments.
Thanks, Mark. Tecsys performance in fiscal 2024 started out strong, and that momentum continued through the year. We have a solid balance sheet and continue to have a robust backlog and sales pipeline. We are seeing widespread buyer intent across our target markets, and the opportunity cycles are being accelerated by a highly capable sales team with the tools, the talent, and the partners to capitalize on a market that's ready to invest. As I mentioned earlier, our expanded healthcare sector offering and growing footprint gives us confidence that the healthcare market will continue to be an important growth engine for us. We have an exciting value proposition within that pharmacy space with multiple proof points and a growing acceptance of the consolidated service model for pharmacy distribution.
Over and above our IDN business, with the added pharmacy white space, we are seeing growth signals in our medical and pharma distribution sector driven partially by legislative pressure from the U.S. Drug Supply Chain Security Act, or DSCSA, which requires traceability that Tecsys solutions enable. We are also well-positioned to pursue new marketplaces and geographies within the converging distribution space, and we will continue to invest to expand our overall growth. Our distribution business represents a massive market opportunity, and we're still only scratching the surface. We continue to hone our sweet spot there and carve out our share of that pie with rising market indicators driven by fundamental changes to the supply chain industry, changes spurred by aging legacy systems, digital adoption, and a realization that heightened consumer expectations are here to stay.
We are pleased that our fiscal 2024 results continue to demonstrate our dominance in key markets and emerging opportunity in growth markets. The wave of change and system modernization in supply chain management is underway, and businesses are actively investing in the tools that they need to adapt to consumer expectations. As we look ahead to fiscal 2025, we are confident in our ability to seize market opportunity and presence in this rapidly growing market in North America and expand our footprint in European markets. And so, in summary, I want to share with analysts and investors some key things for fiscal 2025. First, an emphasis on continuing to refine our SaaS software so it is easy to use and upgrade and even easier to recommend to peers. Second, a continued strategic partnership approach characterized by deeper and stronger alliances.
This helps us tap into new opportunities and fuels our scalability around the world. Third, an emphasis on advancing and deepening our healthcare vertical, covering both Med-Surg and pharma as we continue to solidify our position as the go-to provider for healthcare supply chain solutions. Fourth, a continuous evolution of our distribution and omnichannel business platform that takes advantage of innovative technologies and the power of data. As a final point, I'd like to stress across our markets, we will prioritize customer satisfaction and success. We have long stood by the philosophy of customers for life. A big part of that formula is to deliver value quickly, stay connected, and expand on the value delivered. With that, we'll open up the call for questions. Thank you.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question and answer session. Should you have a question, please press star followed by the one on your touch-tone phone. You will hear a prompt that your hand has been raised. Should you wish to decline from the polling process, please press star followed by the number two. If you are using a speakerphone, please lift the handset before pressing any key. One moment, please, for your first question. Our first question comes from the line of Andy Nguyen from Raymond James. Go ahead, please.
Hi. Thank you for taking my question. So your fiscal 2025 guidance implies slower growth on the top line. Maybe you could share some more color on what you're seeing in the market?
Yep. Peter, you want to take that or you want me? I've got a question.
Yeah, sure. I can comment. Maybe you can add some detail. But yeah, I mean, overall, it's really just a question of, as our business continues to transition with increasing partnerships and alliances and organizations, like whether it be Deloitte or KPMG or RiseNow or Avalon, that are assisting us with a lot of implementation. So what you end up with here is a rapidly growing SaaS revenue line, but which currently represents, let's round it off here, 1/3 of our revenues. So when SaaS represents a third of our revenues and it's growing in the 30%-40% range, but most of the rest of the business, the trend lines are close to flat, that's what you end up with. You kind of end up with a 10%-ish kind of percent growth range. So that's what we're seeing.
And I think as the business continues this transition, as SaaS revenues become a higher and higher percentage of the total, that top-line growth revenue is going to rise, break back up again along with the SaaS. This is probably our last year of transition out of the license model. I mean, maybe you could say last year was, but the fact is license revenue is now sort of virtually gone. So because of that, your SaaS revenue comes to the, well, it's finally able to start really shining through, no longer being dampened by declining license fees, but it still has to get averaged into what is much, much slower growth: professional services and virtually flat hardware sales.
Yeah, Andy, I would just add to that that Q4 hardware for us in 2024 was a pretty—you see those growth numbers. I mean, it was up 21% year-on-year. And if you take that sort of hardware growth out of the numbers, that 2024 revenue growth was around 11%. And we expect in that 7%-9%, if you take hardware out of that, we expect that growth rate to actually be higher than 11%. So we're actually seeing accelerating growth here if you strip out the impact of hardware. We entered fiscal 2024 with a very robust backlog of hardware that kind of built up during the COVID years, actually, where it was kind of hard to get a hold of some hardware stuff. That stuff delivered out disproportionately in fiscal 2024.
We actually expect hardware to moderate in 2025, back down to levels that are closer to what we saw in fiscal 2023.
Gotcha. That makes sense. My next question would be about the win rate in your complex distributions. Do you see that changing? Is it getting better?
I mean, it's holding fairly steady. I mean, part of it is that that's a market where it began to get really active about a year ago, but we're really only starting to see deals go to signature now. And so we continue to win our fair share there. I mean, historically, we've won in the sort of 30%-40% range of those deals. We're trying to nudge that up. We're trying to get that up closer to 50%. There's quarters where it sags below 30%. There's quarters where it does get up higher. But the good news for us is that that market is actually starting to move and sign some deals.
So we were pretty pleased with the performance of that particular market in fiscal 2024, and we've got great hope for it in fiscal 2025.
Perfect. And maybe on the pipeline, complex versus healthcare, what's the percentage mix between those? Hello? Can you hear me?
Sure. I lost you there for a bit. You seem to be back now.
Yeah. Yeah. Sorry. So I was asking how much is the pipeline mix between complex distributions and healthcare?
Mark, what would it be right now? It's got to be close to 50/50, right? The thing is our win rate is so much higher in healthcare that if you've got—if you've got the same amount, technically of the same amount in each pipeline, you're still likely to book twice as much healthcare as complex distribution.
But I think in terms of total, we look at the 12-month pipeline, and they're pretty close at this point.
Yep.
Gotcha. Yeah. And then, sorry, so I was just about to ask, so on the revenue side of view, point of view is probably roughly the same too, right?
Well, actually, our revenue mix is, it's an interesting question you asked there, Andy. I mean, this is sort of the first point where our healthcare business has actually just surpassed the complex distribution business in terms of annual recurring revenue. So it's still a pretty even split there. You might know that our legacy business was very much more directed at complex distribution, and more recently, the healthcare sector has been growing more rapidly. And that's finally resulted only recently in healthcare surpassing complex distribution as the bigger ARR contributor, but just barely.
Gotcha. Thank you so much. I'll pass the line. Thanks.
Our next question comes from the line of Amr Ezzat from Ventum Financial. Go ahead, please.
Good morning, Peter and Mark. Thanks for taking my question. Just to close the loop on hardware for 2025, did I understand correctly that we should be looking for flattish hardware in 2025 as opposed to lower year-on-year from what was obviously a huge 2024?
Yeah. I would say right now, our expectations are, I think 2024 was a bump up, and I think 2025, you should think more about 2023 sort of levels.
Okay. Okay. Okay. Got it. Then maybe if we double-click on SaaS revenues, so as far as your SaaS backlog and RPO are concerned, they seem to be growing at a higher growth metric relative to what you're guiding for SaaS growth in 2025. 30% is still impressive, but I just wonder, I'm wondering, are you guys capacity constrained, be it internally or through your channel partners on delivery, or how do I reconcile that higher sort of SaaS backlog and RPO number to what you're guiding?
Well, RPO, I mean, the big delta there is RPO is a multi-year calculation, of course. So renewals and renewal timing, which really for us sort of started to kick in. Actually, Q4 was really almost one of the first times where we had some pretty material renewals that actually impacted RPO in some meaningful kind of way. So that drove up the RPO growth number. The other thing is we've got some customers that are going with longer-term contracts. We usually talk about three- to five-year contracts, and we saw in that quarter a disproportionate amount on the high side of that and some even higher than that in terms of contract term, which is great because it shows that people are confident enough in us and our platforms to sign up for longer-term contracts.
The positive side of that is increasing RPO, and in that scenario, it would increase faster than annual revenue growth.
Understood. That's very clear. Then can you just refresh us on the accounting? Is there any difference in the margin or the gross margin profile of renewals versus the initial contract?
Not really. I mean, a like-for-like renewal on the platform, we're going to get—we're going to get an uptick most typically when we do a renewal. We're going to get a CPI or CPI+ kind of uptick. So that will be maybe a little bit of creative margin, but every year our costs go up as well. We have merit. We have salary increase and all the rest of it. So I would say there's not—in a like-for-like deal, there's not necessarily much margin expansion. What typically happens, though, Amr, is that that's the time where when people are looking at that and sort of looking at the renewal period and ending up for the next sort of contract period, that's an awesome selling opportunity for us. So that's typically when we're in there working hard to add additional modules and expand the footprint of the platform with that customer.
When that happens, as I think you know, that has a very significant expansion impact on SaaS margins when we add on new modules to existing customers.
Fantastic. Well, maybe one last one. Speaking of expansions, when thinking about your guidance on SaaS next year, can you give us at a high level the splits of how much of the growth is new logos versus expansions and migrations? I believe less migrations now, but.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I think that's right. I think that's what we expect too, Amir, especially on the healthcare side since we've converted a large quantity of those healthcare customers are already on the SaaS platform. There's still a lot of opportunity for migrations in complex distribution. But that said, we do see that we do expect that migration componentry to slow down a little bit. In terms of kind of the new versus base splits, I mean, if we look at what happens there historically, it runs from sort of in the 20%s to the mid-40s, mid-40s, and even 50% is new business in any given quarter. If you average that out over time, it's sort of in the high 20s, around 30%. And that's kind of how we model this going forward.
If we look at our pipeline and the opportunities that are in the pipeline, I would say there's more new logo business in the pipeline now than there has been in the past if we looked at the same time last year. However, our win rates on those expansion deals in our pipeline and the sales cycles on those expansion deals are much, much, much, much quicker. So we've got a lot of white space in that base. As you know, we're in the 20% level of penetration in our white space in healthcare. So there's still a lot of opportunity for us there.
Fantastic. And just one last, last one. When you're saying that 20% penetration, i.e., you could still upsell or expand 80% of your.
Yeah. Exactly.
Pipeline? Yep. Okay. I appreciate that. I'll pass the line.
Thanks, Amir.
Our next question comes from the line of Gavin Fairweather from Cormark Securities. Please go ahead.
The SaaS growth guidance. Do you guys expect bookings to be more back-end weighted? And do you plan to grow bookings in fiscal 2025? Any color would be helpful on that.
Sure. I think I didn't hear you at the beginning of that. I don't know if it was maybe just on my side, but could you start the front end? Could you start that question over?
Sure. Just on the SaaS growth guide, do you expect bookings to be more back-end weighted? If you could just talk about the cadence of bookings in the next year, that'd be helpful. And then just given that the record year in bookings, can you maybe just talk about any expectations for growth year over year in that bookings figure? That'd be helpful.
Yeah. I mean, just one overall comment. I mean, first of all, we don't give bookings guidance. It's too hard to give it. Our accounts tend to be—we book tend to be quite large. And as a result, the bookings are just plain lumpy. Always have been. They'll continue to be that. If you look at this past fiscal year where we ended up at sort of CAD 17 million and change or whatever in bookings, so you're looking at a—call it a CAD 4.4, whatever, CAD 4.5 million average quarter. And meanwhile, you can have one booking that's CAD 2 million. It's just too hard to predict that. At the same time, what I would say is, generally speaking, there is some seasonality to our bookings. If you look at our last 10, 15 years, you'll see it. It holds pretty steady.
Typically, with some exceptions, but typically, the quarter we're in right now that ends July 31st tends to be a little light in bookings. You clean it out for year-end kind of. So May is pretty dry. Starts to come back in June. You get some bookings in the early part of July, and then vacations kick in, and it's hard to get decision-makers in a room to sign off on contracts. So that one tends to be a little light. Q2 tends to pick up. That's the quarter ending October 31st, usually a little bit stronger. Q3, which is November, December, January, tends to get hit with a lot of vacations again. You got American Thanksgiving in there. You got Christmas in there and so on. Tends to be a little bit slower. And then Q4 is typically quite strong with sort of no real vacations in there.
February, March, April is kind of just work, work, work. So it's a good time to get a lot of business done. So it tends to kind of follow that pattern. And because, of course, we continue to grow, typically, it does tilt towards the back end of the year. But I would also say, Mark, I think you would agree that the fiscal 2024 that just ended was tilted far more to the back end of the year than we typically see. And I think the reason for that is what was going on in the healthcare market. I mean, calendar 2023, and I think I might have mentioned this last call, calendar 2023 was a year that was characterized by roughly 10 months of negative cash flow for the average American hospital network. And it was really November before they started turning cash flow positive.
So there was a lot of hesitancy in that market during that time period to sort of kick off new projects or accelerate projects, add additional resources to projects. So we saw it in bookings. We saw it in professional services revenues. We saw it hit a number of places. As they turned back cash flow positive in November, December, and they really stayed cash flow positive since then, we saw a lot more activity starting to happen. So as a result, that really slowed down the first sort of two-thirds of our year, and then it sort of ended with a real kick at the end. So there is some seasonality, but fiscal 2024 was exceptionally back-end weighted.
Yeah. I get why you're asking the question there too because it's somehow, it's hard if you're thinking about how to model that revenue coming off of new bookings. You're kind of wondering, "Well, are you expecting bookings to decline or expecting bookings to grow?" Because there's enough modeling flux in there to maybe not understand that. But we had 13% bookings growth in fiscal 2024. And just to be clear, we expect bookings growth in fiscal 2025.
That's great. Thanks so much, guys. And then just given the cost cuts and the margin guide being unchanged, can you give maybe more color on your investment plans for sales and R&D?
Sure. I mean, as we sort of talked about in the planned part of the script, I mean, we're seeing tremendous opportunity in areas like hospital pharmacies. We're seeing opportunities to invest in AI to dramatically strengthen forecasting, demand planning, inventory optimization. We're seeing opportunities around master file maintenance using artificial intelligence. So we're seeing a lot of opportunities to enhance and strengthen our competitive position in markets that have a huge amount of growth. So we did the restructuring. We cut costs in a number of areas that we felt were sort of already, sort of that we're not benefiting from the additional investment. And we've really just shifted that investment over to areas of the business that we think have some pretty exciting growth in the coming quarters and years. So we said that at the time.
I know a number of people sort of just expected sort of an extra CAD 4 million in profit. But as we stated at the time, it was always our intent to shift the investment to areas of the business with stronger growth potential. That's what we've done. We're pretty excited with some of the stuff we're coming out with this year. We've got a release coming out in the fall, what we call our release 24.2, that we think is going to be a pretty compelling market offering.
That's great. Thanks. I'll pass the line.
Thanks.
Our next question comes from the line of John Shao from National Bank of Canada . Go ahead, please.
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my question.
Morning, John.
Peter, how should we understand your comments that 2025 is perhaps the last year in the transition out of the licensed revenue? Should we expect some changes in your sales strategy or just changing revenue mix?
Really, just a changing revenue mix. I mean, what continued to drive licensed revenue was really unmigrated customers, right? So you had customers still running the older on-prem software, and they were still needing to add another facility or adding more users or that kind of thing. They weren't yet ready to transition to SaaS, so they needed to just pay for more licenses. But as time has gone on, many of our larger accounts have migrated to our SaaS platform, so they're just off that platform. There's still a few that are left. I mean, in quantity of clients, there's still many that are left. But in terms of sizable clients, there's not that many that are left on the old on-prem platform. And we have a strategy to sort of continue to migrate those over.
So as a result, sort of the white space, if you will, in that on-prem base is just evaporating. And it was always our intention. I mean, we never intended to continue to sort of run the licensed business indefinitely. So it's finally really kicking in. And well, I shouldn't say finally. It's been gradually kicking in over the last few years, but it's now at a point where if I look at this coming year, what's licensed revenue going to be? Is it going to be 1%, 1.5%, 0.75%? I don't know what it's going to be, but it's becoming pretty insignificant in terms of the total number for the year.
Okay. We understand the healthcare market is quite strong, but on the complex distribution front, any planning action to potentially monetize the opportunity in the space given some of your competitors are essentially gone?
Yeah. I mean, you're talking the general distribution space, right?
Yes, that's correct.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, it's something we're actually turning up our marketing spend in that space. We're sharpening our message there. We're looking to add sales capability as well. We're looking to add sales capability in Europe as well because we're seeing opportunity over there and opportunity to pursue more global opportunities. So we're doing it cautiously. I mean, the healthcare market is very hot right now. The pharmacy market within healthcare is incredibly active. So we don't want to spread ourselves too thin. But at the same time, that market is heating up. And you're right, the competitive situation has thinned out quite dramatically over the last couple of years. So we are turning up the investment there. We want to see how it goes.
We'll probably give it the first two-thirds or more of the year to see sort of is it shaping up the way we think it's going to shape up? And if so, I think you can expect to see us turning the investment up higher there towards the end of the year and into next fiscal.
Okay. Thanks for the colors. And in terms of the CAD 8 million SaaS bookings, could you maybe help us understand the components of that number? Are they multiple small deals or a few large ones? And also, how much of the bookings are related to new wins versus expansions?
Finally, somebody asking a question about that fantastic booking quarter. Mark, you want to talk through some of those numbers?
Yeah, sure. Yeah, John, the mix in that was pretty spread around. We had healthcare contribution in there. We had good solid complex distribution contribution in there. We had several migrations in there. We had a couple of, actually three, healthcare migrations in that thing, which kind of back to the other point, what's kind of left in there to migrate after this quarter in healthcare? That was three reasonably good-sized migrations in there, which we absolutely love because these are IDNs that know us. They know our platform as on-prem customers. And all three of these have decided in that quarter to kind of join in and migrate over and continue the journey of expanding and improving their supply chain management with our platform. So we're pretty excited about that.
We had another migration in that quarter that was in complex distribution, which is, again, fantastic having that sort of vote of confidence from that sector and from an existing customer. On the new business side, Peter mentioned we had a couple of new IDNs, a couple of new healthcare IDNs in there. Not massive for starts, but kind of normative-sized ARR wins on those two. Still a bunch of white space for both of those. We had also sort of a 3PL, medical supply 3PL-related company that was a new logo in that quarter. So it was really kind of all over the place there. We had some nice expansions. We had some expansions that were driven by pharmacy. Peter mentioned and talked in the opening comments about that marketplace. We had some nice wins in that market.
So it was one of those quarters that kind of it was kind of firing on all cylinders, I would say. There was more from a dollar basis. There was definitely more new, definitely more base business in there. I mentioned all those migrations. So there was definitely more kind of base business and expansion business coming out of that in dollar terms than new logos. But we were happy to see the new logos from across both those verticals.
Okay. That's great colors. And Mark, when you say migration, are they migrating from competitors or migrating from legacy platforms?
Yeah. Yeah. Good question. I was using that term in the latter sense, meaning on-prem customers migrating to our SaaS platform.
Okay. Thank you so much. I'll pass the line.
Thank you.
Thanks, John.
Just a reminder, should anyone have any questions, please press star followed by the number one on your touch-tone phone. Our next question comes from the line of Suthan Sukumar from Stifel. Go ahead, please.
Good morning, Gentlemen. For our first question, I just wanted to touch on win rates. It's good to hear that you guys are seeing your win rates sustained with potential for that to improve. Can you speak a little bit about what pricing power you're seeing in the market today and what trends you're also seeing from an average contract value basis on all the net new business in your pipeline?
Yeah. Let me just comment on pricing power and then Mark can talk about average contract size. I mean, from a pricing standpoint, we are seeing. I'll divide the markets in my comments. So on the healthcare side, we're seeing very good pricing power, partly because the ROI is so clearly definable. We go into a typical hospital situation. We can do a high-level analysis with them to show them what their return on investment is going to be. And that return on investment is very strong. We increased our prices by about 30% approximately a year ago. We were waiting to see sort of how that went over and was it sustainable. It went over just fine, and it has been perfectly sustainable. So we're seeing sort of similar discount rates to prior, even though we increased the prices by 30%.
It's because, again, it's a proven solution with a strong ROI. It's easy to justify that pricing. The general distribution market is more competitive. You're typically replacing existing systems. So the ROI is often harder to sort of nail down in concrete terms. Usually, these systems are being replaced because they have to be replaced. They've literally just aged out, or they're not secure anymore, or they're not coping with current business needs. So there is some ROI, but it's not quite as black and white. And there's more competition in that space. That said, the average price of a user, I would say, has not really moved other than sort of inflationary adjustment over the last four to five years. It's actually held pretty steady.
If you compare us, our price per seat that we're able to get is very similar to what Oracle is charging and SAP is charging and Manhattan and other significant players in supply chain.
In terms of contract size there, Suthan, the average contract size, we usually think about that in the context of just the SaaS ARR componentry there. So that's how we kind of track that number and talk about it internally. It's a bit of a tale of two different sizes depending on which vertical we're in. There's big ranges in both verticals. I mean, Peter mentioned $2 million ARR booking deals. There's $2 million-plus deals out there on the large side. On the smaller side, there's sort of sub-$200,000 ARR deals. So if I separate the broad averages between those two markets, healthcare's average ARR is somewhere right around $600,000, again, with a big broad range. Distribution retail is a little bit lower than that, about $300,000-$400,000 average ARR.
Okay. Okay. Great. No, thanks. That's helpful. The second question I had was more on the expansion motion that you guys have in play here. What are some of the levers that you have here when you are going through these expansion conversations or renewals with existing customers? Is there an opportunity here to capture more value with migrations? And what do expansions typically look like for you guys?
I mean, across the two markets, first of all, the general distribution market, it's pretty straightforward. Expansions are either - if you look at our order management platform for direct-to-consumer, expansions typically seem to involve new countries. They may have already put France and Germany on the platform, and now they're going to add the Middle East, or they're going to add some other area. They may already be in the U.S., and they're expanding somewhere else. In supply chain execution, it tends to be additional facilities. We've got, for instance, electrical distributors that every quarter or two add another distribution center onto the platform. And so that's the expansion there. In the healthcare market, it tends to be a whole new area of the hospital. Sometimes it's an additional hospital building. They may have started with - they've got 18 hospitals.
They may have started with doing general supplies in 6 of the hospitals, and now they're circling back to do the other 12. But very often, it's a complete new initiative for a whole new area of the hospital's business. Most recently, of course, as we've discussed, it's been pharmacy. A lot of additional opportunities in pharmacy to manage the whole pharmacy supply chain from forecasting and demand planning right through to patient bedside with 340B price management and Drug Supply Chain Security Act compliance and so on. So that is what they're doing there in many cases. They're moving to individual patient dosages being shipped directly from a central pharma facility. So rather than sort of a patient checks into a hospital and the patient's in for, they think, let's say, a week.
So he arrives on a Monday, and it used to be the pharmacy would send out to that ward enough drugs for that patient for the week. Well, then on he arrives on Monday, he checks out on Wednesday instead of being there for a week. Well, now there's five days' worth of drugs left over out in that department. They pretty much never get cycled back into central. I mean, depending on how they've been handled and where they've been stored, you might not be able to even be allowed to cycle them back in. So that drug is just wasted. Whereas in a central pharmacy distribution model on our platform, the drugs are literally being sent out every day for patients every day with individual dosages for those patients. So you virtually eliminate that kind of waste. You know where the drugs are throughout the supply chain.
With the cost of drugs these days, that is worth, in many cases, $10s of millions or more to a hospital network on an annual basis. That is an area that is probably the hottest white space for us right now.
Suthan, I would add to that that we scale that market. There's 373 IDNs in the U.S. market that are target. They're over $1 billion in patient revenue. And we sort of scale that market, I think, conservatively at over $3 million on average of ARR opportunity per network. So the market's massive. And I just mentioned our average deal size in that market. Big variety, but an average of $600,000. So if you just think about that $600,000 deal, we're trying to penetrate into an opportunity that's bigger than $3 million with that IDN. So for new deals that we're signing when we're creating that additional logo, we're creating a 5x-6x opportunity on white space expansion.
Okay. Great. No, that makes sense. And the last question for you guys, just on the legacy maintenance and support line. How are you guys thinking about the erosion in that revenue line as you start to migrate the long tail of customers still on an on-premises model?
Yeah. It's a good question. We talked a little bit before about that revenue growth guidance that we provided. Why is it when SaaS is growing so quickly, why is that overall revenue growth line much more moderated? I talked a little bit about hardware and the impact that has on that number. But the point you're bringing up is another one. That number's been sort of flattish this year. We expect, and we've been talking about it, sort of declining as more migrations kick in and the payment of maintenance support ends and turns into a SaaS-only revenue stream. We're in the process of that, still expecting that that line is not going to grow. It's probably going to decline. We're probably going to be declining on maintenance and support. I mean, we said that last year too, that that was our expectation.
It didn't quite happen. It's kind of being supported by some of our other non-SaaS annual recurring revenue, in particular on hardware maintenance that comes into that maintenance and support line. But we do expect that line to be flat to declining in fiscal 2025.
Good. Thank you. Thank you, guys. I'll pass it on.
Thank you.
Thanks.
Thank you. There are no further questions at this time. I'd now like to turn the call back over to Mr. Brereton for final closing remarks.
Great. Well, thank you, everyone. Thanks for spending time with us today. We're staying delighted with how we ended fiscal 2024. Next call will be about the first quarter of fiscal 2025. We'll talk to you in early September. In the meantime, if you have any questions, don't hesitate to reach out to Mark or myself. We're always happy to have further dialogue. Thanks. Have a great day.
Thanks.
Thank you, sir. Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes your conference call for today. We thank you for participating and ask that you please disconnect your line. Have a lovely day.