Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by, and welcome to the Deluxe First Quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode, and today's call is being recorded. We will begin with opening remarks and introductions. At this time, I would like to turn the conference over to your host, Vice President of Investor Relations, Tom Morabito. Please go ahead.
Thank you, operator, and welcome to the Deluxe First Quarter 2022 earnings call. Joining me on today's call is Barry McCarthy, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Scott Bomar, our Chief Financial Officer. At the end of today's prepared remarks, we will take questions. Before we begin, and as seen on this slide, I'd like to remind everyone that comments made today regarding management's intentions, projections, financial estimates or expectations about the company's future strategy or performance are forward-looking in nature and as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These comments are subject to risks and uncertainties, including, without limitation, risks related to COVID, the risk that the company's recent acquisition of First American Payment Systems or any other acquisitions does not produce anticipated results or synergies, and the risk that any future acquisitions or divestitures will not be consummated.
Any of these risks and uncertainties could cause our actual results to differ materially from our projections. Additional information about factors that may cause our actual results to differ from projections is contained in our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2021 and in other company SEC filings. On the call today, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, including Adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow. In our press release, our presentation and our filings with the SEC, you will find additional disclosures regarding the non-GAAP measures, including reconciliations of these measures to the most comparable measures under U.S. GAAP. Now I'll turn it over to Barry.
Thanks, Tom, and good morning, everyone. We had a strong quarter with better-than-expected revenue growth. Company-wide revenue growth was 26%. Excluding First American, revenue increased 7.1%. Once again, we delivered sales-driven growth in all four segments. We did benefit from previously announced pricing actions. However, we're particularly pleased to report that we have continued to experience strong volumes despite these pricing actions. This demonstrates the fundamental strength of our business and the continued strong demand for our products as we have been sharing with you for some time. Our transformation into a trusted payments and data company is continuing, as demonstrated by our strong revenue performance. While Adjusted EBITDA margin rate was impacted by inflation and other factors, total Adjusted EBITDA dollars improved over 10% year-over-year, consistent with our expectations.
During the quarter, payments performance was primarily driven by the continuing positive results of First American and growth in our digital payment services. We continue to be proud of our transformation into a payments company. As a reminder, we're on track for payments to equal checks as our largest business by revenue heading into 2023, another key milestone for us. Cloud growth was driven by Data-Driven Marketing or DDM. Promotional Solutions benefited from the implementation of key wins from last year, and Checks performance was driven primarily by business checks and new competitive wins. Before I go into additional highlights, I want to welcome our new Chief Technology and Digital Officer, Yogaraj Jayaprakasam, to the executive leadership team.
Yogs has more than 20 years of digital data and technology engineering experience, most recently with American Express, serving as unit CIO and head of engineering for B2B digital payments, experience, and data platforms. His background is directly on point for the future we are building here at Deluxe. I'm confident Yogs will help us accelerate our transformation into a payments and data company. I also want to be sure to thank my fellow Deluxers for their continued dedication and unwavering commitment to our customers. This dedication recently led Newsweek naming Deluxe one of America's most trustworthy companies. This is something we're very proud of and is a recognition of the long-term consistent commitment of all Deluxers. Now we can follow to the highlights from the quarter. Revenue is $556 million, up 26% year-over-year.
Not including the positive impact of First American, sales-driven revenue was up a strong 7.1%. This was the fourth consecutive quarter of sales-driven growth and proves that our ability to grow is real and sustainable. Adjusted EBITDA improved 10.1% to $99.6 million. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 17.9%, consistent with our guidance. Scott will provide details. Moving on to some segment revenue highlights. For the first quarter, our payment segment more than doubled year-over-year. This was driven by the 2021 addition and outperformance of First American, which grew this quarter at 8.4%. As you know, First American had been a low single-digit grower prior to the acquisition.
Since the acquisition and the implementation of our One Deluxe model with our trusted reputation, solid balance sheet and deep customer relationships, First American has been exceeding our expectations. Our belief that we could help First American grow faster is proving to be true. Being able to cross-sell to our approximately 4,000 financial institutions and 4 million small business customers, First American is successfully offering a host of Deluxe products. In addition, during Q1, First American signed more financial institutions during the quarter than they would have previously in a typical year. Quite simply, the One Deluxe model works. Excluding First American, payments revenue increased 4.3%, with growth in our other major businesses, particularly digital payments and lockbox. Our Payables as a Service offerings, which include our Deluxe Payment Exchange or DPX and Medical Payment Exchange or MPX, continue to experience strong growth.
In terms of new wins, we signed BillGO, which is a large payments platform used by over 30 million consumers, thousands of financial institutions, fintechs and billers. BillGO will use our digital DPX technology to process millions of payments through the Deluxe network, which will lower costs and increase efficiencies for BillGO's customers. Cloud Solutions had another solid quarter, growing 11.7% year-over-year. Cloud's performance benefited from meaningful relationship expansion with key clients, sales wins and positive impacts of a recovering economy in our DDM business. We continue to pursue additional verticals beyond financial institutions, and in the first quarter, key wins once again included new customers and programs in the telecom, retail, e-commerce, and high-tech security sectors. Also in Cloud, we're pleased to announce we have completed the sale of our Australian web hosting business originally announced in March.
We will continue to assess our portfolio as we focus on businesses that can benefit from the One Deluxe model and those businesses well positioned in secular growth markets. Now on to our Promotional Solutions segment. Promotional Solutions had another strong quarter up on the top line, improving 7% year-over-year, positively impacted by core business essential products as well as key wins we announced last year. During the quarter, we partnered with one of the most well-known brands in the world, Porsche, to become a premium preferred supplier to its brands in North America. This is an exciting new relationship for Deluxe. First, we'll be providing promotional items, signage, and other services in support of Porsche's new racing series in North America called the Carrera Cup. Second, through this relationship, we are a sponsor of the series, which will drive brand awareness in new markets.
Finally, our very profitable cash-generating checks business also had another strong quarter, growing 6.9% year-over-year, which is significantly better than long-term industry trends. The performance was largely driven by new wins, solid growth from business checks, and price increases to offset inflationary pressures. Beyond its strength in generating free cash flow, checks' significant strategic value is to provide leads for our other segments. Examples from the first quarter where we sold First American Merchant Services to existing checks customers include Virginia Credit Union, a Richmond-based financial institution with $5 billion in assets, Century Bank, a community bank in New Mexico which appreciated the benefits of partnering with a true processor versus an ISO, and Freedom First Credit Union, with nearly $900 million in assets and serving 33 counties across South and Central Virginia.
In each case, Deluxe's long-standing trusted relationships led to our sales teams being able to successfully cross-sell additional products. These are clear examples that the One Deluxe model works. In summary, we're pleased with our first quarter results, which plainly show our momentum, and we're off to a strong start in 2022. We continue to be confident in our guidance of 8%-10% revenue growth with approximately 20% Adjusted EBITDA margin for the full year. The first quarter performance and outlook are further evidence of our transformation into a payments and data company. Now I'll turn it over to Scott, who will provide more details on our financial performance.
Thank you, Barry, and good morning, everyone. Let's go through the consolidated highlights for the quarter before moving on to the segment. For the first quarter, we posted total revenue of $556 million, up 26% year-over-year. Not including First American, revenue came in at $472.7 million, up 7.1% year-over-year. The revenue performance was driven by a combination of solid ongoing demand for our products and price increases. We reported first quarter GAAP net income of $9.7 million or $0.22 per share in the quarter. Compared to the prior year first quarter, GAAP net income was impacted by $12.7 million in acquisition amortization as well as increased interest expense, both related to the First American acquisition.
Adjusted EBITDA came in at $99.6 million, up 10.1% from last year, driven by the acquisition and strong performance of First American. Adjusted EBITDA margin was 17.9%, down from 20.5% from last year's first quarter. The Adjusted EBITDA margin rate decline was expected and due to a return to our pre-COVID seasonality patterns and our corporate cost structure and product mix. Planned technology investments and inflationary pressures partially offset by pricing actions and operating leverage from strong revenue growth. These factors were known and consistent with our full-year guidance. As a reminder, the first quarter is traditionally the lowest margin quarter of the year, and we expect to progressively expand margin rates throughout the year. First quarter adjusted EPS came in as $1.05, down from $1.26 in last year's first quarter.
The decrease is driven by the operational items previously mentioned, higher interest expense from the First American acquisition, as well as higher depreciation and amortization. First American in total was slightly accretive to adjusted EPS ahead of our expectations. Now turning to our segment details. Payments grew first quarter revenue 109.1% year-over-year to $166.2 million, largely driven by the acquisition and outperformance of First American. Excluding First American, payments revenue increased 4.3% year-over-year. In addition to First American's strong performance, we also experienced growth in our core payments business. Including First American, payments Adjusted EBITDA increased 98.9% in the quarter, and Adjusted EBITDA margin was 21.9%.
Down 110 basis points due primarily to continued product investments and inflationary pressure, partially offset by price increases. With the addition of First American, our payments segment has more than doubled in size. In the first quarter, First American's margins were modestly dilutive to payments but were accretive to overall company margins. Longer term, we expect the payments segment to deliver a high single-digit revenue growth rate, and for 2022, we expect Adjusted EBITDA margins to be in the low 20% range. Cloud Solutions had another strong quarter with segment revenue increasing 11.7% year-over-year to $69.5 million in the quarter. Cloud's growth continues to be driven by our DDM solutions, which is benefiting from meaningful relationship expansion with key clients, sales wins, positive impacts of a recovering economy, and increased marketing spend by our customers.
We continue to add new DDM clients and new industry verticals and are extending into new product lines, which will benefit us going forward. As Barry mentioned in March, we announced the sale of our Australian web hosting business, which is part of our ongoing strategy to streamline and optimize our portfolio. The financial impact on the first quarter was negligible, but Cloud's revenue will be impacted by about $20 million for the remainder of the year. This impact is included in our reaffirmed guidance. Cloud's Adjusted EBITDA margin in the quarter declined 280 basis points versus prior year to 24.9% due to changes in product mix resulting from strong revenue growth in the DDM business. For 2022, and excluding the Australian sale, we expected to see mid-single-digit revenue growth and Adjusted EBITDA margins in the low- to mid-20% range.
Adjusting for the impact of the Australian sale, we now expect to see flat to low single-digit revenue declines for the year. Promotional Solutions first quarter revenue was $133.2 million, up 7% year-over-year, driven by core business essentials product, key wins we announced last year, and price increases to offset inflationary pressures. Adjusted EBITDA margin for the quarter was 12.8%, down 140 basis points, largely due to increased paper and delivery costs as well as product mix, partially offset by pricing. In April, we completed the sale of one of our promotional solutions product areas, Deluxe Strategic Sourcing or DSS. This exit is a part of our ongoing efforts to further simplify the business.
The divestiture of DSS is expected to have a $10 million impact to revenue in 2022, with very little impact to EBITDA dollars, and these factors are included in our guidance reaffirmation. We are anticipating 2022 top-line growth in the low single-digit range and Adjusted EBITDA margins in the mid-teens. Checks first quarter revenue increased 6.9% from last year to $187.1 million as new competitive wins, pricing actions, and strength in our business checks outpaced the continued secular declines in the business. I should note that while we are very pleased with these results, we do not expect to see this level of outperformance to continue for the remainder of the year as we will begin to lap new customer onboarding activity from the second half of 2021.
As a result, we expect to have low single-digit revenue declines for the remainder of the year. First quarter Adjusted EBITDA margins were 44.3%, down 340 basis points year-over-year, largely driven by the addition of lower-margin new customers. We also experienced inflationary pressures, most notably related to delivery expense and input materials that were largely offset by price increases. Adjusted EBITDA dollars remained virtually flat year-over-year. As a reminder, we anticipate the stabilization of Checks margins due to the implementation of our new HP Print On Demand technology. Turning now to our balance sheet and cash flow. We ended the quarter with a net debt level of $1.65 billion, up from $714.6 million last year due to the First American transaction.
Our net debt to Adjusted EBITDA ratio was 4.0x at the end of the quarter, flat with 4.0x at the end of year-end 2021. Our long-term strategic target remains approximately 3.0x . Free cash flow, defined as cash provided by operating activities, less capital expenditures, was $13.5 million in the first quarter, down $4.4 million from the first quarter of 2021. We do expect overall free cash flow to increase in 2022 compared to 2021 as the investments in our major tech platform modernization will decrease meaningfully later this year. Our board approved a regular quarterly dividend of $0.30 per share on all outstanding shares. The dividend will be payable on June 6th, 2022 to all shareholders of record on May 23rd, 2022.
As a reminder, our capital allocation priorities are to responsibly invest in growth, pay our dividend, reduce debt, and return value to our shareholders. Turning now to guidance. Today, we are reiterating our expectations for 2022. This guidance includes a partial prior year of First American and is subject to, among other things, prevailing macroeconomic conditions, anticipated continued supply chain constraints, labor supply issues, inflation, and the impact of recent divestitures. For full year 2022, we are expecting the following, keeping in mind that all figures are approximate. Revenue growth of 8%-10%, including a full year of First American. As a reminder, the transaction closed on June 1st, 2021. Adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 20% for the full year. Interest expense of $90 million. An adjusted tax rate of 26%.
Depreciation and amortization of $180 million, of which acquisition amortization is approximately $90 million. Average outstanding share count of 43.5 million shares. Capital expenditures of $105 million. To summarize, I believe we're off to a positive start to the year with the first quarter of 2022 results. We look forward to continuing the momentum in the coming quarters. Operator, we are now ready to take questions.
Thank you. As a reminder, that is star one if you would like to ask a question, and we will pause for a moment to compile the Q&A roster. Our first question will come from Charles Strauzer with CJS. Please go ahead.
Hi, good morning. Can you hear me okay?
Hello, Charlie. We can hear you just fine.
Great. A couple of questions for you. First on the First American side, looks like a little bit slower there in the quarter. You know, longer term, kind of, you know, what are you expecting kind of a growth rate there? If you can maybe give us a little, you know, color on that?
Yeah, Charlie, we're still very proud of the results at First American. As you know, that business, when we acquired it, had historically been a low single-digit revenue grower. In the three quarters that we've owned it has been a high single or double-digit revenue growth business. You know, when we acquired it, we told everyone we thought we would get it to mid-single digits, and we're very confident of that, and we think we can do better over time. The first three quarters, we think is a really great you know, sort of set of proof points on that.
Maybe the best proof point about what the future can look like, Charlie, is that in the first quarter, the First American team sold as many new banks in the first quarter as they would do in a typical year. That is a great leading indicator about sort of the power of the One Deluxe model applied at First American, and you know, what we think can come going forward in the future.
Great. Thank you on that. You know, looks like you had a pretty strong, you know, quarter revenue-wise versus my model. You know, kind of what was the main driver? Was it mostly pricing, you know, on the checks side? Was it, you know, across the board? You know, secondly, on the checks side, you know, obviously much better than expected results there. How long can you kind of keep up that pace in that segment?
Yeah, Charlie, we feel, you know, really happy with the momentum that we're seeing across the business. The revenue growth of 7.1%, excluding First American, you know, was roughly a relatively even blend between pricing and volume. I think that was a very healthy profile delivering, you know, both volume growth as well as pricing. The way we think about the pricing is it was largely amounted to a pass-through of inflationary costs and pressures that were affecting the business. You know, the net effect of that is, you know, sort of higher revenue levels, same EBITDA dollar generation, but a little bit lower margin rate as a result of simply adding cost to our cost of goods and offsetting that and passing that through in the form of pricing.
Overall, we felt like it was a really healthy blend of both volume increases as well as pricing to offset inflationary pressures in the business. You know, Checks continues its strong performance, continues to win new business. As you recall, we had a series of large wins last year. We're really happy with the momentum that we've seen within the Checks business. Now, just a signal for the balance of the year, you know, we don't expect to have growth rates at the level we've seen in both Q4 and Q1 throughout the year as we continue to lap some of those new wins that we onboarded late in 2021. However, the underlying dynamics in the business are quite healthy.
That's a good segue into my last question. Just, you know, I know you don't give quarterly guidance, but, you know, maybe you can talk about the cadence of how you get to kind of the 20% EBITDA margin for the full year.
Well, there's a few layers to that, Charlie. You know, as we talked about a little bit during the last quarterly call, there is some seasonality, and we see ourselves as returning to seasonal patterns similar to what we experienced as a company before COVID. There's a number of one-time factors that affected our cadence over the course of the quarters in 2020 and 2021. We see our model this year, you know, returning to similar patterns you've seen in the past. That seasonality is really driven by two things. First of all, there is some seasonality in the rate at which we incur benefits costs, which are highest in Q1, and they decrease throughout the balance of the year.
There's some seasonality around the mix of goods we sell primarily in our Promotional Solutions business, where we have a series of high-margin goods that are sold as part of our year-end promotional segment business that doesn't repeat in Q1. You know, we still feel that we are in a good position from a margin rate perspective that will continue to increase steadily throughout the year based on some of those seasonal factors. You know, it's Q1, we're continuing to watch it, but feel good about the momentum we're seeing so far.
Excellent. That's great. Then, Don, just lastly, you know, I saw you hired a new CTO. Maybe you can give us a little bit more about his background and what he brings to the table at Deluxe.
You know, Charlie, we're really pleased to have Yoges join us. He's had a very distinguished career at American Express, and we went specifically to the market where this is essentially a new role where we are adding digital capability together with our technology organization, which I think is a really clear message and signal about where the company's headed. That we are doubling down on our focus on digitization of all of our businesses, but also a big message that we are clearly focused on being a payments and data company. That is where Yoges' background and experience, you know, for more than a decade at American Express is gonna be really helpful to us.
You know, Yoges had lots of choices of what he could decide to do next, and he was very attracted to our transformation story here about taking this proud company with 4,000 bank partners, 4 million small businesses, hundreds of the world's leading brands, and building platforms as a service in the payments and data marketplaces. He wants to be part of it. You know, he just started this week and is off to a great start. But I'd say, Charlie, the key message there, though, is to understand we really mean it. We are a payments and data company, and we are doubling down there, bringing in talent to help us accelerate that.
You know, bringing people in from some of the best payments companies in the world is one way for us to help accelerate that progress.
That's helpful. Thank you. Thank you for my questions.
Our next question will come from Christine Greany with Sidoti. Please go ahead.
Good morning. Can you guys hear me?
Yeah. Good morning.
Good morning. Great. I'm stepping in for Chris McGinnis this morning and have a few questions. The first is going to be on payments organic growth. How do you see that trending for the remainder of the year? And if you're expecting an improvement, what are the factors in the improvement of the organic growth rate?
Yeah. In the payments business overall, you know, there's the what we call the original businesses, which are around accounts receivable, accounts payable, and small business payments, specifically HR and payroll, and of course the assets with First American. The businesses around AR, AP, and HR payroll, I mean, grew mid-single digits. Our expectation for those businesses is that they will trend up towards high single towards lower double digits. We are very pleased with the pipeline, and we have a backlog of things to get implemented. We continue to work on the backlog.
I got to tell you can't see it specifically in the numbers, but in the areas where we have the most optimism for growth around our DPX, the Deluxe Payment Exchange, and MPX, Medical Payment Exchange, you know, those businesses are seeing very, very material growth. We continue to expect to put more fuel in the tank and get those customers that are in the implementation queue boarded and to see some steady improvement with that business over time.
Okay, great. My next question, was there any impact of Omicron to operations in 1Q 2022?
You know, we're certainly not immune, like any business, to you know, COVID implications. I'm sure there was some impact, but we have not quantified that in the first quarter to a specific number.
I would just add that, you know, we've referenced it a few times, but certainly, you know, inflation is everywhere. It's affected us in our cost of goods. We felt like we were successfully able to offset that through price increases, sort of almost one to one. It differed based on product line, of course. You know, not directly Omicron, but the kind of macroeconomic conditions and indirectly as it relates to our staffing, we felt like we were able to operate effectively and push through any implications that were weighing on the business.
Yep. That actually was in my next question. What are you on the, yeah, on the inflation front? Where are you seeing the greatest cost pressure and what point like what point are you in the price cost equation?
Yeah. As we mentioned in the you know the opening comments you know we feel like we were able to successfully sort of one-to-one pass along the inflationary cost and our cost of goods in the form of price increases. You know the primary areas where we've seen pressure has been in input materials used in manufacturing processes sourced goods that we distribute on behalf of our customers and wage rates in our operational facilities whether it be a lock box facility a contact center or a manufacturing environment. Those are the primary areas where we've seen impacts from inflation. Again we feel like we've covered it in the quarter.
Okay, great. You guys might have touched on this, but could you, On the, on check performance in the quarter, was the growth driven by easier comparison and the rebound in the market? Sorry, let me rephrase it. For check performance in the quarter, was growth driven by an easier comparison and the rebound in the market and likely to normalize for the remainder of the year?
I would say that there's a number of factors here, but the biggest driver has been some of the new wins that we've talked about in prior quarters from late 2021, where we feel like we've, you know, gained share in the market. Those wins are, you know, not in the comp base, if you call that an easier compare, but that's actually because of proactive actions we've taken in business that we won. That's been the real driver. We saw, you know, stronger performance in our business checks have held up really well, as compared to personal checks. We saw some really strong revenue growth in the business check segment.
Okay, great. In the checks business, can you just restate the EBITDA margin profile of the business? Is it 44% or 45%?
You know, we've, you know, we've talked about check margins as sort of stabilizing in the mid-40% range. You know, give us a working margin around that level. We've invested heavily in the print technology. We're midway through the implementation of a new set of capabilities to drive efficiency in the manufacturing process for the production of checks to stabilize those margins. We will continue to drive efficiency in that operation as the secular declines in the space, you know, continue to exist. We look for that sort of mid-40s as being a stabilization point for the interim period on check margin.
Okay, great. I think that's it from my end. I really appreciate it. Thanks so much.
Our next question will come from Charles Nabhan with Stephens. Please go ahead.
Good morning, and thank you for taking my question. You alluded to some investments, some product investments in payments, on your slide deck. I just want to get some specifics around there in terms of the verticals and the distribution avenues that you might be investing in, as well as your product roadmap for the division going forward.
Sure. That's a big question. Let me give you sort of the headlines on that. We are very focused in three areas for growth. An area we call Receivables as a Service which is the automation of the entire order-to-cash management process. The second is sometimes called digital payments or payables, or disbursements, and this is where we are automating and taking paper out of the disbursement flow. The third is around HR and payroll for small businesses. Specifically on the Receivables as a Service business, our model there is to sell a white label package that gets resold through the bank channel. We have a number of banks that are already live, and we have a number of banks in queue to go live.
What we find particularly encouraging is the banks that have already gone live have long queues of customers, their customers, bank customers to come on to this accounts receivables management platform. We are in the process of adding automation tools to allow us to board those merchants faster and also improve the customer or the user experience and the user interface, which will make the product even more compelling. In our payables business, the Medical Payment Exchange and the Deluxe Payment Exchange.
In these businesses, we are taking what would normally be a printed explanation of benefits or a reconciliation to an invoice that would go into an envelope with a paper check, and we are digitizing that process and allowing it to arrive at the customer via email with an embedded, digital check that can then be printed if that is the process of the recipient or deposited automatically and electronically, fully digitizing the experience end to end. We are seeing fantastic growth in that space as we are taking millions of dollars of expense out for our customers through the digitization of that delivery of that payment. The final area is around HR payroll. We think this is a market at the low end that is very underserved and under penetrated by the big guys.
Our tools are particularly well suited here for customers with 50 or fewer employees, and we are seeing terrific growth and uptake, both through direct sales through bank partner sales. What we're also excited about is the addition of First American and their 150,000 small business customers as an additional target for those solutions. Those are the three areas where we are focused and where we're continuing to make investments for growth. Receivables as a service, payables, and HR, payroll services for small business.
Got it. Just as a quick follow-up. Could you speak to the timing or how you think about leverage going forward and when you see yourself reaching that three times target?
Yeah, we've, you know, continued to have that as one of the main drivers of our capital allocation policy, right? We're gonna look for areas to responsibly invest in growth in the business, pay our dividend and apply excess cash to deleveraging the balance sheet. You know, Q1 happens to have been a low free cash flow generative quarter for a lot of the reasons we talked about the seasonality of the business. We do expect free cash flow to pick up meaningfully throughout the balance of the year, enabling us to further deleverage over the course of the year.
You know, it's gonna take us a couple years to get to the 3.0 target that we've articulated, but we're committed to continuing to take every extra dollar of free cash flow and apply it against the debt balances that we have to steadily, you know, work towards that long-term target.
Got it. Thank you.
That will conclude today's question and answer session. I would now like to turn the call back to Tom Morabito for closing comments.
Thanks, Savannah. Before we conclude, I'd like to mention that management will be participating in the following conferences. The 17th Annual Needham Technology & Media Conference on May 17. Cowen 50th Annual Technology, Media & Telecom Conference on June 1st. The Loop Capital Markets Investor Conference on June 2nd, and Baird's Global Consumer, Technology & Services Conference on June 8th. Thank you again for joining us today, and we look forward to speaking with you in August as we share our second quarter 2022 results.
This will conclude today's conference. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.