I am excited to be, welcoming HubSpot to the conference. We are very fortunate to have CEO Yamini Rangan. I'm Brad Sills on the software research team here at BofA, and, got some questions to go through and very much looking forward to the discussion, Yamini.
Thank you so much.
Thanks again for being here.
Thank you so much, Brad, for having. Always, good to come back and talk to you.
Absolutely. Thank you. I thought maybe we could start with the INBOUND conference. It's such a legendary conference, a lot of buzz. It matters a lot to SMBs.
Yeah!
front office. What was it like coming back to the live format last year? You know, I think it had been a two-year hiatus, you know, through the pandemic, post-pandemic.
Just absolutely fantastic.
Yeah.
I mean, it's, I think this is your second one-
Yeah.
live back as well.
That's right. That's right.
It is always fun to be in person, and I think, like, INBOUND is such a special time, and last year's INBOUND was all about human connection. I think we need human connection, and that was the whole theme of the conference. It was electric. We got customers, prospects, partners, our entire ecosystem, and certainly you all, as investors, back. It was just absolutely fantastic. We're looking forward to this year. We are deep, deep in planning mode for INBOUND already, and it's going to be back September 1st week, and look forward to having you, as well as a lot of folks here in person.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
That's great. maybe we could just touch on your background, Yamini. You've got a great, interesting background working at enterprise apps companies-
Yep.
SAP, Workday, product-led companies like Dropbox.
That's right.
How has your experience kind of lent to what you are doing at HubSpot and where HubSpot is today, and how you're driving it forward?
Yeah, I think, you know, on-premise, cloud, enterprise, SMB, PLG, sales-led, you're right, like, kind of across the spectrum of companies and experiences, and I think, like, the first decade of my career was all about really learning, you know, selling. I was spending most of my time in go-to-market. I was in front of customers, and one of the things I absolutely recognized is, you know, how customers make decisions and the patterns of customer decisions, why they make decisions in software, how they get value, how that shapes their own careers. I think that really taught me to become very, very customer-focused.
The second decade was all about scale, working at Workday as well as Dropbox, joined before they went public and went through the process of seeing both of those companies go public and scale. It was a lot about scaling. Both of those experiences add to HubSpot. I joined HubSpot January 2020. I can't believe it's been 3.5 years since I joined. There are a few unique things about HubSpot. One is that when we talk about solving for the customers, we actually do spend a lot of time on customers.
That's our North Star goal for everybody at the company and for me, when I joined as a chief customer officer, when you have customer in the title, you really wanna belong in a company where, the care for customers is real, and I think that is very, very important at HubSpot. I also think the opportunity... We have made some counterintuitive bets as a company. The first bet is on SMB. The number of times I get questions from, you all as investors, from, you know, others within the ecosystem: "Are you going upmarket?" My answer is, we have a phenomenal market opportunity in the 1 to 2,000 segment that we are in with an SMB, it's a $70 billion+ opportunity just in the core spaces of marketing, sales, and service.
We have a great product fit, we have a great go-to-market fit, we, you know, have still very low market penetration, which means that we have a lot more to grow into. I think that counterintuitive bet is just absolutely important. The other thing that is unique about the bet that we've made is, you know, I've been in CRM for a very long time. In fact, I joined right out of business school at Siebel, the original CRM company. There's been a playbook for CRM, which is you start in 1 market, and then you acquire, you know, other opportunities. You start in SFA and acquire marketing, or you start in marketing and acquire SFA and service and so on.
At HubSpot, we've really taken this journey of building things organically, and we've bet on this organic, crafted, beautiful, you know, product that serves the needs of the customers, and that is also exceptionally unique and that makes where we are and the market opportunity for HubSpot really huge.
That's exciting. Great.
Yeah.
Thank you, Yamini.
Yeah.
One of the things as an outsider, you know, following HubSpot, to me, I see a very strong culture, and I don't ask questions about culture very often, but I think it really does matter in the case of HubSpot.
Yes.
I think there's something unique there. Love to get your perspective on what it is that makes the culture, what it is at HubSpot. How would you define that, and what are you doing as the leader of the company to foster that?
Yeah, Thank you for asking a culture question in an investor conference. I appreciate that. It is really unique, at HubSpot, we think about our culture like we think about our product. The way we think about it is like product, having a great product attracts customers. Having a great culture attracts employees, just like we are constantly iterating and evolving our product, we are constantly iterating and evolving our culture. Culture Code, HubSpot's Culture Code is on the web. It's, like, 130 pages long. It's a living, breathing document. We've probably iterated and evolved it hundreds of times. It's on version 100+, you know, now, we take that really, really seriously. You know, the question of how are we evolving it?
We know it's living, breathing, and from me, from the founders, from the leadership team, we have to embody the values for the whole organization, and we really focus on transparency and remarkability, and adaptability within the organization, and that's important. I think the second part of it is really maintaining flexibility. One of the most requested features of our culture is flexibility. A lot of companies are now kind of mandating employees to come back into the office, and we've kind of taken the other approach of providing flexibility, and only about 18% of our employees are back in the office full-time. The other, nearly 88% are either flex, they come in a couple times a week, or they're working fully from home, and we've fostered that hybrid culture.
We're really focused on making connection an important part of the hybrid culture so it can continue to thrive. As we do that, we don't want to lose sight on diversity, which is also exceptionally important from our culture. Our executive team is gender parity. Our board is 70% either women or someone with a minority background, and we care about that, and we foster that, and we live that and breathe that. I do think it is a special part of HubSpot's culture, and that's part of the reason why we've been able to attract, retain, and groom talent and grow talent internally.
Mm-hmm. Mm- That's great. Thank you for that, Yamini.
Yep.
When I think of HubSpot, one of the key strengths is channel. I think of the diversity of the channel. You have the ad agency channel.
Yes.
You have your direct sales channel, you have product-led growth as well, and freemium channel as well. How do you manage so many channels? Maybe if you could zero in a little bit on the ad agency channel.
Yep
such a unique channel to HubSpot.
Yeah, I think you're absolutely right. Like, one of the strengths for HubSpot is the distribution that we have across product-led growth, partner-led growth, and sales-led growth. Very few companies have that, and very few companies are able to consistently scale that type of distribution, and we're focused on that. You know, we started as a sales-led company, and then we went back, and we added the whole product-led motion. For us, the product-led motion is, you know, opening up the signups. We have a free product, a free CRM product, as well as the free CMS product, and we have a number of free tools that opens up the top of the funnel in terms of free usage, and we've continued to improve that part of the funnel. From there, our starter tier is primarily product-led monetization.
Once people experience the product through freemium, they sign up for the starter all through our website. They experience the product, the entire suite of products, and then they continue to kind of go up from there, and that has scaled. In fact, in Q1, I talked about the strength that we see in terms of the top of the funnel, both from a free product sign-up, as well as conversion to starter product perspective. The second channel, and you said, you know, this is a... You mentioned that this is an important part, which is our partner-led growth. We have a partner ecosystem of about 5,000+ partners, and they contribute nearly 40% of our ARR.
They've been a part of really expanding our distribution to our customers, and they've been really part of the journey in HubSpot going upmarket. 3 years ago, we went to our partner ecosystem. We said: We're going from marketing automation to CRM platform. We're going from the smaller portion of the SMB to upmarket customers, the M portion of the SMB, and we want you to come along. They've done an exceptional job of upskilling themselves, going from marketing agencies to CRM implementers, technical implementers, as well as strategic advisors for our customers, and that has continued to grow.
The final distribution motion we have is a direct sales team, which we have continued to scale over the past few years, and they are now focused on talking to customers on a daily basis on the value of HubSpot as a platform, as well as the total cost of ownership savings that customers can see with HubSpot. All of those three distribution motions have continued to scale, and I would say we still have a lot of room to kind of grow each of those channels.
Absolutely. Thank you for that. When I look at the HubSpot stack, I think of it as a stack, and there's all you need in marketing to acquire leads.
Yep.
-generate leads, convert leads to customer across multi-channel.
Yep.
You have sales. You manage the customer through the life cycle. My question is, does HubSpot use HubSpot's tool set?
Yes!
And as, as a user-
Yeah.
What is your perspective, and what are the things that have worked well for you as a user? What are some of the things that you think, going forward as a user, you see the opportunity for expansion?
Absolutely. We live and breathe in HubSpot. I've talked before about HubSpot on HubSpot. We are a 7,000 person company, so we're kind of outside of our target segment, but we absolutely from marketing, sales, and front office perspective, we leverage HubSpot internally. That's, I think, a huge advantage because our salespeople live and breathe it.
They're able to talk about it. That's the product side. I do think from a philosophy of INBOUND and leveraging our own technology, we've been the customer zero in a lot of cases. Our philosophy from a marketing perspective is: add value to your customers and prospects before you earn the right to attract them and engage with them. That's been the philosophy of HubSpot, and it may be a little bit unknown, but we literally have an academy of professors that are constantly, you know, looking at adding value through educational content. It's almost like a mini university inside HubSpot that's generating content that's educational, that's valuable for prospects and customers.
In fact, when I talk to customers, they'll say, "Well, I've been following HubSpot for 10 years, and I've been looking at your content for a very long time." Maybe it's also less known, but there's almost like a media company inside HubSpot's marketing. A couple of years ago, we acquired this company called Hustle, and then we have transformed that into a podcast network for creators as well as influencers and subject matter experts within each of the areas. Again, this allows us to be able to add value to our, you know, customers and prospects, and also provide just a very broad funnel, and that turns into marketing leads. You talked about, you know, being able to bring those leads in, and it's that, and it's all done through HubSpot, and it works really well.
When we then take it and convert it into leads, this is where the magic happens because most of the organizations really struggle from what marketing is providing as leads to what then sales takes and converts. That handoff is traditionally been really, really friction-filled, and there's always marketing organizations pointing at sales and sales organizations pointing at marketing, and we don't have that at HubSpot because all of that customer interaction is within HubSpot. So it's very easy for our sales teams to look at what content have our customers engaged with, what websites have they visited, what are their interests before they even talk, and that's where they add value. A lot of times when I talk to customers, I'll ask them: So why'd you pick HubSpot? Number one reason, of course, product. It's a powerful, easy-to-use product.
Very frequently, the second reason they cite is our sales process and the fact that we engage deeply in how we sell is also why we win with our, with our customers. We certainly kind of wanna do that. You know, I will say that on the flip side, because we are, you know, outside of our target segment, we are kind of like the customer zero for upmarket.
We're constantly, you know, stretching our own systems and stretching the limits of the system and looking at ways to drive better governance and admin features, and that also gets back into the product roadmap, so it's pretty useful that way.
Wonderful.
Yeah.
Thanks, Yamini. One of the things I admire about HubSpot is the pace of innovation, the expansion that the company's gone through over the years, starting with Marketing, Sales, Service, Operations.
Yep.
There's just so much there. It's just such an innovation engine. My question is: What is it about the culture and the development organization?
Yeah
... that is such that the company is not only able to kinda see what customers' needs are, but execute on that?
I think it's a super insightful, you know, question. You know, you already mentioned two things, which is one is the culture, the second is the product and development organization. The third thing that I might add is the product platform choice that we made. Maybe I'll talk about each of those.
We've tried to really keep the pace of innovation as well as execution really high. It comes to what I mentioned early on in terms of the culture. We start with and obsess over customers. Almost every meeting, almost every discussion, whether it is product or within our go-to-market organization, starts with the focus on solving for our customers. Because the North Star is really clear, we're able to build a level of entrepreneurialism within the culture. I think that is a huge part. The second thing you mentioned is the how we develop products and how we have organized our R&D function, maybe this is kind of like the under the hoods a little bit. If you look at the R&D organization, it is what we call as triads.
You'll have engineering teams, working with the product manager, working with the UX, you know, user experience, you know, person, and these are triads, and there is a high degree of autonomy within each of those triads. So, f rom a leadership perspective, our job is to be exceptionally clear and aligned on what the objectives and priorities are for the year. We spend a lot of time as a leadership team providing clarity on what to build, and because of how the R&D teams are organized as part of these triads, they figure out, with creativity and innovation, how to get there fast.
There are these very highly autonomous teams constantly thinking about, you know, creative and innovative ways to solve for the customer, and that keeps the pace of innovation. When you have hundreds of these autonomous teams, there's at least five that are coming up with a new feature or huge needle-moving improvements in any given week, and that keeps the pace of innovation high.
Maybe the third factor is, I talked earlier about our counterintuitive bet to organically build the product. When we made that choice, we also made an important choice at the platform level. You know, a couple of times in the past, I've explained this as primary colors, but think of it as like primary colors or LEGO blocks. The architectural framework for HubSpot's platform is made of component parts so that, you know, you can take the same, you know, blue color LEGO and build, you know, something within Marketing Hub. You can take the same and build it within the Service Hub. So it's very easy for us to make that, you know, pace of innovation last because of the way our platform works.
The combination of these three really allow us to maintain a level of innovation as well as creativity, and we've certainly needed that in the past three years.
Absolutely. While we're on that topic, maybe it's a good segue into the topic of the day, which is AI.
Absolutely.
because you have that platform
Yes.
to me, it feels like you are better capable of executing on AI.
Yep.
The data's in one place.
Yep.
It's all organically built, all integrated. Could you elaborate, I guess, first on where is the opportunity for HubSpot in AI?
Yep.
What is HubSpot doing to kind of satisfy the needs of customers in this emerging category?
Look, we're all in, and we're moving fast. I'd say the, from your question on applicability, it's got huge applicability. If you think about the market we serve, which is SMB, these are companies with 1,000-2,000 employees. They typically don't have an, you know, AI, large language model, expert sitting in the back house, kind of working with this. we've always thought of our value as taking really sophisticated, you know, powerful technology and being able to democratize that for the segment of customers that we serve.
So, there's huge applicability. Our customers are looking to us to innovate. They want us to be able to educate them on how to leverage this technology. That's number one. I think the second thing is also marketing, sales, and, you know, service. The front office is just a great place to be able to take generative AI and drive value. The way we think about driving value is, first of all, generating content, and it's probably the most obvious one.
You know, if a marketer is spending a lot of time building and ideating a blog, it's pretty easy for us to take that, put that large language model, in addition to HubSpot's own, you know, customer data and help our marketing customers to be able to create and ideate on content. That's the easy one. I think the second one is really generating insights. This one is not just about creating new content, but being able to say, you know, "How do I take the data across all of the customers and say, here's, you know, the best email sequence that you can do? Here are the types of keywords that are getting higher open rates versus others." There are very, very specific, you know, insights that you can generate, all using natural language.
Now you're able to just ask HubSpot, "What was the best keyword last month compared to last year? Tell me what I need to be doing next week in order to maximize my website traffic or maximize the email open rates.
That's, like, exceptionally powerful. Again, the applicability of this technology to our customer base and front office is just huge. What have we done about it? You know, as many of you know, we were pretty early in the process. Early in March, we launched ChatSpot, which is an interface that sits on top of large language models and HubSpot API and allows you to use natural language to have a conversation with HubSpot. If you had, you know, a question for HubSpot, you could just use natural language instead of clicking and pointing and creating reports. So far, since March, we've now had 50,000 users that have signed up. We are seeing those users engage the tool, provide feedback, and we're constantly improving. At the same time, we launched our first set of Content Assistant features.
That was also early March. Since then, we've seen a number of customers leverage it, use it, provide feedback. Our teams are fully energized, completely aligned. We have created a new AI platform group, and they are all prioritizing AI use cases. Maybe a sneak preview inbound, we'll talk about AI.
That's exciting. Look forward to that.
Yes.
That's great. another observation as an analyst covering HubSpot over the years is that the landing... areas you can land in HubSpot.
Yeah
... have expanded over the years.
Yeah.
You can now land with Marketing, you could land with CMS, you could land with Sales, Service.
Yep.
If you could comment, because last quarter, we just saw a tremendous net adds number. We just haven't seen that type of result.
Yep
... especially in this type of macro. What's driving that, and what does that kind of multiple landing site expansion, how is that having an impact, would you say?
Yeah, I think the, you know, I would probably separate it into two areas. The net adds growth, and we would continue to remain cautious in terms of macro.
Sure.
The net adds growth was largely due to our starter place. We have a bi-modal go-to-market strategy, and when we say that, what we mean is we want to drive volume at the lower end of the segments. We want to continue to increase value at the higher end of the segments. What you saw in terms of our Q1 results was the starter volume grew, and it grew because, 1, we are consistently optimizing the top of the funnel in terms of free signups and then converting those free signups into starter.
We have moved a number of high-value features, including automation, down into that starter tier, so customers are getting more value from the starter tier. Three, we've really continued to experiment with price points, and we moved to a $30 suite price point for starter. The combination of all of those plays, we saw strength in terms of starter. Now, Q1 is sequentially high, so I wouldn't have the expectation that we would continue to see things like what we saw in Q1 for the rest of the year, but we are excited by the progress that we have made there. Now, the second part of the question is related to our multiple front-end doors.
We are definitely seeing that upmarket. Upmarket, it used to be the case where most customers started with Marketing Hub, and it would take six months or a year for them to look at another Hub. Right now, we do see more customers landing with Sales Hub or a combination of Sales Hub, Marketing Hub, and Operations Hub. There's more multi-hub landing points and then kind of continued expansion from that. That really is our product innovation over the past few years, where we have continued to pour more features and more upmarket and sophisticated features, including governance, admin features, customizability, and all of that drives more value.
At the, you know, same time, both of these trends like point to one thing, which is HubSpot is becoming a platform of choice for SMBs. Whether it is a new company that's setting up their digital presence or a company that's scaling, we are becoming the platform of choice, and that's what we see across both of the segments.
Wonderful. Thank you.
Yeah.
The enterprise edition success has stood out over the years.
Yep.
you know, you've made a lot of effort to put features in there that are really targeting that end of the market.
Yep
... it's really come through in the numbers. I guess the question is: Is there a line, you know, from which you might not exceed in terms of size and scale?
Yeah.
How do you define the Enterprise segment?
Yeah.
Where's the opportunity, and could we see HubSpot even go further north over time?
Yeah. I like this question. There's no investor conference without this question. You know, when we think about our segments, it's the 1 to 2,000 employee. That's what we call as, you know, our focus segments. Within that, the 200 to 2,000 Employee segment is what we call Upmarket segment. If you looked at HubSpot maybe 4 years ago, many of you have been following us for a while, our primary, you know, Customer segment was the 20 to 200 employee company. We used to get some wins upmarket, but we didn't really focus there. Over the last few years, both from a product as well as the go-to-market perspective, and the partner perspective, we've really focused on that 200 to 2,000 segment.
If you look at Sales Hub, as an example, you know, custom objects was the initial starting point, but from there, you know, conversation intelligence, better sequencing, a lot more features in terms of forecasting, and we'll continue to develop features for prospecting and deal management. The list of features is really broad, and we're going to continue to invest in terms of the product. That's why we've seen that steady drumbeat of more sophisticated features that are a great fit for upmarket customers, is what you see translate into the momentum that we have had. At the same time, our partner channel understands where we're going, our direct sales teams understand where we're going, and it meets the needs of our customers at this moment.
If you look at the customers at this moment, they are still very focused on optimizing for their TCO, and they're very focused on getting quick time to value, and we are able to deliver that, which is why we see that continued momentum.
Absolutely. That's great. I think we have time for one more.
All right.
We've seen a nice balance of growth and margin from HubSpot.
Yep.
It's a growth company. You're investing in a lot of key areas.
Yep.
You touched on those. How are you thinking about that balance of growth and margin, such that you are able to deliver on that steady expansion?
Yep
at the same time, you're making the right investments?
I think very, very carefully. It's like a very important balance of growth and profitability. We continue to be focused on the opportunities, very early stages of the marketing automation to CRM platform movement. We are early stages of the upmarket movement. We know that there are growth opportunities. At the same time, our long-term profitability goals of 20%-25% non-GAAP operating margin is exceptionally important. Earlier this year, you saw us take some really hard decisions in terms of our workforce. That's just one. We also made important changes to our partner channel commissions. That's also, you know, in the interest of driving sales and marketing efficiency. We have multi-year efforts in terms of driving efficiency within sales and marketing. You'll see us balance both growth as well as profitability.
Not every year we'll have... You know, it's not gonna be a linear, you know, jump across both of these, but we'll look at the opportunities every year and kind of balance growth as well as profitability as we think about our long-term model.
Wonderful. Yamini, so great to have you here.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for joining us. Great discussion.
Thank you so much for having me, Brad.
Appreciate it.
Pleasure.