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Earnings Call: Q2 2023

Aug 8, 2023

Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Cricut Q2 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question-and-answer session. To ask a question during the session, you need to press star 11 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising your hand is raised. To withdraw your question, please press star 11 again. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I'd now like to hand the conference over to Cricut. Please go ahead.

Jim Suva
VP of Investor Relations, Cricut

Thank you. Thank you, operator, good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us on Cricut's second quarter 2023 earnings call. Please note that today's call is being webcast and recorded on the Investor Relations section of the company's website. A replay of the webcast will also be available following today's call. For your reference, accompanying slides used on today's call, along with a supplemental data sheet, have been posted to the Investor Relations section of the company's website, investor.cricut.com. Joining me on the call today are Ashish Arora, Chief Executive Officer, and Kimball Shill, Chief Financial Officer. Today's prepared remarks have been recorded, after which Ashish and Kimball will host live Q&A.

Before we begin, we would like to remind everyone that our prepared remarks contain forward-looking statements, and management may make additional forward-looking statements, including statements regarding our strategies, business, expenses, and results of operations in response to your questions. These statements do not guarantee future performance, and therefore, undue reliance should not be placed upon them. These statements are based on current expectations of the company's management and involve inherent risks and uncertainties, including those identified in the Risk Factors section of Cricut's most recently filed Form 10-Q. Actual events or results could differ materially. This call also contains time-sensitive information that is accurate only as of the date of this broadcast, August 8, 2023. Cricut assumes no obligation to update any forward-looking projection that may be made in today's release or call. I will now turn the call over to Ashish.

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

Thank you, Jim. We finished the quarter in line with our expectations. We continue to manage the business with an eye towards profitability, even as we navigate softer consumer spend. I'm proud of the accomplishments the team has made. We launched some important innovations that I will discuss in detail. Looking at Q2 highlights, on a year-over-year basis, Q2 total revenues were down 3%, machine sales were up 5%, and operating income was down 4%. We are striving to return to growth. Remain disciplined with how we spend. We are also very focused on innovation and strengthening our platform. I'm also excited to share that on July eighteenth, we launched Cricut Venture, the largest and fastest connected cutting machine on the Cricut platform. Cricut Venture represents the fourth all-new architecture of connected machines in our history and demonstrates our commitment to innovation.

Cricut Venture cuts a wide variety of materials with precision at commercial speeds, as well as writes, scores, and foils. With Cricut Venture, makers can create for occasions that require larger sizes and quantities, from bigger custom wall decals to large batches of custom T-shirts or tote bags. Cricut Venture is able to cut up to 75 feet of repeated images. It works seamlessly with Design Space and is compatible with all our existing 13-inch Smart Materials, as well as our newly introduced 25-inch widths. Powered by Cricut Design Space, our platform helps millions of users discover, make, and share their projects, and Cricut Venture expands the ability for users to make, thanks to enhanced software features that support this new machine.

We focus on makeable content, featuring projects and art that lend themselves to large projects, including education, parties, weddings, sports events, and apparel, large batch quantities, and much more. We are excited to see how makers will use Cricut Venture to create projects and share them with other community members. We launched Cricut Venture on July eighteenth, with our first in-person consumer event since 2020. We love the energy these events generate within our community and are planning to do more in-person customer events around new products and our Cricut platform. We are pleased with early sales performance. Recall that we have four priorities, which are new user acquisition, user engagement, subscriptions, and Accessories and Materials. I will briefly review these items and also provide some detailed commentary on our new platform innovations.

We added over 200,000 new users in the quarter, approximately in line with our expectations. We continue our focus on new user acquisition and platform expansion to ultimately drive engagement, subscriptions, and increase monetization. We have shared previously that our funnel is healthy, and we see an opportunity in holiday to pull consumers through the funnel who have been pausing in their purchase decisions. A recent survey among consumers in the Cricut cutting machine funnel confirms that the current financial situations are a key barrier to purchase. About a third of consumers in the Cricut funnel stated that they are struggling to make ends meet on a personal level. Consumers at the top of the funnel are most interested in understanding the capabilities of the Cricut machine and how it fits into their lives. As consumers get closer to purchasing a Cricut, affordability becomes a constraint.

Among these consumers at the bottom of the funnel, affordability is the number one barrier to purchase. About half of those consumers say that they are saving money to purchase a Cricut, while about a third are waiting for a sale or a special deal. We are using these insights to inform our strategy heading into the holiday season. We plan to be more promotional in the fourth quarter, with deeper promotions for shorter periods of time, combined with a 360-degree marketing plan, including adding over 200 paid influencers to pull more consumers through the funnel. We ended Q2 with nearly 3.7 million engaged users, which is roughly flat year-over-year. We are pursuing efforts to drive engagement along our members' journey, from onboarding to stimulating discovery and inspiration, to assisting, making, and encouraging sharing.

As we have highlighted before, mobile plays an important role in driving more interactions. We launched an enhanced homepage inside Design Space on mobile platforms in July 2022, and continue to make improvements on an ongoing basis. For the first half of 2023, over half the interactions on Design Space homepage came from mobile devices. We have also greatly simplified navigation on the platform for desktop users. This new navigation also makes learning plans, Heat Guide, Cricut Learn and Shop, easily accessible from inside the platform. Increasingly, we will integrate more and more video content, learning aids, and instructions inside the platform itself, where users spend the majority of their time. We're always listening to our customers and prioritizing enhancements that alleviate pain points and friction, and increase the value of our Cricut Access subscriptions. In Q2, we launched enhancements for Print Then Cut.

Print Then Cut functionality gives users the ability to print an image on their color printer and then cut the outline of their printed design. This gives them color designs without having to use layers of different materials in different colors. Last quarter, we shared the introduction of Warp, which enables creative effects on text. In the coming months, we will be releasing version two of that feature, where users can warp their images, giving them greater creative possibilities. In our last call, we mentioned how community projects shared on our platform can help inspire and match content to other users. These mutually reinforcing effects will create value in our platform for all users. At the end of Q2, we improved the way members can search within the library of community projects, and saw a notable increase in members' engagement with those projects.

We ended the quarter with over 2.7 million paid subscribers, which was essentially flat quarter-over-quarter, and up 15% year-over-year, and was in line with our expectations. AI, machine learning, and especially generative AI models, are much in the news. I would like to point out some examples of how we are using AI and machine learning to add more valuable benefits to Cricut subscribers. AI is an area of exciting potential for the Cricut platform and is complementary to our strategy. We see opportunities for AI to impact the experience throughout the user journey around both search and discovery, and design and make within Design Space. We have been working on machine learning and AI for a long time, and we've recently delivered several AI-powered capabilities and are in active development on others.

I want to give you some insights into these AI and machine learning capabilities. On the design and make side, Automatic Background Remover uses a custom machine learning model and is one of our most popular Cricut Access features across our desktop and mobile apps. On the search and discovery side, our Similar Images functionality is powered by a machine learning model that is trained on and tuned for vector images. Building on the Similar Images foundation, we are also developing semantic search, a richer search capability that leverages modern machine learning techniques. We are currently testing semantic search with both internal and external users. We expect to see richer search capabilities powered by semantic search in the future.

AI techniques will also be used to drive the display of personalized content on the Design Space homepage and in our engagement marketing, and we continue to actively refine our personalization algorithms. Generative AI is an area of great interest and excitement in design software, and it holds great promise to augment the already rich Cricut Access content offering. We're actively experimenting with generative AI capabilities that allow users to create unique images based on detailed natural language prompts, such as a sailboat with dolphins jumping in the waves nearby. A unique challenge and area of differentiation for Cricut in building generative AI art functionality is that we will ensure that generated images are optimized for cutting machines. Our teams are investigating other ways in which AI will add meaningful value to our platform, with a focus on facilitating the journey for our members between inspiration and making.

We see Generative AI as being complementary and will enhance our content strategy in a meaningful and positive way. At the same time, we believe that it does not replace human creativity, but enhances it. We are focused on doing this responsibly while ensuring we protect copyrights and our artists. We are excited about the new ecosystem of materials we launched alongside Cricut Venture, including 25 inch width materials and all new markers developed to support the scale and speeds that Cricut Venture enables. As we've highlighted before, we are on a two-year journey to transform this business. Consistent with prior comments, we will continue our promotional cadence in this category to remain price competitive for consumers. We see that when we are in the price range of our competitors, we get our fair share.

We have a strong focus on optimizing our products for lower costs, so we can compete better in the market with improved margins, while still creating a differentiated offering that works seamlessly with our machines and platform. We are intensely focused on the overall customer experience, and we are motivated to work with those retailers that help us create a great experience, both on the shelf and for actual usage of our ecosystem. I've never felt so encouraged and excited about the Cricut platform. We are in the early days of this transformation, while still remaining profitable. We are driven to continue to innovate while exhibiting both long-term focus and current discipline. With that, I will transition the call over to Kimball to go into the financial details.

Kimball Shill
CFO, Cricut

Thank you, Ashish, welcome everyone. In the second quarter, we delivered revenue of $177.8 million, a 3% decline compared to prior year. We generated $16 million in net income, our 18th consecutive quarter of positive net income, as we continue to invest in our key priorities. Breaking revenue down further, revenue from Connected Machines was $37.3 million, up 5% over Q2 2022. As Ashish mentioned, new user acquisition was in line with our expectations in Q2, as we continued to experience the effects of softness in consumer discretionary spending. While we are encouraged to see year-over-year machine revenues turn back to positive growth, we are still far from where we aspire to be. Revenue from Accessories and Materials for the quarter was $64.4 million, down 20% over Q2 2022.

Note that in Q2 2022, we benefited from channel fill for the launch of Autopress and Hat Press. Excluding this, revenue from Accessories and Materials would have been down approximately 4% compared to Q2 last year. As Ashish referenced, we have more work to do here. Subscriptions revenue for the quarter was $76.1 million, a 13% increase over Q2 2022, reflecting targeted investments in Cricut Access and the expansive improvements made over the last several quarters. In terms of geographic breakdown, international revenue was $32.6 million, up 34% compared to $24.3 million in Q2 2022. As a percentage of total revenue, international is 18%, compared to 13% of total revenue in Q2 2022. Turning to users and engagement.

I am pleased to share we ended the quarter with over 8.4 million total users, or 17% growth over Q2, 2022. We ended the quarter with nearly 3.7 million engaged users, essentially flat with Q2 last year. We ended the quarter with over 2.7 million paid subscribers, up 15% from Q2, 2022, and flat sequentially. Our subscription attach rate declined to 32% in Q2, 2023, from 33% last year. As discussed in earlier calls, there is some natural subscriber attrition, so subscriber growth will be muted until we increase the pace of machine sales and new user acquisition. Moving to gross margin.

Total gross margin in the second quarter was 49.3%, an improvement compared to the 46.5% in Q2 2022, and reflects a higher amount of subscription revenue as a percentage of total revenue. Breaking gross margin down further, gross margin from Connected Machines was 9.4%. This compares to 1.6% in Q2 of last year. The increase in margin was primarily due to less promotional activity as a percentage of revenue and a favorable product mix compared to Q2 2022, when our end-of-life Cricut Maker machine was a greater percentage of machine sales. Subscriptions gross margin for the quarter was 89.6%, compared to Q2 2022 of 90.9%. Second quarter gross margin for Accessories and Materials was 24.7%. This compares to 29.1% in Q2 2022.

The decline in margin was driven by increased promotional activity and warehouse and operations costs as a pecentage of revenue, along with an impairment of unused equipment and components associated with the wind down of manufacturing of certain products. Looking into the second half for both Connected Machines and Accessories and Materials, margin pressures from amortizing fixed costs on warehousing and capitalized operations expenses will accelerate through the second half, especially in Q4, as we reduce inventory levels. Q4 is typically our lowest gross margin quarter. Machine sales are seasonally higher with the holidays, which will naturally pressure margins since machines carry lower gross margins than other products and will represent a higher pecentage of revenue in that quarter. Total operating expenses for the quarter were $68.4 million and included $11.2 million in stock-based compensation expense.

Total operating expense was up nearly 5% from $65.4 million in Q2, 2022. While research and development and sales and marketing declined year-over-year, general and administrative expense increased, primarily due to an increase for bad debt allowance, increased personnel-related expenses, and an increase in professional services. Operating income for the quarter was $19.3 million, or 10.8% of revenue, compared to $20 million or 10.9% of revenue in Q2 last year. We delivered our 18th consecutive quarter of positive Net income. Net income was $60 million, or 0.07 per diluted share, compared to 13.8 million, or 0.06 per diluted share in Q2 2022. Turning now to the balance sheet and cash flow.

We continued to generate healthy cash flow on an annual basis, which funds inventory needs and investments for long-term growth. Year to date, we have generated $159.6 million in cash from operations, compared to $13 million a year ago, ending with a cash and cash equivalence balance of $361.5 million before paying the dividend in July, and we remain debt-free. As you recall, as part of our COVID risk mitigation strategies, we intentionally built up our on-hand inventory to ensure we could supply our customers during the pandemic. Starting late last year and continuing for the next few quarters, we began to focus on bringing inventory levels in line with historical norms.

As part of the company's ongoing evaluation of capital allocation, we seek to balance multiple considerations, including ensuring that the company has more than adequate liquidity and financial flexibility, evaluating opportunities to invest in our business to drive long-term shareholder returns, whether organically or through potential acquisitions and returning capital to our shareholders. Given this, in Q2, we announced an additional $234.6 million special shareholder dividend, of which $232.2 million was distributed in July, with the remainder to be paid upon vesting of restricted shares. This dividend comes as a result of right-sizing our balance sheet post-COVID and converting inventory into cash. During the quarter, we used $1 million of cash to repurchase 104,000 shares of our stock.

We were constrained on stock repurchases as we were considering the special dividend, as well as the higher stock price. We have $27.3 million remaining in the repurchase program. Much of our outlook is consistent with what I communicated in our prior earnings call. I do want to highlight a few additional items. During Q3, specifically in July, we paid the special dividend, which will result in a lower cash balance and lower interest income in the second half of the year. We expect to continue generating healthy cash flow from operations and to end the year with substantial cash and no debt.

Consistent with our commentary last quarter, we continue to see soft consumer spend and retailers taking a conservative approach to inventory commitments, and are thus taking a prudent and prioritized approach in our planning as we look ahead to the second half of 2023. We expect operating margins to be slightly down for the full year relative to our original expectations, given first half of the year performance. Typical revenue seasonality is 60% in the second half. Given the current macro environment, we expect second half revenue to be slightly softer as a percentage of full year revenues. In terms of new user growth, we still expect to add fewer new users in 2023 than we did last year.

While we have a positive outlook on subscriptions, lower new users will put pressure on our subscriber growth rate and attach rate throughout the year, and paid subscribers may be flat for the year or even down if current trends worsen. Leveraging our consumer analytics, we plan to execute deeper Q4 promotions for machines, combined with comprehensive marketing plans to address consumer concerns about affordability and consumer reluctance to spend. Gross margins will continue to be pressured on physical products. Higher fixed costs as a percentage of revenue in warehousing and capitalized operations expense will continue to be a factor throughout 2023, and more pronounced in Q4 as inventory levels decrease. Accessories and Materials will also have a promotional cadence to remain price competitive. As a result, we expect full year Accessories and Materials margins will be similar to Q4 2022's gross margin.

We remain focused on managing our profitability while investing in areas with the highest impact. Should macro conditions worsen, we will continue to make adjustments as needed, just as we demonstrated in 2022. We expect to continue generating healthy cash flow from operations and remain committed to our long-term operating margin targets of 15%-19%. Our proven model has demonstrated that when we operate at scale and drive top line growth, these margins are achievable. With that, I'll turn the call over to the operator for questions.

Operator

Thank you. At this time, we'll conduct the Q&A session. As a reminder, to ask a question, you need to press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, press star one one again. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question comes from Erik Woodring of Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.

Erik Woodring
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Awesome. Thank you, guys, for taking my questions. I have a handful here, a small handful. Ashish, maybe just to start off, obviously, you launched the Cricut Venture a few weeks ago. Can you maybe just speak a bit to kind of the TAM opportunity with this new product? Obviously, it's a relatively elevated price point, so it seems to be targeted more towards your kind of professionals or your prosumers versus your hobby crafters. Just, just any color on the TAM opportunity you think for that, how long it takes to ramp, and then any kind of early feedback that you've gotten on the product? Obviously, I realize it, it hasn't been super long, but any color you have there would be helpful. Then I have a follow-up. Thank you.

Kimball Shill
CFO, Cricut

Thanks, Eric, for the question. You know, you probably-- I'm probably going to deem this is my favorite question of the call. You know, so first of all, we're really, really excited about the product. We've been working on it for a number of years, and it's an exciting architecture that we are vested in, and it's going to be here for a long time to stay. The product is actually geared, as you identified, it's a $1,000 price point. It is geared towards, you know, creative enthusiasts who want to make a lot more projects at a time, and also they want to make larger projects. Right, they make these projects for schools, for organizations, religious entities.

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

... You know, we were just actually on the phone earlier today, where, you know, actually, the operator's wife, is an event coordinator for school, and she makes these large projects for schools, et cetera. I think those are the kind of users that we are looking for. Effectively, it's an upgrade of an existing product. Now, some of those users will also happen to sell, right? We launched the product in July 18. We had an in-person customer event, our first customer event in a few years. Super excited, lots of engagement. We then subsequently, added on HSN, you know, had a solid, sales performance. You know, since then, we've been very pleased with the sales. Overall, we are really excited.

We don't break out numbers for individual products. We believe that, you know, again, we have products at different price points. We think it'll be a very good upgrade, you know, product. Again, we are a little bit careful in terms of how we launched it, in terms of inventory, so it's available on cricut.com, on our retailers' websites, e-commerce partners, et cetera. The consumers will not find it in store. That's a phased approach to the launch. As we continue to understand the market better, we'll actually, you know, drive growth and scale the product. Overall, very, very pleased with the early results of this product.

Erik Woodring
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

Okay, that's super helpful. Thank you for that, Ashish. Then maybe if we just follow up on that, 'cause it, it, it almost takes into account that last point you made. Obviously, nice to see Connected Machines revenue get back to growth for the first time in a handful of quarters. You know, if we were to normalize for the launch of Venture and kind of exclude any of that channel fill, you know, what would, what, what would Connected Machines kind of growth or declines look like on a year-to-year basis? Maybe if you could outline any, any impact to Connected Machine gross margins from the Venture impact, that would be helpful as well. Thank you.

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

I think I'll take your question in two parts. One is I'll just talk about acquisition overall, right? Again, we can clearly talk about international, and then, maybe, Kimball, you can jump in and talk about gross margins and overall, you know, how our portfolio mix is improving. Let me kind of just talk at a very at a higher level in terms of acquisition. Our user acquisition this quarter was pretty much in line with our expectations. You know, we've talked, we talked about early on in the year that we expect to acquire fewer new users in 2023 compared to 2022, and that was, you know, somewhat rooted in the fact, given inflation, consumer spending, especially on discretionary products.

A couple of the fact that, as you pointed out, you know, average prices are higher this year, we've been less promotional, you know, et cetera. I think, as I said, our new user acquisition this quarter was very much in line with expectations. Now, when we look at our funnel overall, right, the funnel is pretty healthy, right? Our, our awareness continues to build, and as people are coming through the funnel, we kind of hear a few different things. They stop or they kind of defer at the bottom of the funnel, right? They talk about waiting for a sales event.

They talk about, you know, saving money, or they just, you know, they'll say, "Okay, I'll, I'll, I'll buy it a few months later." Now, given that, you know, we are going into Q4, and we talked about this in our prepared remarks, you know, we basically decided that we want to be a little bit more promotional, so we are running deeper promotions in short spurts. We think it's a really exciting opportunity for us to unlock the funnel that we've been building so that we can actually convert some of those users. One of the ways we're actually planning to do that, and we're going to, you know, basically generate a lot of content, is how consumers can actually help how we can help consumers save money, so that by making things rather than having to buy those things.

We think that that message, along with how we are doubling down in marketing, is going to really help the acquisition. You know, finally, I would just say, you know, when we look at our long-term trends, they're all healthy. We look at our SAM and the broad demographic that we are being able to attract, including, you know, a significant % of our customers are beginners. We think we're in the very early stages of our SAM penetration. Okay, why don't you talk about the impact on gross margins, both from a portfolio perspective?

Speaker 8

Yeah. Erik, as you pointed out, we were up in our machine gross margins and actually machine revenue for the quarter, and we're really excited about that. There's a couple of things going on that Venture doesn't influence at all. One is, we talked about we're going to be less promotional overall this year than we were last year, and we're seeing the benefit of that. The other benefit is, we've seen the mix of our machines tilt more towards some of our newer products that carry higher gross margins. Even though we don't disclose units, I'll say that we sold marginally fewer units in the quarter than we did a year ago, but we got more revenue and higher profit from them.

Venture was entirely an online launch, and so there's no, there's no sell-in in Q2 related to the launch of that product. We, we, we chose to do that because it's, it's a big product, it's a heavy product, and it's an expensive product. So we wanted to be conservative in, in, in how we launch and, and gauge overall consumer demand. I will say we're, we're pleased with, with what we've seen in the first several weeks of, of its launch, and it's for sale on our own D2C channel, as well as on all of our retail partners' online offerings.

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

Yeah, I just reinforce the point, because I think you kind of highlighted specifically impact of Cricut Venture. We had limited inventory to begin with, and effectively, all of the product, or at least most of the sales, are all on a sell-through basis. We're not loading up the channel and recognizing additional sales that drove the Connected Machines growth. This is impact, this is, you know, we're only recognizing the revenue on a sell-through basis, and all the products are being sold through... Even with most of our retail partners, it's on a DSV basis.

Erik Woodring
Analyst, Morgan Stanley

That's really helpful. Thank you, guys, for all that color. Congrats.

Operator

Thank you. Thank you, and one moment for our next question. Our next question comes from Adrian of Barclays. Your line is open.

Paul Kearney
Analyst, Barclays

Hey, good afternoon. This is Paul Kearney on for Adrian. Thanks for taking my question. My first one is on the accessories segment. It looks like the accessories segment margin, while still down year-over-year, was a little bit better than we had anticipated or, or we had, had expected. How should we think about that for the remainder of the year? Your promotions, are they more in the Connected Machines, or are you still having to promote in Accessories and Materials? That's one. Thanks.

Speaker 8

Okay, thanks for the question. there's kind of two, two, two questions I want to answer there. One is, is what happened with A&M for the quarter? We were down 20% year-over-year, and, you know, partly because of a tough comp. If you look at Q2 a year ago, we had channel fill revenue related to Cricut Autopress and Cricut Hat Press, that represented about $14 million of channel fill. We don't have-- we didn't have any comparable products launching in this Q2 that we, that benefited from, from sell-in of channel fill. If we adjust for that, that segment was down about 4%, year-over-year for the quarter.

When we look at A&M overall, there's kind of four things going on as we look at what's guiding us and how we think about our gross margins for that for the year. First is, you know, Q1, we had an $8 million write-down that we talked about related to Smart Material and longer lengths of our Smart Materials, specifically. That's going to affect full year margins. Secondly, we have capitalized costs in our inventory that related to procuring that inventory. We brought in much of that inventory during peak time, you know, peak COVID pricing. As we bring our inventory levels down, and this will be more prominent in Q4 as we lower inventory levels, those capitalized costs flow through the P&L and will pressure margins.

When Ashish talked about deeper promotions, he's talking primarily about machines, but we, we've talked about how we have a continued promotional cadence on our Accessories and Materials to make sure that we're being price competitive and to win our fair share. That promotional cadence will continue throughout the year. Finally, there's the possibility that we may have some reserves based on the velocity of a couple of products, either as we look to Q4 or even maybe Q1 of next year. Those are kind of the factors that are affecting our A&M outlook for the year.

Paul Kearney
Analyst, Barclays

All right. Thank you. Second, I wanted to ask about international. It looks like it was a bright spot of growth, and, and I understand it's, it's earlier than, than the mature market. Could you provide any kind of KPIs so that we can help dimensionalize it? Maybe number of users, subscribers, or, or maybe engagement metrics that you're seeing in the international markets.

Speaker 8

As we commented last time, we shared that we crossed the milestone of 1.1 million users internationally, but that we wouldn't give an update on that metric every time. As we kind of hit key milestones, we will. We are excited about the fact that we grew 34% year-over-year, and the international now represents about 18% of our overall business. What we see in international is while Ashish will emphasize that we're not mature in any market, in our larger markets, we continue to see headwinds similar to what we see in the U.S.

We're in over 50 countries around the world, so there are many countries where we're continuing to get additional shelf space and distribution, and that's helping drive that growth. The other factor that's influencing international growth is we launched our D2C channel in multiple countries late last year, and that's helping propel our growth.

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

You know, I'd like to just add to a couple of just add some commentary to Kimball's comments. You know, you talked a little bit, kind of briefly referred to engagement and subscription. It's actually very comp- I have to look at country by country, but overall, we feel like engagement and subscriptions are at a very healthy rate and very comparable across all markets. You know, I'm very proud of the team and across the world, but specifically, I think there's a lot of marketing, a lot of excitement, a lot of good consumer awareness events going on in the international market. It's such a varied group of countries, as Kimball said.

You know, with some of the larger markets like U.K. and Australia, we see some of similar, some similar headwinds. Even there, we're in the relatively early parts of the cycle. Again, you know, I'm actually going to be doing a trip very soon, in a few weeks, you know, in some of the markets around the world, especially in Europe. I think we're, again, you know, really excited about what we are seeing in international markets. The last comment I'll make is also on the platform.

We have significant investments, so we're adding content, localizing markets, you know, adding projects, adding influencers, and our approach to driving network effects is so unique, and that's particularly playing a great role in our marketing playbook for international.

Paul Kearney
Analyst, Barclays

Excellent. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. One moment for our next question. As a reminder, to ask a question, you need to press star one one on your telephone and wait for your name to be announced. To withdraw your question, press star one one again.

Our next question comes from Mark Altschwager of Baird. Your line is open.

Mark Altschwager
Analyst, Baird

Good afternoon. Thanks for, for taking my question. I guess, first off, can you talk about the feedback you're getting from channel partners with respect to current inventory levels and, and sell-through rates? I'm curious what the order book looks like for the back half of the year, and in your level of confidence that you can sustain positive inflection in, in Connected Machines, based on what you're hearing from your retail partners.

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

Mark, thanks for the question. As, as, as, as we look to the back half of the year, we are comfortable with our channel inventory levels. Actually, let me kind of talk. I think there's two or three different perspectives, Mark, that I can provide. One is, I think it's, you know, as we look at. I mean, clearly, retailers have taken a very conservative approach in the first half of the year, and we've seen, you know, we've seen continued destocking as we've gone through the year, right? As we look at the second half of the year, I think it's still early on for the orders in Q3.

One of the things that I'm particularly excited about, and our team is, is we're really excited about the promotional strategy, you know, as we go into Q3 and Q4. You know, we are working on a deeper promotion calendar. As I said, we have a pretty, you know, good, solid funnel that's been building up over time, and we think that there's an opportunity to unlock that funnel as we go into the Q4 with a deeper promotion. The other opportunity I would have is saying, you know, as we create, we're, we're actually going to be adding about 200 influencers to create content, and we think that this is a wonderful opportunity for us and our retailers to work together, to basically unlock this funnel that we keep talking about.

Mark Altschwager
Analyst, Baird

Yeah, as you, as you look to unlock that funnel, and not to get too near-term focused, but I'm just curious, as we kind of approach the back-to-school season, is there anything that you're seeing in terms of engagement or sell-through rates on some of the machines that would kind of give you an indication that that funnel might be beginning to convert at a higher rate?

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

I think, you know, I would say to date, what we have is, we've done a good job, and I'll talk a little bit about the engagement in a second. We've kind of, you know, as we look at the funnel overall, you know, basically, we've seen people being effective at the top of the funnel, right? This is where we've been able to bring a lot of people. We know from our research that there's a lot of people in the top of the funnel. The second thing that I've talked about previously is the middle of the funnel, which is there are questions that people ask, that we were not doing a good job in helping them understand which machine to buy and what the cost of ownership is.

The data that I'm actually particularly excited about, which has kind of really influenced our strategy for Q4, is that when we ask people, saying, "You know, well, when are you going to convert, or what is your conversion intent," right, a significant majority of them basically tell us that they are waiting for a sale, right? Which is very telling, right. Second is they are saving money to buy the product, or third is they just want to see the economy improve, and they'd ultimately convert that into purchase, right? That's kind of really led to our decision of going in deeper in promotions that we've had for the first six-nine months. You know, to date, we have not driven some of those events. You know, I will say anecdotally, and, you know, not to put some numbers on it, we see a tremendous opportunity in schools.

We were actually, our sales team and our marketing teams attended some education events. We, we see a lot of demand in those channels over time, but again, we're very early on and, you know, really kind of structuring programs and marketing around that. I want to talk quickly, Mark, you mentioned the word engagement, and I want to talk to you a little bit about engagement as to what we are seeing, and there's some good data points I want to share. One is, you know, clearly, we are flat on engagement, 3.7 million users this quarter, and that is flat year-over-year, quarter-over-quarter. Obviously, we like to see that number being a lot higher, right? That's a huge priority for the company.

Now, when we ask users why they are not engaged, over 80% of them, and this is the good news, right, over 80% of them are people who have not come onto the platform for the last three, four, five months, will say they really like using their Cricut. They want to use the platform more often. The reasons they cite are lack of time, lack of a nudge or a trigger that reminded them to make something, or they couldn't find a project. That's what we are focused on in terms of our platform, in helping them discover that content, effectively make that content, and then share that content on the platform. Now, you know, when we look at engagement, we today look at that as a, a cutting metric, right? People who have cut in the last 90 days.

We have strong conviction that the more people come to our platform more often, even if it was to engage, you know, maybe they won't cut because they're worried about the cost of materials. The more behaviors we drive to have them come back to our platform, engage with our platform, come onto our mobile devices, right, the more likely they will be to cut. One data point that, again, I'm not, I'm not going to call it a trend, but in July, we saw more project cuts happened compared to the July last year, and that was a reversal that we saw. Again, you know, one data point, one month's data doesn't point to a huge swing back.

We believe that as some of these economic headwinds go away, and as the consumers start to engage more on our platform, it will lend itself to, to more and more people engaging on the platform and ultimately driving network effects on the platform.

Speaker 8

I'd also call out that as we move into the holidays, there's seasonality to engagement, and so that will naturally pick up as we move into the holidays.

Mark Altschwager
Analyst, Baird

It's really helpful color. Maybe one last one for me, just back to the Cricut Venture for a moment. I, I think in the past, you've said that around a quarter of your users are creating projects that they're ultimately selling. Is, is that still a, a good metric to be thinking of, or if do you have any updates there? Then as if we think about that sort of subset of your user base, the more, you know, call it pro users, have you done any surveys or, or studies that would give you a sense, I guess, what, what percent of that segment of your user base would value the capabilities of the Venture and, you know, would, would consider the Venture even at the $1,000 price point?

Just again, trying to sort of size up, kind of the, the, the opportunity there. Thank you.

Ashish Arora
CEO, Cricut

Yeah. You know, but we have an up-- I mean, we obviously do that research on a per, on a periodic basis. We haven't we haven't, like, revised that number, but I would say it'll still be in the ballpark of that. You know, the 25%-26% of people that are selling was people that have happened to That have made a sale. That doesn't mean that they are primarily identifying themselves as prosumers, right? The other kind of data that we have looked at is the number of people that have multiple machines, right? They are just so engaged in the category. If we, again, if I was to summarize again, we have two audiences for this product. One is, you know, just enthusiasts, right? There's people who buy multiple machines.

There are people who buy every single machine we ever, we've ever launched, right? So anybody that has two or more machines, anybody that comes onto our platform, who is making off, what they call off-the-mat, large projects, that are making projects for schools or, you know, weddings or decals or religious organizations, that's our primary audience, number one, right? Secondly, a set of those also happen to sell, right? They either do badges or 25 T-shirts or 50 tumblers or make large projects, also a strong audience. I think we're going to take our time to build this market, right? We have, we have limited inventory. We've, you know, as time goes on, we'll have more pricing flexibility. We felt that given our inventory, given how we want to phase this product, we're in the early stages. This is a platform that we are super excited about.

It's a platform that I think will lend itself for the next, you know, many, many years. There's a lot of room over time to build that ecosystem. Again, we're taking a very cautious, or at least we wanted to take a very phased approach to this. It's not a slap like, you know, we're not going to go gung-ho and put product in every channel, but we are very confident and feel really good about this product and platform.

Mark Altschwager
Analyst, Baird

Great. Thanks again.

Operator

Thank you. That completes our Q&A segment. I will now turn this over to Jim Suva for closing remarks. Jim?

Jim Suva
VP of Investor Relations, Cricut

Thank you, Chris, and thank you everyone for joining us this afternoon. We have a large opportunity over the long term to drive new user growth and increased engagement. We believe the initiatives we are deploying now will position us well for when consumer spend returns, and the Cricut platform continues to not only strengthen, but provide value to our users. We will continue to manage the business for sustainable, profitable growth and generate healthy cash flows. I'm excited about the opportunities ahead of us. We will be at the Goldman Sachs Communacopia + Technology Conference in San Francisco on September fifth, and Citigroup's Global Technology Conference in New York on September seventh, and look forward to seeing everyone then. If you have additional questions, please email me at jsuva@cricut.com. This concludes our earnings call, and you may now disconnect.

Operator

Thank you. That does conclude our program. Feel free to disconnect and thank you.

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