Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen, and thank you for joining Dropbox's third quarter 2021 earnings conference call. All participants are in listen only mode. Should you need assistance, please signal a conference specialist by pressing the star key followed by zero. After today's presentation, there'll be an opportunity to ask questions. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded and will be available for replay from the investor relations section of Dropbox's website following the call. I will now turn it over to Kern Kapoor, Dropbox's Head of Investor Relations. Mr. Kapoor, please go ahead.
Thank you, and good afternoon, and welcome to Dropbox's third quarter 2021 earnings call. Today, Dropbox will discuss the quarterly financial results that were distributed earlier. Statements on this call include forward-looking statements, including future financial results, including our goals and expectations regarding future revenue growth, profitability, and our ability to generate and sustain positive free cash flow, our expectations regarding remote work trends, related market opportunities, and our ability to capitalize on those opportunities, our expectations regarding anticipated impact to our financial results, including estimated impairment charges and subleasing income as a result of our shift to a Virtual First work model, our capital allocation plans, including expected timing and volume of share repurchases, future M&A opportunities and other investments, the potential amendment to our San Francisco lease and potential resulting financial impact, as well as the potential closing of our previously announced acquisition.
Our ability to drive user growth, upgrades and retention by enhancing our products, developing and offering new products or features and through acquisitions, and our strategy, overall future performance and prospects, and ability to achieve our business goals and generate shareholder value. These statements are subject to known and unknown risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected or implied during this call. In particular, those described in our risk factors included in our Form 10-Q for the quarter ended June 30, 2021, and the risk factors that will be included in our Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30th, 2021. You should not rely on our forward-looking statements as predictions of future events.
All forward-looking statements that we make on this call are based on assumptions and beliefs as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update them except as required by law. Our discussion today will include non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP measures should be considered in addition to and not as a substitute for, or in isolation from, our GAAP results. A reconciliation of GAAP to non-GAAP results may be found in our earnings release, which was furnished with our Form 8-K filed today with the SEC, and may also be found in the supplemental investor materials posted on our investor relations website at www.investors.dropbox.com. Additional information regarding the exchange rate assumptions used in our guidance may also be found in our supplemental investor materials. I would now like to turn the call over to Dropbox's Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer, Drew Houston. Drew?
Thanks, Kern, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to our Q3 2021 earnings call. On the call with me is Tim Regan, our Chief Financial Officer. Today I'll provide an update on our product strategy and share business and product highlights from the quarter. Tim will then review our Q3 financial results and update our outlook for the remainder of the year. We had another strong quarter across the board, with revenue outperformance driven by continued momentum with our Professional SKU, expansion in teams, and better retention across teams and mobile, all while achieving record free cash flow. We made great progress against our strategy of evolving the core Dropbox experience to meet the growing needs of freelancers, small teams, and mobile users, while investing in adjacent workflows to help our customers do more with their content.
We're well on our way to achieving our long-term vision of creating one organized place for your content and all the workflows around it. Before I walk through highlights from the quarter, I want to share some context around why we believe this vision matters in today's world. As we shared before, the pandemic accelerated many trends already in play for us, like digital transformation and the rise of the creator economy. At the highest level, one of the most consequential changes was that 2020 was the year where knowledge workers globally, and probably most of us on this call, moved from working primarily in physical offices to working primarily in digital screens. We believe this is a permanent shift. Just as we're relying on them the most, these digital screens have become even more chaotic and overwhelming.
Over the last several years, work has extended into the browser and across a sea of web-based productivity apps. What used to be 100 icons on your desktop are now 100 tabs in your browser. The shift to remote work shined a spotlight on this problem, and it's clear that we need a solution that organizes everything more than ever. Dropbox has long been the place where so many of our customers, whether they're creative teams or freelancers or small businesses, do their most important work. Helping them organize their digital lives has always been a focus area for us. It's natural that now we're focused on solving the 2021 version of the problem we solved back in 2007.
As we iterate on our product roadmap and execute against our current strategy, we're also building a foundation for this long-term vision, and I'm excited to share more about our progress here. Now, turning to the quarter. As a reminder, our first strategic priority from earlier this year was to evolve the core Dropbox offering and strengthen our foundation for long-term growth. We've been executing against this priority in two ways. First, by focusing on our most passionate customers that use Dropbox for work, such as freelancers, solopreneurs, and small business teams. Second, by improving the mobile experience, where nearly half of new users begin their Dropbox journey. For all these users, whether basic or paid, we're focused on delivering more intuitive experiences and driving optimizations around sharing, onboarding, and reliability. I'm pleased to see this strategy translating into solid business wins.
We've talked in prior quarters about the rise of the creator economy and the corresponding strength we're seeing in our Professional or Pro SKU, and we saw that momentum continue in Q3. We've made steady improvements to the checkout and onboarding process for Pro, better identifying the right users, and making it easier for them to get the most value out of Dropbox from the moment they sign up. In addition to these solopreneurs, we're driving solid expansion in our Teams plans, which represented a significant contribution to net new ARR in Q3. We leveraged data science around sharing activity to make it more seamless for admins and team members to invite additional users, both internally and externally. In addition to driving conversion of free users into self-serve paid teams, we also released some highly requested security features to drive retention.
Now, admins have the ability to enforce and edit password protection and link expiration for their teams, giving them more control over how their content is being shared. While self-serve remains the vast majority of our go-to-market strategy, we also saw further improvements in retention with strategic accounts due to improvements we made in our managed sales motion. Shifting to mobile, where nearly half of all our new basic users are coming from. As discussed on our last earnings call, we made a number of enhancements to the new mobile app to create a better experience for new Dropbox users. Things like faster upload speeds, improved reliability, and increased visibility around sharing all drove higher app store ratings and customer satisfaction scores.
In Q3, we improved the sharing experience further by reducing the number of steps for non-Dropbox mobile users to view and download shared content, giving them a more seamless early experience with Dropbox. 75% of mobile basic users say their primary reason for downloading Dropbox is for sharing. We're confident these enhancements will continue to be a driver of higher conversion and retention among our users who subscribe to the mobile channel. All these improvements in the core Dropbox offering serve as an important foundation for our product roadmap and vision of building one organized place for your content and all the workflows around it. Next, I'd like to highlight the new product experiences we introduced in Q3 to better address this vision.
For the majority of our customers that use Dropbox for work, a common complaint we hear is they have trouble finding and accessing the information they need to do their work. While people can store their content in a growing number of different cloud platforms, what they need most is one place that keeps their content organized, so they can spend more time on their work. We view advanced organization functionality as a competitive advantage, and delivering this to users will help drive both retention and conversion. This week, we introduced a number of new features for teams around helping users automatically organize their content, and we also acquired a universal cloud search company, which I'll cover later on.
Simple, easy-to-use functionality has always been core to our product philosophy, so we focused on adding automation capabilities that our users can easily implement to better organize their uploaded content and find it quickly. We paired human input with machine learning capabilities so that our users are always in control. With our new automated folders, users can customize automated tasks around their files, such as converting, categorizing, sorting, or tagging. Multi-file organize allows users to categorize and sort multiple files at the same time based on dates, keywords, or other criteria. With user-defined naming conventions, Dropbox saves users time by automatically updating file names and format types. Organizing files and folders is a critical first step to helping our customers do more with their content.
In the last year, we've seen this work evolve beyond the traditional Office docs, as there's been an explosion in the creation of rich media like videos and PDFs on our platform. These are the fastest-growing types of content on Dropbox, with videos being the most common type of file shared on the platform, followed by PDFs. Nearly 50 billion PDFs were added or modified on Dropbox over the last year alone. To address these growing workflows, we've been investing in complementary workflows, such as DocSend and HelloSign, which remain our fastest-growing businesses. DocSend outperformed our expectations for the second straight quarter, and we're focused on building on this momentum. By investing in improving the user experience and adding new functionality into adjacent workflows beyond fundraising, DocSend continues to see increases in both usage and retention.
For HelloSign, we announced an integration with Microsoft SharePoint, allowing users to now send, sign, and save documents using HelloSign within their SharePoint workflow. We also saw good growth in the channel for HelloSign, which is a small but growing part of the business. There remains a significant opportunity for greater cross-selling and integration of HelloSign and DocSend into the core Dropbox platform, and we're excited to offer our customers a more complete end-to-end document workflow solution for streamlining transactions. We also introduced new product experiences that I'm really excited about. As we've shared recently, last year, we started seeing a dramatic increase in collaboration around video and images on Dropbox, and we found that distributed teams and creatives have a lot of unmet needs.
We saw a natural opportunity to offer some new, simple, lightweight tools to enable them to do more with their content in a way that traditional storage platforms have not. A good example of this is Dropbox Replay, which is a video collaboration tool that makes it easier for video production teams to collect, manage, and respond to feedback all in one place. Over 3.4 billion videos were added by customers in the first half of 2021, and video is now our most shared content type.
Replay is currently in beta, but we've already been hearing from early customers that they love its simple UI and how it streamlines existing workflows since their video files are already on Dropbox. Replay is also integrated with a number of video editing solutions like Adobe Premiere Pro, and we're excited to build out Replay's feature set towards GA in 2022. We also introduced Dropbox Capture, which enables distributed teams to communicate asynchronously through short video clips, reducing the need for meetings and long emails. Dropbox Shop, which offers freelancers and creators a seamless way to sell their digital content already stored in Dropbox. While these are all in very early stages, we're really excited about our ability to introduce new capabilities to help our customers do more with their content.
Just last week, we took another important step towards our long-term vision as we entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Command E, a universal search and productivity company. As I shared in my opening remarks, the content and information we need to do our work is distributed across files, folders, apps, and other productivity tools, making it even harder for teams to stay organized. As the browser and web-based apps become even more central to knowledge work, we believe our recent acquisition of Command E will be a competitive differentiator. Command E has built powerful functionality that makes everything you need in the cloud across your desktop and the browser immediately accessible from one universal search bar. The product and team are a great fit for Dropbox.
We share a user-focused design philosophy and the belief in maintaining an open ecosystem so users can easily access all the tools they need to do their work. We expect the deal to close in Q4 and not to have any material impact on our 2021 guidance. While it will take some time to integrate Command E into Dropbox, this acquisition is an important step towards our vision of creating one organized place for your content and the workflows around it. It's also a great example of our ability to leverage our healthy balance sheet to identify early-stage technology that can ultimately bring more long-term value to our customers. Finally, we remain focused on driving operational excellence by being thoughtful and disciplined with how we grow our business.
On the technology side, we continue to increase our adoption of SMR infrastructure, bit of advantage in storage efficiency, particularly at a time when there are shortages in the supply chain. On the product side, Replay and Shop to initial users in less than a year after the idea was generated, each staffed with lean teams. On the hiring front to our Virtual First model, we continue to make good progress in recruiting top talent outside of our higher cost location. Through these efforts, we continue to drive efficiency across our company and remain committed toward our long-term goals. With that, I'll hand it over to Tim to walk through our financial results.
Thank you, Drew. Before turning to our quarterly results, I'd like to start with a reminder of our financial strategy. We continue to focus on balancing growth and profitability in a thoughtful, disciplined way. We remain committed to our long-term objectives, including delivering operating margins of 28%-30% and generating annual free cash flow of $1 billion by 2024. We continue to allocate capital to organic initiatives and acquisitions that align with the vision that Drew outlined, while also returning cash to shareholders in the form of share repurchases. Today, I'll talk through our performance for the quarter and our updated guidance for the year to demonstrate that we continue to operate the business in line with these principles. Let's turn to our third quarter results.
Total revenue for the third quarter increased 12.9% year-over-year to $550 million, beating our guidance range of $543 million-$546 million. Foreign exchange rates provided an approximate two-point tailwind to growth. Total ARR for the quarter grew 12% year-over-year for a total of $2.218 billion. On a constant currency basis, ARR grew by $52 million sequentially and 10.4% year-over-year. Our continued growth in ARR reflects our efforts to attract new users to our premium SKUs and to drive better retention by improving the user experience with a specific emphasis on mobile, work, and Teams users.
We exited the quarter with 16.49 million paying users and added approximately 350,000 net new paying users in the quarter, driven by strength in Teams and the continued self-serve adoption of our family plan. Average revenue per paying user was $133.79 in Q3. Before I turn to the P&L, I'd like to highlight some of our go-to-market progress in the quarter. As a reminder, our go-to-market strategies involve both our self-serve motion as well as our outbound sales motion. As Drew discussed, we saw better than expected expansion in our self-serve team SKUs as a result of making it more seamless for teams to invite additional members. We prompted users with suggested invites right after they shared content with a potential team member, driving an increase in invites and net licenses per team.
We also saw improved retention in our outbound business as a result of the change in strategy we made earlier this year, where we more than doubled the number of sales reps that are fully dedicated to customer renewals. Once again, we saw momentum in our Professional SKU, as Drew Houston highlighted. Professional grew by about 30% year-over-year, driven by the ongoing adoption by freelancers and creators. We continue to help our Professional users understand the solutions that we offer by enhancing our onboarding paths to match their most common use cases with Professional's most pertinent functionality. As a result, we saw improved trial conversion as our users developed a stronger appreciation of how Professional users help them get their work done. Finally, we continue to see a healthy contribution to our net new paying users from our family plan.
During the quarter, we redesigned our upgrade pages to better highlight our family plan to basic users that were near or above their storage quotas, thus driving an uplift in conversion. Before we continue with further discussion of our P&L, I would like to note that unless otherwise indicated, all income statement measures mentioned are non-GAAP and exclude stock-based compensation, amortization of purchased intangibles, certain acquisition-related expenses, impairments of our real estate assets, and expenses related to our reduction in force. Our non-GAAP net income also excludes net gains and losses on equity investments and includes the income tax effect of the aforementioned adjustments. I'd also like to provide a brief update on our real estate strategy, where we are taking steps to de-cost our real estate portfolio as part of our transition to a Virtual First model.
We continue to make progress against our goals, executing subleases in Austin, Seattle, and Ireland this past quarter. As a result, we incurred no additional impairment, and our previous expectations of up to $450 million in total impairment charges remain unchanged. In addition, we are in discussions with our San Francisco landlord to pay roughly $32 million to buy out a portion of our lease where we have an existing subtenant. If executed, this would generate a long-term financial gain, as we expect our savings on future rent payments avoided would exceed the amounts we'd otherwise generate from the sublease by roughly $50 million. Thus, this would be an efficient use of our capital, and this would aid our ability to achieve our $1 billion free cash flow target by 2024.
In addition, executing this buyout would free us from the operational obligation to service the space. We expect to execute this arrangement in the fourth quarter this year and have therefore factored this into our guidance, which I'll touch on shortly. In the future, we may enter into similar buyouts with our landlords should the economics make sense for us, though there are no other pending deals at this time. With that, let's continue with the P&L. I'd note that all expense categories continue to benefit from lower facilities-related costs, driven by our employees working from home and a reduction in depreciation as a result of the write-down in our real estate assets stemming from the aforementioned impairment. Our personnel costs are also at reduced levels relative to last year as a result of our reduction in force and prudent subsequent hiring.
Gross margin was 81% for the quarter, representing an increase of 1 percentage point on a year-over-year basis. The improvement in our gross margin is primarily a result of the continued rollout of hardware efficiencies across our internally managed storage and data infrastructure. Third quarter R&D expense was $133 million, or 24% of revenue, which decreased compared to 27% of revenue in the third quarter of 2020. Sales and marketing expense was $106 million, or 19% of revenue, which was roughly flat relative to the third quarter of 2020 as we made investments in brand awareness and product marketing campaigns. While it's early, we are encouraged by the trends we're seeing in search impression volumes.
G&A expense was $46 million, or 8% of revenue, which decreased compared to 10% of revenue in the third quarter of 2020. In total, we earned operating profit of $161 million in the third quarter, which represents an operating margin of 29% or a six percentage point improvement compared to the third quarter of 2020. Net income for the third quarter was $147 million, which is a 33% improvement over the third quarter of 2020. Diluted EPS was $0.37 per share based on 398 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding, up from $0.26 per share for the third quarter of 2020. Moving on to our cash balance and cash flow. We ended the quarter with cash and short-term investments of $1.929 billion.
Cash flow from operations was $231 million in the third quarter, and capital expenditures were $10 million during the quarter. This resulted in record quarterly free cash flow of $221 million compared to $187 million in Q3 of 2020. In the third quarter, we also added $44 million to our finance leases for data center equipment. Let's turn to our share repurchase activity. As I previously mentioned, we intend to leverage our share repurchase program to not only return capital to our shareholders, but to also reduce our share count. In Q3, we purchased 5.8 million shares, spending approximately $181 million. At the end of Q3, we had approximately $639 million remaining on our $1 billion share repurchase authorization.
We continue to believe that utilizing our capital for share repurchases is efficient, and we will leverage the strength of our balance sheet to deliver returns back to our shareholders. With that, let's turn to guidance for Q4 and for the full year. For the fourth quarter of 2021, we expect revenue to be in the range of $556 million-$559 million. Currency exchange rates assumed in this guidance account for approximately two points of growth at the midpoint of guidance and are based on a combination of recent and historical average rates. We expect non-GAAP operating margin to be approximately 29%. Finally, we expect diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be in the range of 391-396 million shares based on our trailing thirty-day average share price.
For the full year 2021, we are raising our revenue guidance range, which was previously $2.136 billion-$2.142 billion to $2.148 billion-$2.151 billion. Currency exchange rates assumed in this guidance account for an approximately two points of growth at the midpoint of guidance and are based on a combination of recent and historical average rates. We are updating our gross margin guide to approximately 80.5% for the full year. We are raising our non-GAAP operating margin guidance, which was previously a range of 28.5%-29% to be approximately 29.5%.
Taking into account the aforementioned lease buyout opportunity, we now expect our full year free cash flow guidance, which was previously a range of $710 million-$730 million, to be approximately $715 million. This includes cash outflows comprised of $32 million for the lease buyout, $16 million for the 2021 installments of deal consideration holdback related to our acquisition of HelloSign, and one-time severance payments of approximately $14 million related to our reduction in force, which occurred in the first quarter. We now expect capital expenditures for 2021 to be approximately $35 million net of tenant improvement allowances as we complete our investments in our lease space in order to optimize their potential sublease income.
We continue to expect additions to our finance lease lines to be approximately 6% of revenue in 2021. Finally, we are maintaining our expectation for 2021 diluted weighted average shares outstanding to be in the range of 397-402 million shares. Lastly, let me share some thoughts on our long-term operating margin and free cash flow targets. We are on track to take a sizable step forward this year on profitability, outperforming our expectations, with operating margins now expected to grow approximately eight points and free cash flow expected to improve by more than $200 million year-over-year. It's important to consider that we don't expect progress of this magnitude every year. While our progress on profitability this year is outstanding, we are equally focused on driving sustainable revenue growth.
Therefore, while we are now within our long-term operating margin target range of 28%-30%, we plan to invest for growth by hiring to support compelling product initiatives, by funding marketing to drive awareness, and by exploring inorganic ways to strategically expand our product portfolio. In addition, our margin profile in 2021 benefited from favorable FX rates as well as reduced overhead and T&E costs as our employees worked from home. While we will remain a Virtual First company, we may see additional expenses in these areas next year should pandemic restrictions soften. Given these considerations, and at this time, we are maintaining our long-term operating margin target of 28%-30% and our 2024 free cash flow goal of $1 billion. In conclusion, we continue to execute well against our 2021 goals.
We believe that progress against these objectives will generate long-term value for our shareholders, and we remain committed to making decisions in line with this financial trajectory. With that, I'll now turn it back to Drew for his closing remarks.
Thank you, Tim, and thank you all for joining us today. I'm incredibly proud of our third quarter results and excited about the opportunity ahead of us. I believe Dropbox is well positioned as our customers continue to look for technologies that help them adapt to the rapidly evolving work environment. We remain focused on executing against our 2021 strategic priorities, our long-term financial goals, and further solidifying our position as the go-to solution for distributed work. With that, I'd like to open up the call for Q&A. Operator?
Thank you. Our first question comes from Rishi Jaluria with RBC. Your line is open.
Wonderful. Thank you guys for taking my questions. Nice to see continued solid results. First I wanted to touch, Drew, on a comment you made in your prepared remarks, which is regarding supply chain issues. You know, I understand obviously you have much more efficient infrastructure, probably with SMR, probably with some of the other investments you've made. Maybe you're a little bit more insulated, but can you talk a little bit about, you know, how does this impact some of your future CapEx plans? At what point does the supply chain issues out there start to become a worry? I've got a follow-up.
Sure. Well, I can start. Thanks, Rishi, and Tim, feel free to add on. I mean, as you'd imagine, we're obviously keeping a close eye on shortages in the supply chain. It's something our team has been out in front of. Our infrastructure team has done an excellent job in securing the supply we need this year. You know, we don't see a reason why that would change. We've always had great relationships with our vendors and partners, and to date our teams have been pretty proactive about it. I mean, obviously, never say never. Things can change. The environment is somewhat unpredictable, but to date, we feel good about how we've been able to keep on top of this.
All right. Thanks, Drew. That's really helpful. I wanna maybe think a little philosophically about the Virtual First model. You know, it feels like you guys were very much early in this and, you know, as Delta has pushed the office reopenings out, it seems like more and more companies are adopting that kind of Virtual First model that, you know, to a certain extent, you guys pioneered. You know, how have you shaped your view in what that Virtual First model looks like since you announced it and as things have been pushed out?
Maybe more importantly, how do you think about, you know, wanting to keep the same culture that that's kept, you know, Dropbox going so strong all these years later, while also maintaining that sort of flexibility that you really want? What lessons maybe do you think that has for other companies looking to emulate that sort of Virtual First model going forward?
Sure. Well, I mean, we're about a year in, and on the one hand, I'm really happy with the decisions we made last October. I don't think I'd make very many different decisions, although I don't think anybody could have exactly predicted the sequence or things like Delta. I mean, some things that are top of mind for me, like we really and a lot of other companies in tech and beyond are still kind of virtual only or remote only. We haven't really been able to meaningfully reintroduce the in-person experience in a consistent way, and I think a lot of companies, that's gonna happen, you know, Q1 of next year. I mean, hopefully things continue to trend in a positive direction with Delta and others.
All that is to say, like we haven't really been able to fully, neither we nor most companies have been able to fully implement their hybrid models. I mean, I'm proud of the work the team has done to anticipate some of these issues. I mean, I think the sort of default consensus compromise version of hybrid is like, are we two days, three days a week, which we envisioned would have major issues where, given that. Well, if you, if it's the same two days a week, you have a utilization problem where the office is empty five days a week, and if it's not, then you sort of get the worst of both worlds where you're commuting, but you don't have community.
I think something that we didn't even really fully anticipate was that the degree to which people have kind of spread out. I think for most companies, you know, they find even anti-remote companies in the old world are now finding themselves on their way to having a double-digit percentage of their population in places well outside of commuting distance of their former office, and they're hiring more remote workers outside of commuting distance.
Why that matters is in these hybrid models, if you have even one person on a given team who's remote, then suddenly the whole meeting has to happen on Zoom, and then you're in this massively dysfunctional situation where you're paying for all this office space, you're getting people to commute multiple hours, and in many cases further than they were before, to then be in the office without like back on Zoom, without your snacks or your dog or your setup and in a noisy environment, you know. We sort of envisioned that there was gonna be this circle of hell with the default model that we did not want to inhabit. We learned a lot from other.
I'm really proud of the work the team did researching a lot of the models that other companies have come up with, and we've tried to build on that and open source what we found. Everything that I'm talking about here, we've posted online in our Virtual First toolkit. You know, basically, I'm happy with where we are. We're gonna continue to iterate on this. I'm looking forward to reintroducing the in-person experience. You know, I'm excited for next year. I think we'll continue to do this. We've got a lot of ideas on how we can iterate further.
All right, great. That's really helpful. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Brent Thill with Jefferies. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. This is Luv Sodha on for Brent Thill. I wanted to echo the congrats as well on another solid quarter. Maybe the first question would be for Drew. You know, it sounds like you have a lot of different levers, if you will, on the innovation front, you know, the creator economy teams, HelloSign, DocSend. Could you maybe talk to us about like your top two or three levers that you think will help you sustain the current growth momentum?
Sure. I mean, the ones that are top of mind for me are kind of all against the pillars that we talked about. There's evolving in our core business, there's investing in future products, and then there's operational excellence. And there are exciting things happening in each of those areas. On the core side, there are a lot of continued sustained improvements. Some of the examples there are, we've invested a lot in the mobile experience, and we've been really improving our app store ratings and driving conversion, retention, top of funnel, better sharing, things like that. Those are kind of some incremental improvements, but a lot of them, and they're really important to sustain our growth. I think that there's
What I'm really excited about as well is a more transformative change in our core business as we evolve from syncing your files to organizing all your cloud content. I think this is a big deal. As we sort of all have been living this hybrid remote life, I think we find that living out of our screens or digital environments can be very overwhelming and fragmented and distracting places, and some of the dynamics that we saw before, like, you know, questions that I had, like, why is it easier to search all of human knowledge with something like Google than it is my company's knowledge and increasingly even my own knowledge, my own stuff, given that it now lives in 10 different places, so dynamics like
These are kind of huge problems hidden in plain sight that Dropbox is really well-positioned to solve. With my team, I talk about, "Hey, we're solving the 2021 version of the problem that we solved back in 2007, and maybe back then it was syncing files across your devices, or it was 100 icons or 100 files on your desktop. Now that's 100 tabs in your browser." There's this, we're transforming our core business in ways that if you think about it, a lot of our customers today pay for Dropbox around file-oriented workflows, but we all have, as more workloads shift to the cloud, we all need better ways of keeping on top of all that resulting fragmentation. I'm very excited about things like that.
We're making a lot of progress there. We'll have a lot more to share in the future. The acquisition of Command E, a universal search company, is a great step in that direction. The founders of that company identified very similar things and have built a lot of capabilities that will be pretty instrumental in delivering on that vision. There's a lot in the core business that I think totally, I think it breaks us free of a lot of our historical TAM constraints, where, like, I call them file-native customers and cloud-native customers. We'll have a lot to offer cloud-native customers in addition to everything we do for our file-native customers. As far as the rest of our product portfolio, there's a lot of workflows around that content.
Being able to do more for our users, given our scale, just hundreds of millions of registered users and 550 billion pieces of content, as we're your home screen for that content, there are a lot of different verbs that our customers want. I'm very excited about HelloSign and DocSend. The usage of PDFs has exploded. The collaboration on documents and PDFs has exploded on our platform in the last year. I'm very interested in what we do on document workflow in terms of taking what we have with Dropbox and DocSend and HelloSign and building an end-to-end document workflow. I think it's a huge opportunity for us.
You see some of our green shoots with the new product experiences like Capture and Replay and Shop, which address some of the other macro trends like the creator economy, the explosion of video and rich media on the platform, like massively elevated demand to have better tooling and workflows around that. With an audience, with a creative audience of freelancers, solopreneurs, these are people that really love Dropbox and need a cross-platform solution. We manage it like a lot to be excited about. Those are some of the things that are top of mind for me, and we'll manage this as a portfolio of kind of near-term incremental improvements, green shoots, where on one end of the spectrum, the core transformation, and then all the workflows around content.
Awesome. That sounds great. Maybe a quick follow-up for Tim. Just wanted to ask, it's really great to see the momentum you're having on teams and strategic accounts. Going forward, could we expect to see, I guess, more investments on that strategic side, or are you still committed more to investing on the self-serve motion? Thank you.
Sure. While self-serve does remain the vast majority of our go-to-market motion, certainly encouraged by our outbound team's execution, and the team continues to execute well against the strategy that we adopted at the beginning of the year. Specifically, we more than doubled the number of reps focused on renewals. This is driving improvements in our team retention. We're also cross-selling add-ons and newer products like HelloSign and DocSend. Then we're investing more in the channel, which is also gaining traction. Overall, certainly pleased with how the team is performing and with the higher levels of efficiency that we're seeing in our outbound side.
Yep. Building on that, we also see these as one integrated motion or one customer journey.
Often folks start at Dropbox using the free version or an individual SKU, and then they bring it with coworkers and become a self-serve team. Then self-serve expansion. There's that land and expand motion where you do hit limits on the self-serve side, where you have enough people using it in a company, and to really go wall-to-wall, you need to engage with IT and have a more managed outbound motion or channel. We see teams graduating from self-serve and then moving into a more of a managed mode as a connection between these two efforts. They're both important. The self-serve motion's kind of at the start of the journey, and the wall-to-wall motion is at the end in a larger account.
Got it. Thank you.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Dan Church with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.
This is Dan Church on for Kash Rangan. Thanks for taking the question. Just a couple quick ones from me. With respect to, it's great to see DocSend and HelloSign kind of doing better and kind of outperforming plan. Can you give us an update on the traction you're seeing with cross-sell with the two products and the kind of the momentum and any way to kind of frame the size or growth we're seeing from the new acquisitions, and then a quick follow-up on how margins for me.
Sure. We've done our first round of integrations with HelloSign. We've done things like our Professional eSignature bundle and some product integrations. I'd say we're pretty early innings in terms of the depth of those integrations, very early innings with DocSend, and pretty early in terms of the penetration of the overall Dropbox space. This is something where we wanna invest much more here in coming years. Big opportunity.
Great. Actually, to kind of the last two quarters, I mean, last quarter you mentioned an improvement in overall retention rates. We're hearing it again tonight, both from the self-service side and on the strategic side. You touched on it a little bit with respect to adding more, you know, doubling the reps focused on renewals. I guess with respect to the self-serve side, can you kind of give us an update on what's driving that retention rate and kind of how we should be thinking about the durability and levers of that? If you could level set us on the kind of maybe where we are now versus where we are last year and where we are at the time of the IPO or any kind of directional color would be great. Thank you.
Sure. I can start and Tim can add. I mean, retention starts with just the quality of the experience, right? As there's been a mix shift, as people have as mobile becomes more, or as we spend more time on our phones in addition to our laptops or desktops, that becomes a more important part of the experience and something like half of our top of funnel, half the new signups come from mobile. A lot of it is getting back to basics and making sure that experience is as simple and fast and streamlined and just works. That's always been kind of our product philosophy. Removing friction from sign up or from sharing or different things pays dividends. We've seen.
I mean, we'll list examples, but we've seen like record app store ratings or big improvements, improved conversion and retention, improved sharing activity, and these kind of all the sort of self-reinforcing flywheel. I could say similar things about just making it easier for. I mean, it sounds basic, but it's very important just if you're a self-serve team, making it really easy to get your whole team signed up, figuring out what are all the steps in that experience and trying to remove or simplify as many of them as possible pays big returns in terms of that kind of viral flywheel. We see a direct link between the simplicity of the experience and having as few steps as possible and really understanding what our customers are trying to do and make that as easy as possible.
We see that translating into improvements across the funnel from better engagement to better retention to better conversion to better virality, and we work all those things in parallel.
Maybe just to briefly add on to that, Dan, we don't update churn metrics quarterly, but churn did improve sequentially and year over year, and our revenue guidance obviously factors in the latest trends, but certainly encouraged by the results of these efforts.
Great. Thanks a lot. It's really helpful.
Thank you. We have a question from Pat Walravens with JMP. Your line is open.
Hey, guys. This is Enzo on for Pat. Congrats again on another strong quarter, and thanks for taking the question. I know during the prepared remarks that there was a little bit of color about the self-serve adoption of family plans. I was curious if you guys could just expand a little bit on what that growth looks like, kind of what that opportunity looks like as it stands now, and then how you expect that to trend going forward.
Sure. I mean, I can speak to it at a high level, and then Tim can add on. I mean, family plan is a good example of how, you know, while on the one hand, most Dropbox subscribers use Dropbox for work, the vast majority, many also use it for personal use, and family plan is something that was, like, commonly requested and has been pretty popular and doing well. I mean I bring that up because one of the things that was clear after the pandemic is that the physical boundaries between home and work, like fully dissolved for many of us. And the same thing is true of the virtual boundary between home and work.
Like, we're all managing personal stuff and work stuff often on the same machine, and that can be a big hassle. Dropbox has always been, or our customers have appreciated that we handle both your personal and working life together. We'll continue to make investments like that, and Tim can speak to more of the growth momentum.
Yeah, maybe just to quickly add on. In the third quarter, we did enhance our upgrade pages for those approaching their storage quotas, where we did offer them the family plan for the first time. That helped drive incremental traffic and conversion. Maybe one place you do see that is in net new paying users, where in the quarter we added about 350,000 net new paying users. Family plan was a contributor to that, as was the strength in teams, as was the strength in Professional.
Awesome. Thanks so much.
Thank you. We have a question from Steve Enders with KeyBanc. Your line is open.
Okay, great. Thanks for taking the questions. You know, in the pre-prepared remarks, like there was quite a lot of content around the broader ambitions around content workflow and how Dropbox is thinking about that. Just kinda wondering, if you look at the kind of product roadmap and what happens here longer term, how does the product set evolve to match that vision that you are outlining?
Sure. Well, I mean, at the highest level in the core business, it's that evolution from syncing files to organizing all your cloud content. A big part of that is search. Command E is a great example of pretty important building block there with the universal search and being able to index all of your different cloud tools and services and have one fully working search box instead of 10 kinda fragmented search boxes. Organization, like how do you give people one view of their stuff regardless of wherever it may reside, instead of having to visit 10 different places. Organization, navigation, search, those are all certainly pillars of the future experience, where those are.
I'm really excited about our roadmaps in each of those areas. Second is all the workflows around content, as I mentioned. There are our document workflows with our products like HelloSign and DocSend. I'm really excited about the opportunity to build a more end-to-end solution with each of those that encompasses all those components. Bringing DocSend, HelloSign, Dropbox together so that when you save a contract in Dropbox, send it out for feedback in DocSend, get it signed in HelloSign, have the completed contract in Dropbox. There's a lot more that we can do to tie those products together.
Finally, a lot of the creative workflows, rich media workflows, so things like Dropbox Capture, which is a visual communication tool, Dropbox Replay, video collaboration tool, and Shop, where we find we have a lot of demand from our customers to help monetize their digital goods or monetize the content they have in Dropbox without having to stitch together five different things. There's a pretty big portfolio of products and potential growth levers.
Okay, great. That's helpful. You know, I know you mentioned, you know, Capture, Replay, and Shop in there, and you've come out with Passwords in the past year. But how do you think about, you know, the ability to kind of incrementally monetize these new solutions you're rolling out, and how does that kinda play out over the next couple of years, and how would we see that develop?
Yeah. I mean, I think it's gonna be a portfolio, and each of these investments is gonna have different magnitudes over different timescales. I mean, the core business is obviously the biggest lever, and I've talked about kinda the range of more incremental improvements to more transformative changes, more incremental improvements that happen kinda week-by-week, month-by-month, to this broader transformation that will take will be measured more in years. Then in our the portfolio of workflows, similar kinda thing. Got HelloSign and DocSend, which are already at meaningful scale and in our fastest-growing businesses. We'll always have a portfolio of green shoots, where we'll double down on what works and keep iterating, but won't be material to the business for, you know, in 2022.
Okay, perfect. Really appreciate you taking the questions here.
Yeah.
Thank you. There are no further questions in the queue. I'd like to call back to Drew Houston for any further remarks.
All right. Well, thank you everyone for joining today. We really appreciate your continued support and look forward to speaking with you again next quarter.
This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.