DoubleVerify Holdings, Inc. (DV)
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Goldman Sachs Communacopia + Technology Conference

Sep 7, 2023

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

We're ready to get going. I know everyone's moving from room to room, but in the interest of time, and I just wanna make sure we're okay on the clock in the front of the room. There we go. Okay. All right, just to keep us on time. It's my pleasure to have the team from DoubleVerify here at the conference this year as we get started on our internet for day three. Mark Zagorski, CEO, Nicola Allais, CFO. Mark, Nicola, thanks so much for being a part of the conference this year.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Great being here.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Thank you.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

All right. It's great to see you guys in person. Great to have you here. Mark, maybe start with you. For those that are less familiar with the business, why don't you take a few minutes and just talk a little bit about the evolution you've been on? Because the business is very different now than it was a few years ago.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

You've had an investor day in the last 18 months, and you've talked a lot about your vision for where the company's going. Maybe just set the table for us with that first.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah, sure. So, starting at the beginning, what DoubleVerify is, we are a software platform that helps protect digital advertising spend, and also helps make it perform better. We do that by enabling advertisers to avoid brand safety violations, to ensure that their ads are delivered in a viewable environment, and that the transactions are fraud-free. So think of it as, in our name, DoubleVerify. We help verify that that spend is safe and secure, but are increasingly enabling it to perform better. And as you talked about kind of the evolution of the business, a big part of that evolution was moving or evolving our tool set from not just ensuring that the spend is safe, but ensuring that it works. And it's always been at the core of what we do.

So, you know, if you think about it, if you're buying digital ads, if you can take the junk out of the system, stuff, stuff that can't be seen, fraud, brands not, you know, environments that aren't brand safe, what's left? What an advertiser buys that's left is gonna perform better. It just will. If you take garbage out, what's left is gonna perform better. So we've always been in the performance business, but over the last several years, we've refined our tools to help drive that better performance. And a lot of that has come in the form of what we call Pre-Bid Tools .

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Tools that actually, you know, filter out bad impressions or, or keep, you know, enable advertisers to avoid delivering against, you know, unsafe environments before they do so. That has driven our growth. I mean, our, our pre-bid, or what we call our activation tools, are now over 50% of our revenue, you know, and growing, you know, in the fastest growing parts of our business.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. I want to stick with what you injected there in the conversation, which is this concept that you guys are exposed to a lot of secular thematic tailwinds for the industry versus some of the cyclical dynamics we end up talking a lot about-

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

With advertising in general. Just go one layer lower for us on what you see as the most interesting or exciting secular growth trends in advertising, privacy, brand safety, things that you're exposed to, and how you think about aligning investment against those themes.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. So, I'll start with the bad stuff that's happening that is good for us, and then I'll talk about the good stuff that's happening that's good for us. So bad stuff that's happening, by bad, I mean it's kind of bad for advertisers, is there's obviously, you know, an increased proliferation of incendiary content. We've seen that across social networks. It's just the nature of the broader internet. That's created a lot of issues around advertisers being concerned around brand safety, particularly around social networks, which we have increasing penetration across. So I think, you know, there are these trends around... You know, the web has always been the Wild West, but now it's, you know, much wilder than it's ever been. I think that's one part of it.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Mm-hmm.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

You also have a trend on both the good and bad side of AI, and we know we're four minutes in, so I had to mention AI at some point.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Sure.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

I'm a little bit slower than, I'm sure, than most people today. But AI is actually upending the digital advertising market, and it is a trend, and I don't think it's going away. And by AI, I mean, you have tools that are generating content at levels of which we've never seen before. There's growing incidence of what's called Made-for-Advertising content. Content that is specifically generated to just attract advertising dollars. They've always been around, but they're proliferating at a level at which we've never seen before.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Whereas, sites that used to be able to create 100 news articles a day are now creating 10,000. 10,000 being generated by, you know, generative AI content engines. What does that mean for us? It just means there's a larger scale of things that we need to tackle as a company to help advertisers kind of maneuver around. And, you know, I think that is a secular tailwind. And then there's other stuff in the industry which you could say is, it's not good, but maybe more consumer-centric. So the deprecation of cookies and individual tracking data, that is, you know, that continues to move ahead as we see, you know, more and more both countries and companies move away from using individual trackers.

That's a good thing for DV, because we don't traffic in the world of individual identifiers. So when we do things like deliver Viewability Metrics or brand suitability metrics, these are now proxies for performance that individuals used to take the place of, right? So there's lots going on in the digital space. And then there's the overall fact that, you know, digital is just eating everything, right? You know, non-digital media has been and is continuing to slow, you know, wither a slow death. Everything is more or less digital today, and that just feeds the advertising machine. I'd say that, and on that front, there's one other part of it, too. You see more and more digital advertising, you know, particularly in areas like connected television-

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yep.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

are being ad-supported, right? So everything that, you know, whether it's Netflix, that said they would never sell ads, or, you know, the traditional networks who've moved to digital CTV, those are all ad-supported. Those are all dollars that are coming from linear or non-digital sources that help us because we don't play in the non-digital world. So more volume coming in, more complexity in the space, more challenges for advertisers because of some of the not great activities happening there. All those things are happening at once, which drive a demand for our business.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Understood. So that's the secular growth thematic side of the equation. Other than AI, which we will get to in more detail, macro is the other word that we can't get away from in the first 10 minutes of any of these conversations this week. You have been growing well above digital advertising, which speaks to those secular themes, but no one in advertising seems to be immune to the-

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Sure.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Macro environment. So can you talk a little bit about the growth you're seeing relative to what you're seeing in the broader end demand environment, and how macro and advertising might be interplaying with each other in the current market?

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. So we've said this before, you know, the macro certainly isn't helping us right now. We don't have a tailwind because all of a sudden, advertising is booming at 20%. I mean, digital advertising growth is expected to be in the mid-single digits this year, maybe slightly higher. So there's not a huge digital advertising kind of macro environment going on. Our growth is being driven by the fact that even though we've been around for over a decade, we're still a relatively new value prop for a lot of companies and for a lot of parts of the world. So we've got significant global expansion that we have to go after. I mean, of our measurement business, less than 25% or so is coming from outside of the U.S., North America.

So we've got significant global expansion that provides opportunity. You know, I mentioned social networks earlier. We still have significant platform penetration to go after across social networks that provide opportunities for growth. And, you know, we've got, you know, new products that we're continuing to launch. So we've got, you know, all these different levers of growth that have nothing to do with the fact that, you know, the macro is not helping us. We've got new markets to go after, we've got new products that we're launching, and we've got new sectors to cover. All of those provide great growth opportunities that have allowed us to grow significantly faster, multiples faster, than the general ad industry.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Understood. So you've talked about AI, and you recently made an acquisition, and with the full caveat that I know we're gonna talk more about that next week, 'cause you've got an investor event next week around the Scibids acquisition. But instead of talking about it going forward, just help us understand the process of how that asset came to be known by you, why you thought that was the right acquisition to do, and how it feeds into your broader AI strategy as a company.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. So, as Eric noted, we acquired a company called Scibids. Or we announced that we were going to acquire a company called Scibids, you know, last month. And the impetus is this, this was not an overnight decision. We've been working with these guys over a year. And we were lucky enough to do the try before you buy process, right? So we launched a product with them this summer, called the Algorithmic Optimizer, which basically took some of our data, our attention data, and enabled it to be applied in a pre-bid fashion for advertisers, so that they could optimize their outcomes against attention metrics in a more fluid way.

Basically, the idea of what Scibids does is an evolution of what we've been doing in the pre-bid business for, you know, for almost a decade. We started off, you know, working with DSPs, or demand side platforms, with what we call static segments. The ability for an advertiser to say, "Don't bid on an impression if DV says it's not viewable." Right? It's very binary. "Don't bid on an impression if DV says it is fraud." Right? So it's like, "Okay, DV, is this fraud or not fraud? Good or not good? Brand safe or not brand safe? Don't bid, don't bid." Very, very fixed. Then we moved to what we call dynamic, you know, the dynamic application of data, and that was with ABS.

We have a product called ABS, which allows advertisers to still make that binary decision, but to do so on their specific criteria, their specific suitability criteria, and adopt that over time. So we went from static filtering to dynamic filtering. The natural progression of that is algorithmic, where we can not just say binary, you know, look at a binary decision of yes versus no, and not just do it on an individual client basis, but have a more fluid look at... Well, don't just look at viewable or not viewable. Let's look at the viewability rate versus something like the cost of the impression, or versus our ultimate outcome. Let's make this a lever, not a switch, right? That we can move up and down, and let's do it on every impression. Not just every client, but do it on every impression.

So looking at Scibids, we said, "You know, this is the natural evolution of what we're doing." And as I, you know, You know, over 50% of our revenue is coming from pre-bid filtering. So it was a natural evolution of the fastest growing part of our business, which is now the biggest part of our business, evolving to from static to dynamic to algorithmic, and this was a company that was focused just on doing that.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Got it. Super clear. If we broaden out the conversation about AI, one of the ways I wanted to engage with companies this week is to better understand how you think about AI and generative AI as both outward-facing and how it'll impact your business into the client base, versus inward-facing, and how it might help processes and efficiencies over the medium to long term. I seem to be falling into this duality conversation with companies. How do you think about both aspects of that with respect to AI in the years ahead?

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. So, there's a pretty clear delineation for us that, you know, it's driving change in both. You know, I started mentioning how AI is changing the business opportunities for us. You know, there's a greater proliferation of fraud that we believe is AI-generated. There's more made-for-advertising content that's AI-generated. That all creates a demand for our solutions, for the advertisers have to, you know, navigate this increasingly complex and massively scaled world of AI-generated content. So externally, it's created lots of just angst, right? And challenges that we can take advantage of. Internally, I'm sure you're hearing a lot of the same stories, which is, A, if you're in the coding business and you're writing code, you know, these tools can massively impact your productivity of your engineers.

We've seen, you know, in the initial tests that we've run with some Copilot tools, you know, something as high as 80% of the code generated from these tools as being good out of the gate, right? If that's an 80% productivity improvement, that our guys are just now looking at the last 20% to tweak, that's massive. So, you know, just in the, you know, the pipes-

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Making the pipes move, you know, flow faster. But we're also looking at AI specifically for our business in things like classification. When you think about what we do, particularly around brand safety and brand suitability, we're just a giant classification engine, right? We look at content, and we say, "Good or bad, safe or not safe." The ability to do that across different types of content, so video, text, mobile applications, across different languages, adds to the complexity. AI is helping us now move much faster in our ability to make those classification decisions. We've always used machine learning, but training those models take time. Now, we can use AI to help train those models, always with a human counterpart, because that's an important part. You don't want those models to start going in one direction.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Right

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

P articularly when it comes to brand safety and suitability. But it's accelerating our ability to expand our classification capabilities to new languages, to new platforms. And we're already you know, we're already seeing the benefits of that in, in our ability to move to new languages faster, to leverage our ontologists and our, and our semantic scientists in different ways, rather than just the mundanity of looking at certain words, and translating those words. So, it's impacted our operations pretty significantly, and we think it will in the future as well.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. Going a little bit deeper into the advertising business, one of the questions I typically get from investors is just: What does the current state of your advertiser base look like? Is there exposures to verticals, and geos, and pockets of the advertising world that you are leaned in one way versus the other? And then the second part of the question typically goes: How is that gonna change over time? What sort of advertiser acquisition initiatives are in place? How do you think about the living, breathing mix shifts that will happen in the advertiser base in the years ahead? So-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah, sure. I'll take that one. We, we've historically, and currently, our advertiser base is, is mainly large brand advertisers, right? The top Fortune, the Fortune 1000 is kind of where we go, because the types of products that we've had in the market really cater to the brands, the large brands. That's evolving, that's evolving with time, as we go deeper into other areas, because we're very US-centric still as a business. As we go global, you know, we're able to kind of move towards kind of smaller size, advertisers. First is we move from large, large brand advertising to sort of smaller brands, as we go outside, of the US. What's, in terms of industries, we're fairly spread out.

You know, there's no single industry that's more than 25% of our business. CPG is a large player for us. In terms of performance within the industries, because we're kind of insulated into, you know, being across most industries, we don't really, you know, are hurt or helped, really, if one does better than the other. But what we've seen this year in particular is CPG has done very well. Public, financials, and telecom is maybe the areas that have not done as well, but CPG and auto have clearly done well in terms of industry performance. Where we're moving to is smaller business, right?

And so the way we're moving to those areas is through our Retail Media Network, which is an expansion of the business that we have. So these are brands that, by themselves, may not come and work with DV directly, right? They might not have a budget where it makes sense for them to engage with us directly. But through, say, a large Retail Media Network, such as Target or Walgreens, those brands do use those networks, and we're able to reach them through the partnership that we have with those Retail Media Networks. That is creating an opportunity for us to go deeper into the slot of advertisers. There's another opportunity that is opening up with Scibids, which is more towards performance marketers.

So as Mark has explained, the Scibids acquisition, the product they have, rather than being very much yes, no decision around brand safety, for example, you now have a lever that an advertiser can decide, "You know what? I'm okay playing on the brand safety lever if I think I'm gonna get a performance for an ad at a lower CPM." And that's really where performance marketers come in.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

So we think that this is a product that's gonna help us also expand the type of advertisers that are gonna come to DV.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. There's a couple things in there I maybe just wanna follow up on. So if, if we start with your existing advertiser base, one thing-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

You guys talk about a fair bit is the idea of being able to cross-sell and upsell into the existing-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

-advertiser base. What's the most exciting opportunity you see in terms of garnering more budget from your existing advertisers, before we get into some of the other planes of growth?

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah, I think it's important to note that most of our growth still comes from existing clients.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Right? So the upsell, cross-sell is something that's just there happening as we go deeper into their budget. So I'll give you a few examples. Authentic Brand Suitability, which is our flagship premium product, you know, 80%+ of the growth last quarter came from existing advertisers. This is a five-year product. It's a really strong growth still, five years in. What's happening is advertisers are starting to use it for more and more of their existing inventory. So we grow as more advertisers use more of our products for more of their inventory, and that can be, as I just described, for ABS, or it could also be as they expand geographically, and we're able to then see more of the inventory as they go into new markets, and we're able to verify for them the spend that they have in new markets.

So upsell, cross-sell of our existing base is a very large continuing opportunity for us. We obviously need new, and that also allows us to gain market share and become, you know, a sort of a currency in the market. But growth of our existing advertisers for more and more of their dollars is a large driver of our growth.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. And then maybe just one other follow-up. When you talk about expanding into smaller and medium-sized-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Mm-hmm

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

businesses and new sets of advertisers, as well as advertisers with a wider international scope.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

both in terms of dollars and locale, how should we be thinking about elements of what needs to be built to attract that opportunity, versus things have already been built?

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

and it's about executing.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

against that opportunity in the years ahead?

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. It's really execution. I mean, we invested internationally a few years ago, and so now we kind of feel like we have the infrastructure, and now this is about execution. And the beauty of it is, now that we are in markets, we're able to actually be part of the RFPs because we're on the ground and we are present, and so really, this is all about execution at this point. It's opportunistic. You know, our investments in sales and marketing particularly now are gonna be geared towards specific countries where we see growth opportunities by just having a presence on the ground, and that's, I think, how we're gonna continue to grow there.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. Just maybe one follow-up-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

-because you injected ABS into the conversation-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

And Mark referenced it earlier in one of his answers. Just talk a little bit about where you are in the journey of what the size of that business is today, and how you think about what it might turn into. Because it's been an outsized source of growth for the company in the recent past, and

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Just understanding that as a lever of growth going forward, and how far along that journey we are.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. So, I'll give the stats and then you can-

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Give the story. You know, we're basically... Of our top 100, 98% of the top 100 use ABS. We thought originally when the product launched, that it being a premium price product, that would be the opportunity. Now, we're looking at the top 500, where, you know, basically about half are using ABS. And the growth, as I said, 80% of our growth came from existing using ABS. So we've now expanded the opportunity and know that of our top 500, most people will use it. So that's kind of the opportunity in terms of continuing to grow.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. Now, you know, we've been really pleased-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

with the continued expansion towards, I wouldn't say smaller clients, but less sophisticated clients.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

You know, we looked at ABS as a pretty sophisticated tool that only the biggest brands would use, right? Because it takes some management. It has to do with, you know, specific categorization of brand suitability, categories across different types of platforms. So there's some knob twisting that needs to occur. But as Nicola noted, you know, we've penetrated the top 100 of our brands pretty significantly, but we've now started looking at the top 500, and it's growing in those top 500.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Mm-hmm.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

You know, the representative stat is 80% of our growth is coming from current clients. So ABS, I think is certainly not a... I wouldn't call it a mature product. We still, you know, last quarter, grew over 50%.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

And it's a five-year-old product, so I think we've got a lot of legs there. I think, particularly outside the U.S., it's growing in adoption, and it's now the lead part of our pitch.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

It used to be, "Hey, let's sell verification, and let's sell some of the standard stuff first until the advertisers get used to it." Now, it's we go in. I think it's just part of it, the fact that just you know, our advertiser base and digital advertisers are just becoming more sophisticated. They're catching up to the types of tools we had. So, we still—that product still has legs. There's still—we're gonna still see continued growth on that for many quarters to come.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. Taking one more step back and just thinking about the broader competitive landscape, you know, so who you compete with for advertisers and to partner with platforms, how do you think about the broader competitive landscape? What's some of the differentiation you try to carve out in vis-à-vis other competitors?

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Mm-hmm

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

for sort of clients and dollars?

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah, I mean, the competitive landscape is, for us, I think it's interesting and it's not very broad. And by that, meaning, you know, there's only a handful of companies that can do what we do because of A, the scale that you have to be at to be in this space. I mean, you know, advertisers want a single metric, a single currency for verification they can use across you know, display and mobile, and connected television and social, all of those different places. So to be able to do that, you can't just be a point solution. So I think A, the fact that we are broad and that we're managing literally trillions of transactions every year at scale means the competitive landscape is relatively tight.

And it's right now a two-player game. There's us and another competitor that's out there that really are driving most of the growth and change in the space. You've got point solutions out there, and when they're worthy and interesting, we'll either acquire them, or you know, look to you know mimic what they're doing to go after their space. So ultimately, I think we've got a pretty open highway ahead of us when it comes to competitive challenges and competitive pressure. There's also this, you know, that we always get a question around, "Well, okay, you guys are in a relatively limited space. There's a limited number of competitors. Why don't the big guys just do this?

Why doesn't Amazon or why doesn't Meta just do what you're doing?" They have - they can always have more engineers than we have. They can, you know. The scale issue is not an issue for them. And that's the big important part of the role we play in the industry, which is why we believe we are so sticky and why we have such a long-term growth trajectory, is that we're independent.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

You know, we are outside of the media transaction. We are trusted by others to verify what happens on Meta, to verify what happens on TikTok, to verify what happens across CTV networks like Netflix. And that's an important role we play. So the competitive universe of, you know, of players out there is relatively limited to those who are independent, who can be trusted, and who can build scale as fast as and to cover that we've done. And I think I just don't think there's anyone that can enter the space right now that could catch up.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. I know it's early days, and you're not yet through the process of complete budget planning for 2024, but one of the questions we get asked a lot, because you guys do talk a lot about the interesting growth opportunities ahead of you, is to how to think about some of the building blocks for growth longer term. We talked about the advertiser side. We also get a lot of questions on the platform side-

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Sure

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

... the growth of short-form video, the growth of Connected TV, newer products that you're putting out there on your platform. How do you think about the building blocks or the algorithm of growth that investors should be keeping in mind as we look out to not only just 2024, but sort of a multi-year view?

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. So, I'll start the answer. The way we think about it is we have had a track record of obviously outperforming the digital ad spend growth, right? Single digits, we're well above that. And so as we think, as you're asking about 2024, 2025, the question for us is: What's gonna accelerate what we would do otherwise? And the accelerators that we see in the short term are going to be around Meta and the deployment of the brand suitability product on the Meta newsfeed. That is a large opportunity. And so just as a quick level set, TikTok provides brand suitability, fraud, and invalid traffic and viewability as the full product. Meta, so far, does not allow for the brand suitability product.

That is an opportunity that is going to unlock a lot of volume, because that's really the product that advertisers are looking for.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yep.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

We're in the process. We've said this is probably something that's going to be something that launches in the Q4 of this year. That's announced, and then we kind of get into it as we get into 2024. That is a very large accelerator on what would, you know, what would be sort of our recurring growth rate, because existing advertisers and new advertisers will look at it and say, "Okay, now I am willing to buy your product for for Meta." So that's one accelerator. Other accelerators are going to be the scaling of TikTok. I already mentioned it. TikTok is still a small platform. It's a fast-growing third player for us in our social networks, and it's a fast-growing third player.

So that will be an accelerator on top of what we would otherwise see as recurring growth. Another accelerator will be the Scibids acquisition is gonna provide us with an acceleration on the activation side of the business, for sure. And that's gonna be new clients adopting Scibids as a product, and then existing clients seeing the benefit of using Scibids for a way to use other data sets that we provide to them. So Authentic Attention is a product that we provide. Algorithmically using that to bid on the activation side of the business is something that we believe will create additional inventory for us. So there are accelerators to a base. Meta will be the biggest one, probably, at some point. TikTok, Scibids for sure, and then CTV.

You know, at some point when show-level data is available, that will create also an acceleration in CTV.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah. And if you think about it this way, I mean, maybe this is another way to ask the question, but when you see industry shifts like this, I think what's always intriguing, watching the company from the outside in, is the media landscape goes towards Retail Media Networks-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Right

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

... or it goes toward short-form video-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Right

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

... or it goes towards Connected TV. And then within 6-9 months, you guys are talking about, "We can play in this space. We can pivot, we can move." Talk a little bit about the flexibility in the organization-

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Mm-hmm

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

... to be sort of above the fray of who wins on time spent and who... and, and overall ad growth, to be bringing it back to that secular growth theme we talked about before, which is a little bit, yeah, somewhat divorced of the cyclicality of the industry, necessarily. How do you think about that philosophically?

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

... I think, you know, a core part of our philosophy is we don't care where you spend.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Right.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

We don't care what it looks like.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Right.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

We're going to be there to ensure that it's safe, secure, and performs, right? And so that means that we have to have a platform and a team that is incredibly flexible. So, you know, we talked a little bit about competitive. You know, there are a lot of small point solutions out there that are very good at doing one thing, which is brand safety on user-generated content video, right? What happens when user-generated content video dies? Their business dies, right? So for us, it all starts with the core technology being flexible, and I, you know, I'm gonna dumb this down, and my engineers would kill me about this, but all we are is just a big classification engine, and that engine needs to be able to ingest everything: video, text, images, audio.

It needs to be able to look at all those things and make a decision on it, right? Whether this is safe or non-safe, whether the engagement is viewable or non-viewable, whether this transaction is fraud-free. So, the flexibility of our platform is key to our ability to continue to grow as consumer tastes change, as consumer engagement changes, as trends in the marketplace come. Who knew that short-form video, like TikTok, would basically eat all advertising, right? It is. It is driving growth in digital advertising. That's why all you heard about in, you know, Meta's upfront a few years, a few months ago, 90% of that discussion was about, was about Reels.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Got it.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Right? The short-form video ate everything. Now, if we were a company that was only focused on looking at text or only looking at a certain platform, we'd be in trouble because dollars are now running towards short-form video. We're not. So our flexibility is key, and our ability to continue to grow, to continue to grow faster than the marketplace, and to not worry about whether dollars are being spent on CTV today or mobile tomorrow, or social the next day, because our advertising, we're just covering everything and covering the spend.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Got it. Okay. A few minutes left, but I wanna get to two quick topics. You talked about your margin structure between now and the end of the year, and the way you guided.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

I wanna give you an opportunity to refresh the market on what the messages were of what's being invested in between now and the end of the year.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Sure.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

The second part of the question would be: How should we be thinking about balancing all the avenues for growth you're interested in as a company, versus the investment cadence on a longer term view? That would be a sort of a two-parter.

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

Yeah. So you know, the investments for this year are gonna be in R&D, and the reason for that is we've achieved scale enough that G&A investments are sort of more recurring at this point, so they're not huge areas of investments. Sales and marketing, as I mentioned before, is more opportunistic. So if we see one or two countries where we can put people on the ground and grow, we will do that. But really, the majority of our investments are in R&D, and investments in R&D are AI, as we discussed a little bit, right? And that means sort of infrastructure investments to be able to ingest more data and be able to verify more data, so that kind of impacts our cloud investments. And then it's investment in people.

And so the Scibids acquisition is sort of... You know, there's a component of Scibids, which is a bit of a, you know, acquiring talent-

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Acquiring, yeah

Nicola Allais
CFO, DoubleVerify

... which is hard to find on the data science side of things. So that's kind of the general theme around the investment that we're gonna make. We set our sight on a margin of 30%, basically. You know, up or down a few points, depending on what we see in the market. And that is because we believe we need to continue to invest to have the growth that we see on the revenue side, right? So we're not gonna sacrifice revenue growth opportunities just because we want our margins to be higher than 30%, and I think that's gonna be... That is a short- to medium-term view that we have.

Obviously, longer term, if we stopped investing, we could see our margins go up a whole lot more than that, but our view is that is a nice level to be at. It allows us to invest in the right areas at the right time, to be able to continue to see the top line growth, which is really the most important one for us.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay. We've got 1 minute to go. Mark, bring us home. If you look out over the next 12 months, and even beyond that, you've got investments you wanna make for the long term, you've got decisions to make about allocating capital, you've got priorities for an execution standpoint. What will we be talking about in a year's time that we're top of mind for you today, looking out over the next year, that we should know you're the most focused on, for this business?

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

I think we've already mentioned, you know, we're hyper-focused on social and short-form video.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Yeah.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

I think that's gonna be a core driver of growth. Particularly, and we cannot forget, we have a massive political years coming up, right? And that is gonna change digital ad spend. It's gonna be driven by AI, and I think we're gonna see a campaign season like we've never seen before. It is gonna be a crazy world for advertisers to be able to negotiate, not because they're spending money on campaign dollars on advertising for, you know, campaigns, because the content out there is going to be really, really challenging for them to be in. So particularly around social, and I think that's why social is both the biggest opportunity for us and the biggest growth driver for us in the short term.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Okay, understood.

Mark Zagorski
CEO, DoubleVerify

Yeah.

Eric Sheridan
Managing Director, Goldman Sachs

Please join me in thanking the DoubleVerify team for being part of the conference this year.

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