Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for standing by. Welcome to the Deluxe Q1 2023 Earnings Conference Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. 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 Q1 2023 earnings call. Joining me on today's call is Barry McCarthy, our President and Chief Executive Officer, and Chip Zint, our Chief Financial Officer. At the end of today's prepared remarks, we will take questions.
Before we begin, and as you see 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 as defined in the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995.
Additional information about factors that may cause our actual results to differ from projections is set forth in the press release we furnished today, in our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2022, and in other company SEC filings.
On the call today, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, including comparable adjusted revenue, adjusted and comparable adjusted EBITDA, adjusted and comparable adjusted EBITDA margin, adjusted EPS, 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. In the presentation, we are providing additional reconciliations of GAAP EPS to adjusted EPS, which should help with your modeling. I'll turn it over to Barry.
Thanks, Tom. Good morning, everyone. Deluxe is off to a solid start to 2023 with positive comparable adjusted revenue and EBITDA growth. You'll recall that last quarter we began discussing both revenue and EBITDA on a comparable adjusted basis, which will exclude the inconsistencies caused by acquisitions or divestitures in the prior periods.
We're now in our third consecutive year of revenue growth on a comparable adjusted basis. We're delivering on our long-term promise of scale, growing profits faster than revenue. This has been an elusive goal for more than a decade. While there's still more to do, we're cautiously optimistic that this quarter represents our inflection point of improving margin and earnings leverage over time. Before we review the quarterly results, let me take a moment to offer a few business updates.
First, in Q1, we completed our three-year corporate infrastructure modernization program with the implementation of our ERP, clearly showing our ability to execute well on what is always a difficult project. Chip will provide additional details in a moment. Second, I want to offer some details on First American as we approach the second anniversary of the acquisition.
First American, our merchant services platform business, continues to meet or exceed our management case for the transaction. Pre-acquisition, the business was growing lower single digits and is now solidly a mid-single digit grower, delivering 7% revenue growth this quarter. The progress we've made on this acquisition highlights the operational and financial discipline and the power of our One Deluxe go-to-market model. As an example, since the acquisition, we've onboarded nearly 1,100 new clients that were Deluxe relationships or referrals.
We continue to see First American as an important value driver for Deluxe. Third, the sale of our North American web hosting and logo business is expected to be completed this month after satisfying all closing conditions. As we mentioned on our last call, web hosting is a non-strategic business line, and this divestiture will allow us to further focus on payments and data.
Post-divestiture, 90% of our data business, formerly known as the cloud business, will be data-driven marketing or DDM. Fourth, we made significant strides in our ongoing Lockbox improvement efforts by further consolidating sites and shifting work to optimize the operations. Chip will share additional details. Fifth, as announced earlier this week, Deluxe entered into a joint venture with ECHO Health focused on expanding the capabilities of our Deluxe Payment Exchange or DPX platform.
We expect DPX will positively impact the payments business in future periods and will share more on future calls. Deluxe has once again been recognized as one of America's most trustworthy companies by Newsweek. This speaks to the quality of our products and services, reliability, and talent, and it underscores the mission-critical and trusted role we play for our clients.
All of these accomplishments, and many more, would not have been possible without the hard work and dedication of my fellow Deluxers. Let me again say thank you. Now on to the results. For the quarter, on a reported basis, revenue decreased 1.9% to $545 million, which was impacted by several business exits throughout 2022. On a comparable adjusted basis, revenue was up 0.5% year-over-year.
Total adjusted EBITDA dollars increased nearly 1% from the Q1 of 2022. Total comparable adjusted EBITDA dollars increased 2.1% as we continue to benefit from ongoing pricing actions and management of our cost structure. We continue to be focused on driving quality revenue growth with increasing adjusted EBITDA and free cash flow for the long term.
We expect to see improvements in these metrics as we progress through 2023, just as we have messaged for some time. For the year, we're looking for modest increases in comparable adjusted revenue and EBITDA with free cash flow between $80 million-$100 million. Importantly, I wanted to mention that we have not seen any associated weakness across our lines of business as a result of the recent banking industry challenges.
We are not banked by any of the directly affected institutions. They collectively represent an immaterial portion of revenue. Perhaps more importantly, as a result of these challenges, we won additional business from several institutions that were competing to win deposits away from the affected institutions. Moving on to some segment revenue highlights. Payments revenue grew 3.5% from the Q1 of 2022.
Merchant services had a strong quarter with revenue increasing 7% at the high end of our long-term expectations of mid-single-digit growth. The rest of payments, which includes our receivables and payables businesses, was roughly flat as solid performance in treasury management was partially offset by volume and cost pressures in other areas of the business temporarily impacted by our site consolidation efforts and ERP project. The data segment's comparable adjusted revenue declined 7.7% in the Q1.
You'll recall that several key DDM customers pulled forward spending into Q4 2022. This pull forward, along with an unusually strong Q1 2022 comp, impacted the performance of this business. On a blended Q4 and Q1 basis, the DDM business grew 6.6% in this 6-month period, consistent with long-term expectations. Last quarter, we highlighted some DDM-related traction we saw in non-financial verticals.
Today, I'd like to highlight our continued efforts to expand into regional financial institutions. For example, IBC Bank, one of the largest Texan regional banks and a Deluxe Check customer for over 25 years, recently expanded their relationship with Deluxe to include our DDM solutions. We helped IBC introduce an innovative digital outreach solution to expand one of its business lines. Another win is Pentagon Federal Credit Union.
Based in McLean, Virginia, PenFed manages approximately $25 billion in assets for more than 2 million members. A longtime Check customer, we also helped PenFed significantly increase credit line and mortgage applications. Turning to Promo, we had another strong quarter, improving comparable adjusted revenue 8.1%. We were also pleased with the improvement in margins. The Promo business continues to benefit from our strong and growing relationship with Amazon.
Amazon is using our recently improved Deluxe Brand Center, or DBC, which is an ordering platform enabling businesses like Amazon to customize promotional items. We believe having an anchor customer like Amazon on the platform is a testament to our capabilities and the potential to provide this service to many more customers. Finally, our Check business declined four and a half percent year-over-year, consistent with our long-term expectations of mid-single-digit revenue declines.
The ERP implementation did have a one-time impact on profitability, which Chip will discuss. Before concluding, I do want to briefly discuss our capital allocation process. Our strategy is focused on growing our payments and data businesses by reinvesting the harvested cash from the print businesses. We have a very disciplined process to approve growth investments, and we are encouraged by our progress.
Payments and data are well-positioned in strong secular growth markets. Payments will become our largest revenue business this year, and we expect both payments and data to deliver positive shareholder returns. While we still have a lot of work to do, we're pleased with our Q1 results, generating positive comparable adjusted revenue growth and modest to positive operating leverage. We believe this is an important milestone for the company and that this margin leverage should be durable over time.
We're also pleased to have now completed our infrastructure modernization efforts and look forward to further unlocking benefits from these investments. I'll turn it over to Chip, who will provide more details on our financial performance, capital allocation priorities, and guidance.
Thank you, Barry. Good morning, everyone. Let's first go through the consolidated highlights for the quarter. On a reported basis, revenue declined 1.9% year-over-year, while total comparable adjusted revenue was relatively flat, increasing 0.5% to $545 million.
We reported Q1 GAAP net income of $2.8 million or $0.06 per diluted share, down from $9.6 million or $0.22 per share in the Q1 of 2022. Adjusted EBITDA came in at $100 million, up 0.8% and up 2.1% on a comparable adjusted basis from last year. Improvements in promo were partially offset by checks and data, which was impacted by the 2022 business exits.
In addition, we had changes to our benefits plan that helped smooth some corporate benefits costs out better across the quarters. Comparable adjusted EBITDA margins were 18.4%, up 30 basis points year-over-year. Q1 adjusted diluted EPS came in at $0.80, down from $1.05 in last year's Q1. This decrease was primarily driven by interest expense and depreciation and amortization.
In the Q1, we also completed a $200 million interest rate swap, which replaced the existing 2019 swap that expired on March 20, 2023. We also modified our existing credit facility and interest rate swaps to utilize SOFR as the term reference rate in these agreements. With this replacement swap, our debt remains approximately 60% fixed rate, which should partially insulate the company from future rate hikes.
Our guidance assumes a May rate increase, with SOFR reaching a high of roughly 5% and no rate reductions in 2023. Before going through the segments, I'd like to provide some additional details on our ERP implementation. As the system went live, we experienced some challenges that did have an impact on revenue and profit. Notably, backlogs built up mostly in February, but improvements occurred throughout March.
We are now operating largely as usual and have satisfied the backlog of orders created by the transition. The Check segment's profitability was particularly impacted, which I will detail in a moment, but overall company profitability was impacted by roughly 80 basis points. Despite these near-term issues, the long-term benefits of ERP implementation remain. Examples include savings related to legacy IT system costs, third-party supplier spend, and improvements in working capital and supply chain.
We also expect to have several million dollars of future value to be saved through operating on a more streamlined end-to-end ecosystem. The reduction of numerous legacy ERP systems will reduce the risk inherent in operating unsupported and non-standard systems in our acquired businesses and within our legacy Check and Promo businesses.
This was a massive undertaking, and we are very pleased that it has been materially completed. This will also effectively mark the end of increases in operating expenses to modernize the antiquated infrastructure. Now we continue to focus on driving the benefits. Turning to our segment details, starting with our growth businesses, Payments and Data. Payments grew Q1 revenue three and a half % year-over-year to $172 million, with merchant services growing 7%.
As we have previously indicated, we anticipated slower growth for a few quarters as all of Payments was up against tough year-over-year comps. We still expect growth rates to improve as the year progresses. Strength in merchant services from government and nonprofit areas was partially offset by modest softness in consumer spending patterns.
While the merchant business is subject to overall market conditions, we remain confident that we have many levers across our Payments portfolio to still deliver our guidance for the year. Payments adjusted EBITDA margins were 21.2%, down 70 basis points from the prior year, mostly driven by volume and cost pressures related to our Lockbox consolidation efforts. We closed two Lockbox sites this quarter, with a third expected to be completed this month.
These changes will further improve operating performance, we expect between 100-200 basis points of margin expansion in subsequent quarters. For 2023, we continue to expect to see mid-single-digit revenue growth and adjusted EBITDA margins in the low to mid 20% range.
The data results were down year-over-year and a little softer than we expected due to having to rebuild the pipeline from the strong Q4. On a reported basis, Data's revenue declined 15.7% from the Q1 of 2022 to $59 million. Comparable adjusted revenue decreased 7.7% year-over-year, adjusting for the $6 million of divested revenue related to last year's Australian web hosting divestiture.
As Barry mentioned, Data was up against some tough comps, experienced the impact of the campaign shifts into the Q4. The results still include the web hosting business, which declined 11.8% this quarter. If you combine the performance of the two quarters, DDM increased a strong 6.6%. Taking these factors into account, we expect to see a solid rebound in revenue growth in the Q2.
Data's adjusted EBITDA margins in the quarter increased 120 basis points year-over-year to 26.1%, largely due to product mix and disciplined expense management. On a comparable adjusted basis, EBITDA margins improved 60 basis points. For 2023, we continue to expect to see low single-digit revenue growth on a comparable adjusted basis. We also expect to see comparable adjusted EBITDA margins in the low 20% range.
Turning now to our print businesses, Promo and Checks. Promo's Q1 revenue was $136 million, up 2.2% on a reported basis. Comparable adjusted revenue increased 8.1%, driven by new sales wins and pricing actions, and adjusting for $7 million of divested revenue from last year's many business exits. Promo's adjusted EBITDA margins increased 100 basis points year-over-year to 13.8% as we benefited from continued pricing actions and improvements in operations and cost structure.
On a comparable adjusted basis, EBITDA margins improved 50 basis points from the Q1 of 2022. For 2023, we continue to expect to see low single-digit comparable adjusted revenue growth and adjusted EBITDA margins in the mid-teens.
Checks' Q1 revenue decreased 4.5% from last year to $179 million as the business continues to return to expected secular declines. Demand remains predictable, and we continue to take responsible price actions and maintain high retention rates. Q1 adjusted EBITDA margins were 42.8%, down 150 basis points year-over-year due to the ERP-related challenges I mentioned.
Mostly occurring in February, we did not see a significant decline in volumes, but we did see an impact on some higher profit specialty and expedited orders. Over the past 6 weeks, the system has been operating as expected, and bookings remain on trend. For 2023, we continue to expect mid-single-digit revenue declines and adjusted EBITDA margins in the mid-40% range. Turning now to our balance sheet and cash flow.
We ended the quarter with a net debt level of $1.66 billion, flat compared to the Q1 of 2022. Our net debt to adjusted EBITDA ratio was 4 times at the end of the quarter, unchanged from a year ago. Clearly, our rate of debt paydown and reduction in leverage ratio will not be a perfectly linear line.
The impacts of the Q1 do not change any of our projections, and we remain on track for our goals for the year. Our long-term strategic target remains approximately 3 times. Free cash flow, defined as cash provided by operating activities less capital expenditures, was expected to be negative in the Q1, just as we outlined on the last call.
However, free cash flow of -$32 million was somewhat less than anticipated, impacted by temporary changes in working capital related to the ERP implementation. This compares to a positive thirteen and a half million dollars in the Q1 of 2022, and the decrease was primarily driven by the expected increases in CapEx, taxes, and interest.
Once again, the negative free cash flow was anticipated, and we've already seen a recovery early in the Q2, which gives us confidence free cash flow can remain on track for the year. Our board approved a regular quarterly dividend of $0.30 per share on all outstanding shares. The dividend will be payable on June fifth, 2023 to all shareholders of record as of market closing on May twenty-second, 2023.
To build on Barry's comments around capital allocation, we are responsibly investing the significant free cash flow generated by our core checks business into payments and data, businesses that we believe can generate more robust growth over time. Our current process is disciplined, and our priorities for capital allocation are clear: reducing our debt and net leverage, delivering high return internal investments, and paying our dividend.
We facilitate a rigorous annual planning process ensuring all investments have a compelling business case and target returns above a 15% hurdle rate. We return value to shareholders through our dividend, which is currently $0.30 per share per quarter and equates to a very attractive roughly 8% yield. We continue to review the dividend with our board, and our current focus is to grow out of that high yield through improving business performance.
Finally, we remain focused on accelerating our rate of debt paydown through even more improved EBITDA and free cash flow growth so that we can get back below three times lever. We plan to share more details on upcoming calls. Turning now to guidance.
Today, we are affirming our expectations for 2023, keeping in mind all figures are approximate and reflect the expected impact of the web hosting and logo divestiture, which are now expected to close this month. We continue to expect revenue of $2.145 billion-$2.21 billion, adjusted EBITDA of $390 million-$405 million, adjusted EPS of $2.90-$3.25, and free cash flow of $80 million-$100 million.
As we mentioned on our previous call, on a comparable adjusted basis, 2023 revenue represents a range of -1% to +2% growth. The comparable adjusted EBITDA range represents -2% to +2% growth. Adjusted EPS is expected to decline year-over-year due to the full year impact of rising interest rates, incremental depreciation amortization, and an estimated now $0.20 impact from the announced divestiture. After factoring in the impact of the divestiture, the free cash flow guide remains an increase year-over-year on a comparable adjusted basis.
In order to assist with your modeling, our guidance continues to assume the following: interest expense of $120 million-$125 million, an adjusted tax rate of 26%, depreciation and amortization of $170 million, of which acquisition amortization is approximately $75 million, an average outstanding share count of 43.7 million shares, and capital expenditures of approximately $100 million.
Among other things, this guidance is subject to prevailing macroeconomic conditions, including interest rates, labor supply issues, inflation, and the impact of other divestitures. To summarize, while we have additional work to do, we are encouraged with our Q1 results and believe we are off to a solid start to 2023. Our ERP implementation is now live, and we expect to see significant benefits going forward.
As we move through 2023, in addition to continued revenue growth, we are also expecting increased operational efficiencies, which should help us grow EBITDA, improve free cash flow, pay down debt, and lower our leverage ratio. Operator, we are now ready to take questions.
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, press star, then the number one on your telephone keypad. If you would like to withdraw your question, press star one once again. We will pause for just a moment to compile the Q&A roster. We will take our first question from Lance Vitanza with TD Cowen. Your line is open.
Hi. Thanks, guys. Good morning. Barry, could we start actually with the ECHO Health JV? I'm just wondering if you could talk a little bit more about the motivation to set up the JV. Was that more about accelerating volumes and thus revenue growth, or is it more about improving the cost structure in that line of business?
In any case, could you know, just talk about how you expect the partnership to help Deluxe and whether this is a one-off or potentially a blueprint for additional ventures in the future, whether with other partners or perhaps in other verticals? Sure. Good morning, Lance. First of all, you'll recall that we have continued to make progress in the area of digital payables or the outbound side of payments and digitizing what are often paper-based payments.
We've had great success with a product that we have internally called DPX, as well as something we created, I guess, about two years ago called MPX or the Medical Payment Exchange that really helped solve for medical payments, outbound payments, streamlining that and making it a much more digital process.
We saw an opportunity to deliver that same type of solution for the middle market that is very large and underserved today with digital payout mechanisms. We have some of the assets that are required to succeed there, and the partner, ECHO, has other assets. We saw by bringing our assets together and going to market with a collection of these assets, we had a real opportunity to take a meaningful share of the payables market for the payables business in the middle market. That was the motivation.
We think it's a very attractive way for us to do this that, you know, limits our CapEx investment, but allows us to have that additional feature functionality and get to market quicker, and take a bigger piece of the pie faster.
Great. Thank you. In terms of the structure, is this going to be consolidated on your financial statements, or is this sort of an income from a, from a equity stake that we need to be thinking about?
No, Lance, it's Chip. There's actually various streams to think about here. There's three streams of revenue. The first is we will be a distributor of the platform towards the joint venture. We'll continue to have distribution revenue as we go find clients and drive them through the sales force.
We'll be a servicer of the platform, leveraging our technology, selling that into the joint venture and getting a revenue stream from the servicing side. Then we will have the equity method investment side, the third stream, where we will share in our percentage ownership of the net income of the joint venture and record that as an equity method investment inside our consolidated financials.
Great. Okay. Thanks for the clarification there. Let me turn to the corporate expense line, which did much better than we'd at least expected. It was down about 13% year-on-year and was about 8.5% of revenues. I guess that latter stat, that 8.5% of revenues, is that how we should model corporate expense going forward over the balance of the year or any additional color thoughts there?
Yeah. First of all, Lance, I would say it's been a while since I think we've had a quarter where we could talk about corporate improving year-over-year. Fantastic to be in that place. The journey we've been on restructure, upgrades, and modernization, having to deal with various headwinds, reinstating benefits from COVID. It's nice to be where we are here now to start to kind of eat into it.
The one comment I made on the call that is important to understand, we made a minor change in part of our benefits plan that will help smooth out some of the timing of corporate. As you know, we've been a little front-end loaded in Q1 and lower in Q4 over the past history of our business, and that had to do with certain benefits timing.
There was about $3 million that we've now shifted kind of from Q4 into Q1 that'll help smooth things out. Still despite that, though, we were overall down $7 million. There's $4 million worth of cost improvements that we were able to manage that we feel good about.
I would continue to assume somewhere around roughly 9% now, percentage of revenue for now as we continue to get to the year, continue to execute on our plans to take cost out there and get more efficient. You know, roughly 9%, 8.5%-9% is a good spot to be from your modeling.
Okay. Last one for me, just on the free cash flow. That came in a bit, well, actually well below our expectation. Unfortunately, I can't really see where we were off because the delta seems to be all lumped into the other line in your cash flow statement, at least in the press release. A year ago, other cash outflows were $9 million.
This year, other cash outflows were $46 million. Can you unpack that for us? Just for the full year, should we be thinking, I know you reiterated the guide, but should we be thinking more about the low end given the slow start to the year, or were there some timing items there that you think could reverse in subsequent quarters? Thanks.
Yeah. We continue to maintain our guide. We mentioned on the last call we expect to be negative. We, of course, didn't go as far to exactly tell you the number, but I can tell you now our internal plan was negative $25 in the Q1. The negative $32, as I said, was slightly worse than we thought, and it really was tied up in working capital.
We mentioned the ERP. Once again, we're so glad we've gotten through that. The team did a fantastic job. It was a difficult project, but like any of those things, it has its bumps, it has its delays, working capital was not immune from that, specifically some AR collections and a little bit of inventory.
Really that $7 million difference in working capital bridges me from the $32 million we delivered to the $25 million we had in our plan. The good news is we've already had significant customer collection activity here in April that's even higher than that $7 million miss.
As I sit here today without perfect visibility, I actually think I'm ahead of plan on a year-to-date basis, which continues to give me confidence that Q2 can be a good quarter, solid rebound, and there's nothing to worry about in terms of moving up or down in the range. Our range remains solid, and we feel confident with the year.
To perfectly be able to give you a reconciliation of others, I don't think I can do real-time here on the call. Let us follow back up with you offline, and we'll see what we can do. We know the big drivers year-over-year were what we called out on the last call and what we expected, higher interest costs, many rate hikes as we've all seen since a year ago.
We knew interest would be higher. We knew taxes would be higher. We knew CapEx would be a bit higher as we continue to reinvest in the growth products. Those things all played out the way we knew they would. For me, it's all about working capital and getting more efficient and improving our execution there.
Great. That's very helpful. Thanks, guys. I appreciate it. I'll get back in queue.
Thanks, Lance.
We will take our next question from Charles Strause with CJS. Your line is open.
Hi. Good morning.
Good luck.
I'd love to hear Barry's thoughts, if you could, about the banking turmoil and, you know, possibly that you could turn this into a positive, a potential share gains there as customers are shifting banks, you know, Chase buying First Republic, things like that, you know, are there potential positives there to, like I said, to build customers and take share there?
Charlie, I mean, at the highest level, we are of course we serve the banking sector as one of our distribution channels. So far we have not seen any impact from the banking challenges. I very specifically want to reiterate what we said in the opening comments. We don't have any significant banking relationships with any of the institutions, even those that you see in headlines this morning that are banking us or where we have any material revenue exposure.
As far as opportunity, every time there are banking consolidations, it turns into on average a net positive for us. We are a net winner when there are bank consolidations. Whether that's in our checking business, in our data businesses or otherwise, we tend to be a net winner when there's consolidation.
We did see something that we thought was very encouraging actually in the Q1 in our data business. As some of our customers were looking to accelerate their ability to go, attract deposits from affected institutions, it turned into additional revenue for us in helping those institutions quickly go to market with, you know, short-term campaigns to draw deposits.
While there is definitely, you know, concern and some change happening in the sector, we think in the end analysis it is a net positive for us, and we have not seen any impact to our volumes, or what we see on the horizon.
That's helpful. Thank you for that. You know, just shifting gears a little bit to the balance sheet. You know, Barry, when the board and has discussions about, you know, you know, capital allocation and things like that, you know, have, has there been, you know, more discussions at the board level to, you know, maybe do some more things more aggressively to, you know, help pay down that, you know, the debt down a little bit more quickly?
You know, first of all, we are very focused on improving the balance sheet overall. One of the biggest things we knew we needed to do was get this ERP implementation complete, which we've done because it gives us opportunities now that we did not have before to streamline the operations of the company.
I think over coming quarters, you will see us focus there and talk about things that we're trying to do to make improvements. Of course the board is very engaged with us on capital allocation decisions to make sure that we are getting great shareholder returns for what we do completely understand is very precious shareholder capital. We feel like we have been good stewards of that. I think that especially now that we've got some of these infrastructure things behind us, we have opportunity for some additional improvements.
Excellent. Thank you very much.
We'll take our final question from Marc Riddick with Sidoti. Your line is open.
Hey, good morning. I was wondering if we could start in the prepared remarks there was commentary around the pricing environment and retention rates. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more about that and maybe some of those controls, then we can shift over to a few ERP questions?
Let me just start with the macro and then, you know, Chip can come in and give you a little more specificity. At the macro level we've been very pleased by our ability to take price increases and hold volume. We think that is a really important message about the durability of demand for our solutions. I think it's very important to note that the durability of demand for our solutions continues.
Across our entire portfolio we're seeing, you know, solid and sustainable demand for the solutions even as we take price. We think there continues to be room for us to continue on the price journey. Inflation is not over. Our customers understand that.
While they may not like the fact that we are going to talk to them with a much greater frequency now on pricing actions than we have in anyone's memory, I think they understand and have accepted that reality. That is going to help us going forward. Do you want to talk any more about specifics?
Marc, I mean I in the prepared remarks, I used the term responsibly taking price. I think that's the way we've gone about it over the past couple of quarters. You know, we aren't simply using this as an opportunity to just gouge prices and make profits.
We're really looking at our input costs, our contractual requirements to our customers and doing it in partnership and being very responsible about it. We've built up new muscle over the last year. I think we're very thoughtful about how we go about it, the rhythm we take price, the inputs we're using to do the analysis on what that price should be. We just continue to keep it front and center and look at inflation. Obviously inflation is slowing down a bit. Not where we want it yet, but it is coming down.
The degree to which we're having to have this conversation internally continue to rethink about pricing is getting slower. We continue to be responsible about it and use it as an opportunity to make sure we stay whole on the bottom line and continue to do what's right by our customers.
Well, I also want to sort of highlight that, you know, the three-year journey and the, you know, being on the other side of the ERP, is always, it's always good to get to the other side of that journey. Congratulations on that. I was wondering if you'd talk a little bit about sort of... You kind of touched on this a little bit, but I would imagine there are some things that you know, maybe have held off on doing until you got to the other side of that.
I was sort of wondering if you know, to what degree you could sort of share a little bit about some of maybe the initial efforts or targets that you might have, you know, post-ERP and then maybe some of the longer term benefits that we can look forward to.
Sure. Thank you for acknowledging that journey. The team worked very hard, and we're very pleased to be here. As you could imagine, having gone through it for a long period of time, right now, near term, we're focused on stabilizing the operations, fixing the bugs or the issues that we know we come out about and that have kind of manual processes around them and getting them re-automated. Near term, it's gonna be very low cost.
We call it kind of hypercare, hyperfocus. Just get what we have going, working perfectly and get it smoothly. We'll start to transition to more of a traditional regular cadence that you would see anyone do. We'll always be slowly investing in the platform. We're not gonna under-invest in it or leave it on the shelf, so we'll continue to improve the functionality.
I think near term what we'll look to do is improve our consolidation process, which will give us faster visibility in our close, faster analytics, and really think about how we drive business performance. Really, to me, it's a little bit of start to use what we've put in place.
You know, as we went through the quarter and we dealt with the bumps that everyone deals with, the amazing opportunity we got was to leverage the new system right away, stand up a daily cadence to really manage the output of the plants, the fulfillment process, look at things like AR, billing, inventory, get very insightful on what the business is going on. It was a big part of how we improved the operations from February into March. We had to get stable. We had to get right for our customers.
That's now an area of opportunity for us to keep doing daily going forward and help improve working capital, get very efficient of how we run the business. To me, I think it's just business as usual. Continue to expect us to do right by the system, make it more feature, full feature and better for our needs, but we're gonna really just run the business now and get the benefits and efficiencies out of it now.
The one thing I would add on that is it does allow us to further streamline the actual operating infrastructure of the company so that over time, we will be able to, you know, put more reliance on the new ERP and step away from other systems. I mean, don't do that in 1 quarter, but it does give us the opportunity to, that absolute spend over time as well.
Okay. Excellent. I know you had mentioned that, you know, I appreciate the commentary around the banking challenges that we see in the headlines every day and sort of your exposure, lack thereof, exposure there. I want to talk a little bit about maybe from a longer term perspective. You talked about winning maybe some opportunities from that.
I was wondering if you're getting a sense of the types of opportunities. Do those tend to be sort of cost savings generating in nature from those clients? Do you... Are you getting the sense of this is sort of just a little bit of a, an emergency type of moves that they're going through that you're able to benefit from, you know, as a trusted provider?
You know, at aggregate, you know, when there is industry consolidation, we're net winners on multiple levels. That's from revenue, which of course has profit dollars associated with it. We think that happened in the past. We expect that to continue going forward.
I think, Marc, I think the important thing, you know, and it's a bit overblown, our attachment to what's going on, 'cause what we have to always remind ourselves is the banks, the financial institutions, they're a partner, they're a vehicle to get to the, to the customer, the end user, but that end user is still there, right?
We kinda look at it as where the customer banks may shuffle around. It may move into a portfolio of ours where we have a relationship. It may move out of it. We get the opportunity to leverage our data analytics side to go help target marketing and help kinda move the customer through the journey. For us, it's a little bit of we just keep operating business as usual, and it's not really a material impact at all. As Barry said, we know and on average, it's gonna play out in our favor, and we just continue to be ready to serve the customers.
Okay. Great. Thank you.
There are no further questions at this time, so I will now turn the call back to Tom Morabito for closing remarks.
Thanks, Abby. Before we conclude, I'd like to mention that management will be participating in the 18th annual Needham Technology & Media Conference on May 18th, Cowen's 51st annual TMT Conference on May 31st, and the Sidoti Virtual Small-Cap Conference on June 15th. Thank you again for joining us today, and we look forward to speaking with you in August as we share our Q2 2023 results.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call, and we thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.