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Earnings Call: Q4 2018

Aug 23, 2018

Speaker 1

Good afternoon. My name is Latif, and I will be your conference facilitator. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to Intuit's 4th Quarter and Fiscal Year 2018 Conference Call. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speakers' remarks, there will be a question and answer period.

With that, I'll now turn the call over to Jerry Natoli, Intuit's Vice President of Finance and Treasurer. Mr. Natoli?

Speaker 2

Thanks, Latif. Good afternoon, and welcome to Intuit's 4th quarter fiscal 2018 conference call. I'm here with Brad Smith, our Chairman and CEO Michelle Clatterbuck, our CFO and Sasan Ghadardi, our incoming CEO. Before we start, I'd like to remind everyone that our remarks will include forward looking statements. There are a number of factors that could cause Intuit's results to differ materially from our expectations.

You can learn more about these risks in the press release we issued earlier this afternoon, our Form 10 ks for fiscal 2017 and our other SEC filings. All of those documents are available on the Investor Relations page of Intuit's website at intuit.com. We assume no obligation to update any forward looking statement. Some of the numbers in these remarks are presented on a non GAAP basis. We've reconciled the comparable GAAP and non GAAP numbers in today's press release.

We are reporting fiscal year 2018 results today under the historical revenue recognition standard, ASC 605. We adopted the new revenue recognition standard, ASC 606, in fiscal year 2019, which began August 1, 2018. We elected to adopt ASC 606 under the full retrospective model for comparability and we have provided restated financials for fiscal years 2017 and 2018 in the press release issued today and on our fact sheet. We also posted a slide deck to the Investor Relations section on Intuit's website at intuit.com highlighting the significant changes under ASC 606. Michelle will discuss the impact of this change during her prepared remarks.

Unless otherwise noted, all growth rates refer to the current period versus the comparable prior year period, and the business metrics and associated growth rates refer to worldwide business metrics. A copy of our prepared remarks and supplemental financial information will be available on our website after this call ends. With that, I'll turn the call over to Brad. Thanks, Jerry, and thanks to all of you for joining us. As you read in our press release today, I'll be stepping down as the Chief Executive Officer of Intuit at the end of 2018 and will continue to serve as our Executive Chairman.

I'm happy to announce that Sasan Ghadarzim will become Intuit's next CEO on January 1, 2019. Hassan is also with us on the call today. I'll share more thoughts about Hassan and why I feel it's the right time to pass the baton to him in January at the end of this call. But first, let's talk about our results in fiscal year 2018 and our outlook for fiscal year 2019. We had an excellent Q4 tapping off a very strong fiscal year 2018.

4th quarter revenue grew 17% and full year revenue grew 15%. We are 1 year into a multi year change journey and our results affirm that our refreshed 1 in-two eighty business strategy is positioning the company for durable growth as we look ahead. Revenue growth accelerated across our businesses in fiscal year 2018. This growth is fueled by 18% growth in the small business and self complete group and 14% growth in the consumer group. As you can see reflected in our guidance for fiscal year 2019, we expect to deliver another year of strong revenue

Speaker 3

With that overview, let me share some observations on our business performance. We delivered another successful quarter in our Small Business and Self Employed group. Online ecosystem revenue grew 43% in the 4th quarter

Speaker 2

and 40% for the fiscal year, exceeding our targets to grow better than 30%. We added over 1,000,000 QuickBooks Online subscribers in fiscal year 2018, exiting with more than 3,400,000 subscribers, a 43% increase year over year. Growth remains strong across multiple geographies with U. S. Subscribers growing 38% to approximately 2,600,000 and international subscribers growing 62% to over 800,000.

Within QuickBooks Online, self employed subscribers grew to nearly 720,000 that's from roughly 390,000 just 1 year ago. As we move into fiscal year 2019, we're placing a greater focus on additional services and penetrating a broader range of customers. Online ecosystem revenue growth has emerged as the best gauge of health and success of this business and it now represents more than $1,000,000,000 Even at this scale, we continue to expect online ecosystem revenue to exceed 30% growth year over year. With subscriber growth beginning to moderate some as we shift our emphasis in the next chapter of the business model evolution. With the focus revenue growth, we will no longer be providing forward looking guidance for subscriber growth, but we will continue to share our actual QuickBooks Online subscriber count on our fact sheet.

Turning to the consumer group, as we shared last quarter we had a successful tax season. Consumer revenue grew 14% in fiscal year 2018 as innovation drove customer and revenue growth and we made encouraging progress behind each of our strategic priorities. Our team is actively developing

Speaker 3

the next wave of innovation to better serve our customers next season. We're excited about the opportunities ahead for TurboTax Live to further transform the assisted category and for our Turbo and Mint offerings to expand our business beyond tax. With regards to the external environment, I want to share our thoughts on the tax legislation changes that go into effect next season. We have long advocated for tax simplification. We think anything that makes taxes easier to understand is good for consumers.

As you know, the new legislation increased the standard deduction, so a larger number of people won't be required to itemize their deductions. This change does introduce some trade down risk from our pay to our free offering, but in aggregate, we believe tax simplification will be an overall catalyst for DIY category and TurboTax growth as more assisted customers choose to adopt digital solutions. In addition, the Internal Revenue Service has been working on developing a streamlined tax filing form, consisting of 1 summary form and 6 supporting schedules. We're working closely with the IRS to fully understand the changes to the 10 40 forms and we'll ensure that all of our forms and our products are up to date as we do every year. We'll share more information later this year when we introduce our offerings for next season.

In the strategic partner group, our professional tax revenue was slightly ahead of our expectations as revenue grew 4% in fiscal year 2018. We continue to focus on multi service accounting firms that do both books and taxes. This enables us to drive our accountant success while growing our small business ecosystem at the same time. Putting a bow around fiscal year 2018, we're 1 year into our refreshed 1 into an ecosystem strategy with our business gaining momentum and significant opportunity ahead. We're activating our ecosystem by connecting our customers, our partners and our products across product lines through value creating solutions.

This includes offerings such as our ProAdvisor matchmaking platform, TurboTax Live and our TurboTax Self Employed bundle. We see many more opportunities to connect our ecosystem with newer offerings such as QuickBooks Capital and Turbo as well as others on the horizon. We'll share our progress on each of these offerings at our upcoming Investor Day. With that overview, let me hand it over to Michelle to walk you through the financial details.

Speaker 4

Thanks, Brad, and good afternoon, everyone. As Jerry mentioned at the beginning of the call, I'll review our Q4 fiscal year 2018 results under ASC 605. I'll also provide guidance under both the new revenue recognition standard 606 and historical standard 605 for comparability. Let's start with results for the Q4 of fiscal 2018. We delivered revenue $988,000,000 up 17% year over year.

A GAAP operating loss of $81,000,000 versus a $10,000,000 loss a year ago. Non GAAP operating income of $104,000,000 versus $78,000,000 last year GAAP diluted earnings per share of $0.18 versus $0.09 a year ago and non GAAP diluted earnings per share of $0.32 up 60% versus $0.20 last year. For full fiscal year 2018, we delivered revenue of $6,000,000,000 up 15% year over year. GAAP operating income of $1,500,000,000 versus $1,400,000,000 a year ago. Non GAAP operating income of $2,000,000,000 up 14% versus last year.

GAAP diluted earnings per share of $4.64 up 25 percent versus $3.72 last year. And non GAAP diluted earnings per share of 5 point $6.1 up 27% versus $4.41 last year. As previously announced, our GAAP earnings per share for the Q4 fiscal year 2018 include a $79,000,000 charge from the sale of our data center in Quincy, Washington. The impact of this charge on net income and EPS was offset by tax benefits that we recognized in the quarter. Turning to the business segments.

Total small business and self employed revenue grew 20% for the quarter and 18% for the year. This compared to 14% growth in fiscal year 2017. Online Online Ecosystem revenue growth remained strong and grew 43% in the 4th quarter, up from 41% in the 3rd quarter. For fiscal year 2018, online ecosystem revenue grew 40%, up from 30% in fiscal year 2017. QuickBooks Online subscribers grew 43%, ending the quarter with over 3,400,000 subscribers.

As Brad mentioned, we believe the best measure of the health and success of our strategy going forward is online ecosystem revenue growth, which we continue to expect to grow better than 30%. For fiscal 2019, we expect QuickBooks Desktop units to decline single digits and desktop ecosystem revenues to be roughly flat. Including both online and desktop customers, our total QuickBooks paying customers grew 26 percent in fiscal year 2018. Total QuickBooks paying customers includes QuickBooks Online Customers, QuickBooks Desktop Units and QuickBooks Desktop Subscribers. The consumer group had a strong year with revenue up 14% compared to 8% revenue growth in fiscal year 2017.

TurboTax units grew 4% and TurboTax Online units were up 6%. The Strategic Partner Group posted $453,000,000 of professional tax revenue for fiscal year 2018, up 4%. Turning to our financial principles. We continue to take a disciplined approach to capital management, investing the allocating resources to strengthen our investments in several key priorities, including increasing our capability in artificial intelligence and machine learning, accelerating our transition to Amazon Web Services, enhancing our brand marketing effectiveness globally, and enabling our engineering organization to increase effectiveness and efficiency. At the beginning of fiscal year 2018, we told you that we expect these initiatives to set us up to deliver strong growth in the coming years.

We saw this momentum begin in fiscal year 2018. Revenue growth accelerated approximately 5 points to 15%. GAAP operating income grew 7%, including the $79,000,000 charge from the sale of our data center. Non GAAP operating income growth accelerated approximately 2 points to 14%. We finished the year with $1,700,000,000 in cash and investments on our balance sheet.

Our first priority for that cash remains investing in the business to drive customer and revenue growth. Next, we use acquisitions to accelerate our growth and fill out our product roadmap. We return excess cash that we can invest profitably in the business to shareholders via both share repurchases and dividends. We repurchased over $270,000,000 of stock during fiscal year 20 18. The Board approved a new $2,000,000,000 repurchase authorization, giving us a total authorization of $3,200,000,000 to repurchase shares, including the remaining amount on our prior authorization.

The Board approved a quarterly dividend of $0.47 per share, payable October 18, 2018. This represents a 21% increase versus last year. As I mentioned, we are adopting ASC 606, the new accounting standard for revenue recognition in fiscal year 2019. We will be reporting our results under this standard going forward and we'll be restating the financial statements of previous years to provide comparability. The new standard will result in an increase in revenue for fiscal year 2018 of $61,000,000 and changing how we account changing how we account for revenue under 606, this is an accounting change only and has no impact on customer billings or cash flow.

In addition, how we recognize revenue for all online offerings, supplies and desktop payroll and payments will not change. What will change under the new rules is how we account for revenue associated with Books Desktop Units, Quick Books Desktop Subscription Offerings and Consumer and Professional Tax Desktop Offerings. I'll highlight the changes briefly, but please review the materials in the Investors section of our website for more detail. The primary change for our QuickBooks Desktop unit and subscription offerings under 606 is that more revenue will be recorded in earlier 6 is that more

Speaker 2

revenue will be recorded in earlier periods. The primary change for

Speaker 4

our consumer and professional tax desktop offerings is that more revenue will be recognized at the beginning of the tax season under 606. We expect the net impact of adopting 606 to be approximately a 2 point reduction in our revenue growth in fiscal year 2019 versus the prior standard. Under 606, Q1 fiscal 2019 guidance includes revenue growth of 5% to 7%, a GAAP loss per share of $0.17 to $0.19 and non GAAP earnings per share of $0.09 to $0.11 While we're not providing quarterly guidance under 606, our Q1 fiscal year 2019 revenue guidance would have been approximately $30,000,000 higher than it is under 606. You can find additional Q1 fiscal 2019 guidance details under 606 in our press release and on our fact sheet. And just one more comment on Q1.

We expect desktop ecosystem revenue to decline single digits in Q1 of fiscal year 2019. This reflects a change we made in fiscal year 2018, moving our QuickBooks Enterprise subscription offering from a perpetual license to a term license to better serve our customers. Under 606, our full year fiscal 2019 guidance includes total company revenue growth of 8% to 10%, GAAP earnings per share of $5.25 to $5.35 and non GAAP earnings per share of $6.40 to $6.50 We expect a GAAP tax rate of 21% and a non GAAP tax rate of 23% for fiscal 2019. To help you compare with the forecast you have in your model, we're also providing guidance under ASC 605. Our full year fiscal 2019 GAAP earnings per share of 5.35 GAAP earnings per share of $5.35 to $5.45 and non GAAP earnings per share of 6 point $5.0 to $6.60 With that, I'll turn it back to Brad to close.

Speaker 3

Great. Thanks, Michelle. In summary, we delivered a strong year in fiscal 2018, posting a faster pace of revenue growth than we have seen in several years as our OneIntuit ecosystem strategy takes shape. We continue to have our sights set on next year and beyond as we other news we announced today. Sasan is the right executive to lead into it in our next chapter.

During his 13 years with the company, he has and a key architect of our 1 Intuit Ecosystem strategy. He leads with intellectual curiosity and humility as well as strategic and operational rigor. At every stop, Sasan has built high performing and highly engaged teams who deliver amazing results. I am confident in his ability to lead the company to new heights and I'm looking forward to working with him in his new role. When Sasan steps into the role of CEO on January 1, he will be succeeded by Alex Chris as the General Manager of the Small Business and Self Employed Group.

Alex is another Intuit veteran with a stellar track record of success over the past 14 years. We also announced today that Tylo Stansbury will be stepping down as our Chief Technology Officer on January 1, 2019. This move is another thoughtful transition in a multi year succession planning process that has been in the works for some time. I want to thank Tayloe for his many contributions over the past 9 years, having led our evolution to a platform company, advanced our leadership in artificial intelligence and machine learning and accelerated our journey to the cloud. Taylo has built an amazing leadership bench, which successfully prepared Marianna Tessel, our current Chief Product Development Officer for the Small Business and Self Employed Group to be his successor as CTO in January.

And on a personal note, it has been a privilege to serve as Intuit's CEO since 2008. Together, we've built on the strong foundation that those before us had put in place. We transformed the company from a North American desktop software company to a global cloud driven product and platform company. We've delivered consistent top line and bottom line growth and we've cultivated a strong and enduring culture of innovation and self disruption. Today's announcement is a continuation of a long history of leadership development that has built a deep bench of leaders who will take their place as the next generation of Intuit's management team.

As I look ahead, I have never felt better about Intuit's future. So with that, let's open it up and hear what's on your mind.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our first question comes from the line of Keith Weiss of Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.

Speaker 5

Hi, this is Sanjit Singh for Keith Weiss. And sorry to see you go, Brad, and congratulations, Sasan. Brad, maybe you could start with tax. This year was a very strong year and you guys saw a lot of uptake with TurboTax Live. As you think about the tax changes going into next year with maybe a little more of the demand coming from simpler tax filings, What do you think the implications are for the TurboTax Live portion in terms of the benefit that you can see from that portion of consumer tax?

Speaker 3

Thanks for the question Sanjeet. I would tell you we're very encouraged by this year's performance in TurboTax Live and we're optimistic about the opportunities as we look ahead. As you know, just to put context around this, today there are more people who file using an assisted tax prep method than those who use do it yourself. And we've discovered tens of millions who will be willing to actually use a do it yourself solution if they had the access to an expert to answer some questions that they may have in the back of their mind. So it opens up a $20,000,000,000 TAM.

And when we introduced TurboTax Live this year, we had 2 hypotheses. The first is, could we actually retain more of those 3,000,000 customers who leave us each year when they have a life event change, like they had a baby or they sold stock. And I'm proud to tell you that we improved our retention very strongly in this past tax season. We'll talk more about that at Investor Day. The second hypothesis was could we start to attract more people out of tax stores and assisted methods into TurboTax with TurboTax Live.

And this year, TurboTax Live did indeed increase a 10% acquisition of customers out of an assisted method versus the standard TurboTax Online offering. So both hypotheses proved to be true. But there was one other surprise that occurred in tax season. Each year, 3000000 to 5000000 people enter the tax filing process for the first time. We have always gotten our fair share with digital solutions, but with TurboTax Live, we actually pulled a disproportionate share of first time filers into the franchise.

So we're seeing an improvement in retention. We're seeing an acquisition increase from those who were using assisted methods and we're seeing a disproportionate share of first time filers. That gives us a lot of confidence that next year and beyond TurboTax Live could potentially be a game changer if we continue to execute well.

Speaker 5

That's really interesting. And maybe just if I could sneak in one more on the QBO. You mentioned in your script that growth might flow a little bit next year versus the strong growth you saw last year. How does that relate to your overall expansion efforts, particularly on the international side and also with QuickBooks Self Employed? Are those international markets slower to ramp or are you starting to see some slowdown on the self employed side as well?

Speaker 3

I appreciate the question and let me set some context around why we've made this decision. We're at the next chapter of the business model evolution in QuickBooks Online and we do fundamentally believe that the online ecosystem revenue growth is the appropriate measure for health going forward and let me explain why. 1st and foremost, we're now starting to serve an expanded group of customers from the self employed to the core QBO, both U. S. And international and now we're expanding into what we used to call the mid market or enterprise space with QuickBooks Online Advanced.

We're going to be talking more about that in the fall. And so you're going to have an expanded group of customers each coming in with a different revenue stream. On the other side, we have our online services, which you probably saw accelerate in this quarter, very strong growth, 34% growth. That's not only payroll and payments attached, we're also beginning to introduce those services as their own standalone front doors that can ultimately unlock the QuickBooks Online. So think of things like GoPayment or online payroll.

When you start to put that together, it starts to muddy what's the definition of a subscriber. And so at the end of the day, what we know matters most is that we are delighting customers and we measure net promoter that we are taking market share in every geography, which we measure very intently and that we are indeed accelerating revenue growth. And it's those three measures that we think are the best indicator of whether we're growing our franchise. I'll give you this as a little sort of mindset that we're thinking about. I personally will be disappointed if we do not at least meet or exceed the number of net new subscribers we add in QuickBooks Online next year.

And this year, as I mentioned in my opening comments, we added 1,000,000 net new subscribers. So that ought to give you some ballpark of what we mean when we say moderating growth. This is still very strong growth with a business that's accelerating.

Speaker 1

Our next question comes from Matt Pfau of William Blair. Your line is

Speaker 6

open. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions. Wanted to hit a few on the tax side. So I guess just in terms of and Brad, you mentioned that part of the guidance for the consumer group is more of a shift from the assisted category to do it yourself.

So I guess what drives even though the tax codes have become simpler now, what sort of drives those assisted customers into the do it yourself channel? And then I guess in terms of the way you guys thought about your the upcoming tax season, every time they make the tax code simpler, it creates more confusion sometimes. So how did you sort of factor in, I guess, consumer response to maybe being a bit more confused even though the tax code has become simpler? Thanks.

Speaker 3

Yes, I appreciate it, Matt. So first of all, we've seen a secular shift to do it yourself over the past decade plus. If you just look at the numbers the IRS publishes each year, that do it yourself category has outpaced the assisted category, whether it's tax stores or CPAs pretty significantly. And then with TurboTax Live, we think we've untapped a whole new source of growth because we've always discovered there were tens of millions of people going to an assisted tax prep method who had a simple unanswered question. Hey, my kid just turned 26, can I still claim them as a deduction?

And we found that with the touch of a screen to have the opportunity to have an expert come in to that experience, answer that question, allowed us to start to get more of those customers into the category. So as we look ahead, we think a combination of 2 things. The government simplification of the tax process now has more people saying, I qualify for a standard deduction, why am I paying someone, I could actually be doing tax on my own, I should consider a do it yourself solution. And then for those who say, hey, I think I can do this, but I may have a question, we're going to make it very apparent with a lot of delighted customers who are willing to go out there on our behalf and talk about how great the service is to say you no longer have to choose. You can use TurboTax and get the access to an expert, but you don't have to drive to a store.

You can do it from the convenience of your home in your pajamas if you want to. And so it's those two things that fundamentally give us confidence and we have reasons to believe coming out of this tax season. And you're correct, anytime there is a change, there's always a desire for people to say, gosh, do I have enough here to get this done on my own and we're going to have competitors who are going to try to stir up fear, uncertainty and doubt. But as you saw with the Affordable Care Act several years ago, a lot of people said well, this caused people to lose confidence and that was actually one of the greatest accelerators of growth we've had in our franchise. Our team is poised to sort through that fear, uncertainty and doubt and let people know that we have an answer for them whether they want to do it themselves or access an expert.

Speaker 6

Great. That's it for me guys. Thanks a lot.

Speaker 3

All right. Thank you.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Jennifer Lowe of UBS. Your question please.

Speaker 7

Thank you. And first, I'd like to say, Brad, we're going to miss you. I know you're still around for a couple more quarters, but you've been a big presence for a lot of us for a while. So, but I look forward to looking at working where you see us on going forward. So, just wanted to say that first.

And maybe digging into maybe following up on Sandra's question a little bit and around the strength that you're seeing in the online services revenue line. I know a few years ago, the message with the QuickBooks online transition was the opportunity to get higher attach rates with payments, higher attach rates with payroll, since then the disclosures have been collapsed a bit and it hasn't been as much of a discussion point at least on the earnings call. So maybe just circling back on your comments there, if you think about the acceleration there, is that it? Is that sort of the original vision of QuickBooks Online of having greater attach rates around today's services starting to play out a little later than maybe we thought it would? Or is there something beyond that that's happening in that line segments?

I know you mentioned some of the their own front doors commentary, but I'm just trying to contextualize that versus that being a similar ambition a few years ago that maybe didn't play out as we had hoped originally.

Speaker 3

Thank you, Jennifer. And first of all, thank you for your kind comments and you're right. I'll be here for a couple more quarters and then the junior varsity will exit and the varsity will take the field and I'm excited to have Sasan stepping in.

Speaker 4

If you

Speaker 3

go back and think about our model over the years, it's been a razor and blade model and the first thing is to get the razors and then after that attach the blades and we played that out very well over a desktop era. As we've moved into online, we are still aggressively getting razors. We're opening new markets. We're going into the self employed and now we're moving up into the mid market with QuickBooks Online Advanced. But at the same time, we've gotten wiser in how to capitalize on services.

This past quarter, online payroll attached to QuickBooks Online grew faster than 30% and payments grew faster than 40%. Now you introduce these new opportunities to have those services be the first experience for a customer, whether it's GoPayments for payments or it's payroll and then unlock the QBO and we think that's really going to give us an opportunity to accelerate our services business. So we are in a razor and blade business. We feel like there's a lot of game left in the razors, but we have gotten smarter and now we're entering that chapter where the blades are going to become more important and we do expect that you're going to see online services continue to grow and accelerate.

Speaker 4

And maybe just quickly to follow-up on

Speaker 7

that, because if you look at how the landscape has evolved over the last few years, it feels like there's a growing number of Payroll providers in particular that target the SMB space. So I'm just curious to get an update on how you feel about the landscape there. Obviously, it makes a lot of sense for a QuickBooks customer to use payroll, but in situations where you're leading with payroll, what sort of the competitive dynamic there given players like Gusto have got more visible over that time horizon?

Speaker 3

Yes, Josh and the team at Gusto, great partners, good friends, we've worked with them for years, but all of us see the same opportunity. 4 out of 10 small businesses still do their payroll with a spreadsheet and a calculator. So it is not a zero sum game. There is so much opportunity to help these small businesses get their payroll done much more efficiently and avoid the penalties and businesses get their payroll done much more efficiently and avoid the penalties and interests that come with

Speaker 2

a mistake. And then as

Speaker 3

you know, as we moved into this one into an eco system strategy, we opened up our platform. So customers can use our payroll, they can use Gusto, they can use ADP, any of those services will work with QuickBooks Online. And 2 things happen in that regard. 1 is the customer is able to make the choice they want. And the second is that data flows into QuickBooks Online and the retention of QuickBooks Online then goes up exponentially, up over 10 points when they attach a second service, whether we built it or one of our competitors built it.

So we actually view this as a real win. And yes, the market is competitive, but right now we're all trying to get the customers out of spreadsheets and into a digital solution that makes sense. And then from there, it's always going to be up to us to make sure we have the best alternative in the market. But if they choose a partner, we're happy with that as well because that increases the retention of QuickBooks Online.

Speaker 4

Great. Thank you.

Speaker 3

Thank you, Jennifer.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Brent Thill of Jefferies. Your line is open.

Speaker 8

Brad, if the junior varsity team doubled revenue, we look forward to seeing what the varsity team does, so.

Speaker 3

Thank you,

Speaker 8

Brad. I guess, Brad, just a question around why now. You've had 3 of your top corporate positions turnover recently, obviously, great athletes in those positions. But can you maybe just address, I think there's some investors that are maybe a little unsettled by what's happened just with the number of changes that have happened. Can you maybe walk through your perspective?

Speaker 3

I can Brent. Let me start first with the broader perspective. As you know and you've seen us, we've rotated leaders between positions over the years. I had the opportunity to run 3 businesses before I became the CEO 11 years ago and that is by design. We fundamentally believe we grow and develop our bench by giving them opportunities to run different parts of the company and then that prepares them for greater things.

These decisions that have been announced have actually been a multi year process. We have a very regular set of discussions with both the leaders as well as the Board to say what's the individual's personal true north and what are the business needs as we look ahead. And then we make decisions to basically get those all lined up. And so we have been sequencing these moves and they've all been based upon a multi year succession planning process. When it comes to me personally, we all know that these jobs, it's inevitable at some point, you're going to have to say goodbye.

The real art is being a part of that decision. And so for me, when I set out 11 years ago, there were 3 mile markers that I wanted to put in place. The first is, is the company ready? The second is, do we have an internal leader ready to take the seat? And the third is, am I ready?

And I feel like with this year being a capstone that our company successfully has transitioned to the next chapter of growth. In terms of the next leader, not only is Hassan ready, having run every one of the businesses more than I ran and also served as the Chief Information Officer, he is primed. And finally with me, I always hoped that I would leave when I was more of an asset than a liability and I think many people may argue that point that I may have already crossed that line. But I really never wanted to be that athlete that lost a step or couldn't complete the path. And I feel like now is the right time.

I just feel like the company is in a good place. We've got a great leadership team in place. Sasan has everyone's confidence and I learn from him every day and I think this next chapter is really set up. So that's really why and I would encourage anyone who may be unsettled to simply look at those who've assumed the seats because you know them all. They're 14 year veterans, they're 8 year veterans, they've been at Investor Day, you've seen them do demos and they have been a part of these decisions from day 1.

We run this company as a team and I really feel like this next chapter is going to be a strong chapter. Thanks.

Speaker 8

Just a quick follow-up for Michelle. Just as it relates to your guide, I think you're guiding under the old rule, pretty modest margin improvement. It's almost been 4 years now, you've been hovering right around 33%. Some of the questions we get is top line is accelerating, that's great, but what about the bottom line? When do we get to see the bottom line come through?

Speaker 4

Thanks for your question, Brent. We feel really good about the growth that we have in our guide. You're right. When you go back to our financial principles, we talk about double digit revenue growth and op income growing in the mid teens. We want revenue growing faster than expense.

This year, we came in strong with 15 percent revenue growth and 14% op income growth. You see for next year for our guide, we are expanding margins. Revenue is continuing to be in the double digit range and we have operating margin expanding by 2 to 5 excuse me, by 10 to 50 basis points. So we feel very good about the guide. The business is really strong.

And as Brad said, there's lots of opportunity for us.

Speaker 9

Thanks.

Speaker 3

Thank you, Brent.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next comes from Ross MacMillan of RBC Capital Markets. Your line is open.

Speaker 10

Thanks so much. And Brad, it's been a real pleasure over the last 10 years or so, but I look forward to working more closely with Sasan going forward. Maybe I can start, Brad. Just as you think about tax for next year, two things struck me. One was your guidance range was actually for consumer was narrower than normal.

And I would have thought that given the moving pieces in next year's season, you may have actually gone the other way. So I'd love just to give to get your sense of you're thinking about the different inputs into that? And then second, just on as we think about ancillary revenues on small business online ecosystem, there's a big gap obviously relative to QBO revenue today. And if you compared it to the desktop business, I think ancillary actually got up to almost 2x QuickBooks Desktop revenue. So I was just curious, do you think there's that same type of opportunity as a multiplier if you will over time for the online ecosystem?

Speaker 3

Thanks. Great, thank you Ross and it's been a pleasure to work with you over this past decade as well. I've learned a ton from you and you've always helped us think about the business in different ways. So appreciate that. Let me start with the consumer group guide.

Actually the range is in the same zip code. If you look at it under 605, it's 9 to 11. I know under 606, it looks 9 to 10, but that's really just wooden nickels. It's basically the same shift and it's just a rounding thing. But also if you look back, there have been years where we've had a slightly bigger band because we were in the early days with a hypothesis, hey, will TurboTax Live actually do what we think it will.

At where the Affordable Care Act is coming out and even though we have confidence, do we have enough of a range to give us some wiggle room. What you should read into this range right now is 9 to 11 is a little more typical. It's kind of like what we do if you look under 605 with the other businesses. But the second is because our confidence level is high coming out of this tax season, we don't feel we need the wiggle room to broaden that range. We actually feel good about our momentum as we head into fiscal year 2019.

On the second one around online ecosystem revenue and services, you're correct. We went through a period of time where we had razors with QuickBooks Desktop and then that number kind of stalled out at about $4,000,000 on the fact sheet for a lot of years and then we made a lot of growth happen by simply selling blades into that installed base. And that drove 2 big businesses, our payroll and our payments business to your point got to be about 2x what the accounting business was. We're not near that chapter yet. We still have a lot of growth in QuickBooks Online.

We're just now entering the mid market space, which comes with a much higher ARPU and we are still opening new markets internationally and we've got a lot of room to still grow in the U. S. With both self employed and core QBO. At the same time, however, we don't have to sequence it like we did back in the day. We can also start to capitalize on the online services.

And so yes, I believe over the long term, you're going to see those services continue to accelerate and grow and become very meaningful. But I don't think you're going to see them get to the point where they're 2x over accounting anytime soon because we've got a lot of greenfield with accounting and we're going to continue to go out there and capture that opportunity as well.

Speaker 10

Thanks Brad.

Speaker 3

All right Ross, take care.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Jesse of Goldman Sachs. Your question please.

Speaker 11

Yes, thank you. And Brad, it's been a pleasure. And Sasan, good luck. I'm sure you're listening in. First on the consumer guide, I guess stripping that apart, what are you thinking units versus ARPU?

And I'm assuming that ARPU is going to be a big part of the story again next year with Live! What do you think the different components that will drive the ARPU growth are? Is it mostly mix shift? Do you see potential to take more price again this year? It would be helpful if you could break that down.

Speaker 2

Yes,

Speaker 3

I appreciate it, Jesse, and also the kind words. And Sasan is sitting here with us and he's anxious and excited to continue to deliver strong results in small business and self employed for another few months and then sit in the seat. So back to your question around consumer group, we're going to unpack for this group at Investor Day what we see as the long term outlook for the consumer group at Investor Day. Ultimately, that includes 4 levers. What do we expect total IRS returns to grow?

What do we think do it yourself category growth will be over the next 5 plus years, what do we think unit growth will start to look like and then how much can you expect from ARPU. I don't want to get ahead of that at this point, but what I can tell you is our outlook on the growth of this business is higher than it was just the last couple of years. And we'll talk more about how much that will come from category growth units and ARPU when we actually get to Investor Day here in another 60 days or so.

Speaker 11

Yes, that's helpful. And Michelle, I understand 606 can distort the income statement. We've seen that with a lot of other software companies. I'm wondering on the cash flow side, what are your expectations for operating cash flow growth in fiscal 2019? Thanks.

Speaker 4

Hi, Jose, thanks. Yes, in FY 2018, we had operating cash flow was quite a bit higher, was 32 percent. But as you look and that was because of some of the benefits we got from our tax benefits this year. We had an abnormally lower tax rate. But going forward, we would expect operating cash flow to more closely track non GAAP operating income on a go forward basis.

Speaker 11

Got you. Thank you.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Kartik Mehta of Northcoast Research. Your line is open.

Speaker 12

Thanks. Brad, looking at the tax season this year, as you look at TurboTax Live, I don't think last year you really marketed TurboTax Live. As you go into this year, do you think that changes or do you think you'll use a similar strategy to what you did last year?

Speaker 3

Tarek, you're correct. As we entered this last year, we treated it as a V1 and our campaign was more around there's nothing to be afraid of, but wasn't that explicit about TurboTax Live. As we get closer to season, we'll start to unveil more of what we plan to do, but I will share at this point 3 major learnings that we know we have an opportunity to capitalize on as we go into next year. 1 is much more effective and targeted marketing about what TurboTax Live is, which is the point you're making. The second is a better seasonality.

We entered the year thinking that those that would want TurboTax Live would be towards the back end of season when there were more complex filers. We were wrong. There are just as many people upfront in the early part of season who have questions as well. And the third is, while we had a really good version 1, we had an opportunity to improve the pro experience to actually answer the questions for the consumer. So we spent a lot of time over the summer improving that pro experience.

So those are 3 big areas we're focused on. But we will absolutely be looking at our marketing messaging and helping create category awareness if there's a new way to do taxes with TurboTax Live.

Speaker 12

And then Brad, just your thoughts on with the new tax law changes, do you think there is risk in customers maybe trading down to a lower price SKU for TurboTax and maybe how you might have taken that into account for your guidance?

Speaker 3

Kartik, we do. In fact, we have incorporated that into the guidance that we've shared with you. We shared that with the standard deduction, more people qualify. We've always had a category of customers that when they know that there's opportunity to move down, they will. There's a group in the middle that we call aspirational buyers.

We've all learned this in our marketing days. If you have a good, better, best product lineup, many people buy the middle. And so there is going to be an aspirational buyer that may qualify for standard deductions that may actually get confidence knowing they can get access to something else. And but at the end of the day, we factor that in and we believe the bigger opportunity are the tens of millions of people who sit in the assisted category, they're going to discover the same thing and they're going to downshift into the digital solutions. And so we think when you net it all out, it leads to the guidance we provided for you for fiscal year 2019.

Speaker 1

Thanks Brad. Really appreciate

Speaker 3

it. All right, Carty. Take care.

Speaker 2

You too.

Speaker 1

Our next question comes from Walter Pritchard of Citi.

Speaker 13

I just want to stick to the 606 numbers and look sorry, 605 numbers and look at the small business side. You talked about the acceleration you saw in fiscal 2018 on small business. And it seems like you're basically guiding for the high end of the range to be back down to the kind of growth rate you saw in the year prior. And it feels like you saw acceleration, you've got some momentum and there's some underlying drivers here. Why would the small business growth be sell back to where it was before you put in place these measures?

Speaker 3

I'm sorry, could you just repeat the second part of the question there? I missed it.

Speaker 13

I'm just wondering why, so you guided on 605, the high end of your small business guide is 14%, which is the rate at which you grew in fiscal 'seventeen. And you saw some acceleration this year. It feels like you put in place some things that would make that durable and yet you're calling for a decel of small business back down to at or below the levels you saw in 2017?

Speaker 3

Yes, I appreciate the question. A couple of things going on there. Obviously, we're in the process of opening new markets, moving up into the QuickBooks Online advanced SKU and then building on the momentum and growing over some pretty healthy numbers. And so I often say internally the best way to have a good year is to lap a bad one and we don't have that luxury in this case. At the same time, I wouldn't over read too much into that.

There's nothing in the leading indicators that has when we provide our guidance, because we want to make sure that we have the opportunity to when we provide our guidance, because we want to make sure that we have the opportunity to learn and to adjust as we get into season. But when we get to Investor Day, I have a feeling what you'll get the chance to see is strong momentum in self employed QBO in the U. S. And international and a real excitement around QuickBooks Online Advanced, which is the enterprise version. And at the end of the day, we feel really good as we enter fiscal year 2019, we've got the right growth drivers to drive growth.

The rest of it in terms of the high end or the low end of guidance is really a combination of us being prudent and the fact we're growing over some pretty numbers and we want to give ourselves the opportunity to get over those numbers.

Speaker 13

And then Brad on the international side, I guess we don't have a great sense as to how fast that is growing here with the sub. Can you give us a sense, are some of those markets starting to mature and are other markets starting to open up to keep that international growing well ahead of domestic? Any color there around small business international would be great into 2019?

Speaker 3

Yes. So yes, thank you for the question. The UK has really hit a new stride. We'll be talking even more in the fall, but that business and that country has been performing at levels that exceeded our expectations and they're only picking up steam. At the same time, Canada and Australia remain strong and we're very encouraged by the results we're seeing in Brazil as well as in France.

We are still in the early days of trying to get the product market fit in India. We have a powerful team of 1100 engineers who live there and work on the rest of our products and so they're committed to helping us find that product market fit. So net net, there's not a lot of change in terms of countries other than momentum forward in terms of how close they are to being able to get to the green light on product market set for us to then turn on the marketing. But right now the results are strong and I would call out the United Kingdom as being the real superstar right now and they're just continuing to build momentum.

Speaker 13

Great, thank you.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Sterling Auty of JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Speaker 14

Yes, thanks. Let me have my congratulations, Brad, on a wonderful tenure as CEO. And Sasan, congratulations on your appointment. Two questions. 1, back to TurboTax Live.

Can you kind of review for us how you felt the pricing on TurboTax Live was received by the market and maybe thoughts on the pricing of it moving into the new tax season?

Speaker 3

Sure, Sterling and thank you for the kind words. This past year, we ran a lot of experiments in TurboTax Live, but if you netted out what it tended to be on average, it was about $150 which was a premium to core TurboTax, but a discount to what you would have to pay if you went to an assisted store or a pro. What you may see if you go to turbotax.com right now as we enter what we call 3rd peak, which is October extension season, you're going to see one of the lessons we learned this year is TurboTax Live in and of itself does not have to be a single SKU. Can actually be a service that can be attached to the rest of the TurboTax lineup. So what you're now going to see right now out in there and it's one of many tests we're running is you can now have TurboTax Live Assistance with TurboTax Basic at around $80 You can take it all the way up to Premier and it makes that skew about $170 and then of course you can even do it with self employed which goes up to about $200 So think of TurboTax Live now being an add on service or bundled in with the core TurboTax whether you're at the simple end of our tax filing SKU up to the more complex.

So you're going to see us take a different pricing approach this year.

Speaker 14

That makes sense. And then one real high level question around small business. We're at the highest levels on the NFIB kind of optimism index that it's ever seen. Should we be thinking that we're actually at peak growth rates within that small business because of the environment so positive?

Speaker 3

Yes, we are seeing very high optimism and confidence growth rates in the NFIB. And as you know, having followed us for years, we don't put a lot of credence in those numbers because we've come to appreciate and celebrate that small businesses and entrepreneurs are optimistic by design. 1 out of 2 fell in the 1st 5 years, they're always sure it's going to be the other person. And we love that about small businesses. The other thing I would tell you is while we certainly are at a cycle right now where small business formations and confidence are high.

We also know that in most downturns, that actually tends to be a catalyst or a boom for small business formations. We did have one counter cycle, which was the latest downturn, 2008, because that was a consumer driven downturn and their credit cards were maxed out. They couldn't get any loans because the financial sector had melted, but that really was the anomaly. If you look back at all other recessions, small business formations tend to accelerate in a downturn. So while we absolutely think that right now we're seeing a lot of robust confidence, I don't think that gives us any reason to say we're going to have a drought coming up because small businesses tend to be confident by nature and even if things get tough, more people tend to get laid off from their big jobs and they go start their own small business.

Speaker 9

Thank you. You're welcome.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Citi Panagrahy of Wells Fargo. Your line is open.

Speaker 15

Thank you. Brad, we're going to meet you and Sasan, congratulations and look forward to working with you. When you think about consumer, you're leading in the DIY category and getting share from assisted. But when you think about the long term opportunity on the consumer, you talked about transitioning from a consumer app to more of a consumer platform. Where do you stand on that region?

And when should we think about some of those initiatives like Turbo started to contribute meaningfully?

Speaker 3

Yes. Steve, thank you so much. We are excited as we talk about our consumer strategy. The first is of course to continue to extend our lead in the do it yourself software tax category. The second is to begin to transform assisted tax and those 2 have a lot of juice in them.

That third part of the strategy is to begin to expand from a tax business to beyond tax and become a consumer platform and Turbo this past year within its 1st year. And Turbo had when you look at TurboTax's customers, 23,000,000 people consented to share their data in an effort to get access to lower mortgage rates, better credit card financing, refinance their student loans. And that was a significant indicator of competence for us. And we really liked the version 1 Turbo experience, not only for the consumer, but also for the partners. The partners who worked with Turbo got an 8x to 10x list on their conversion because the leads are so much more qualified and the data is so much deeper and richer.

So the consumers are winning and the partners are getting a better lift. So we really think there is gain here and it's early days. In terms of when we're going to see meaningful revenue, we haven't really baked anything into the guidance for next year's consumer business. When it comes to this, it's a very small amount, but we do think as we look 3 to 5 years out, this could be a real growth catalyst for us if we continue to execute well.

Speaker 15

Thank you for that. And then on the QBO side, last quarter you talked about some of the doing some kind of experiment in terms of promotion and discounting. I was wondering if you could give some color on like what you've found there and how much of that baked into your guidance?

Speaker 3

Yes. So we're always running pricing and promotion tests. We run multi cell tests, AB tests and we look for where we can get the greatest conversion, the greatest lift and obviously the greatest optimization of our revenue growth. We have learned some things. We've learned some important things about the bundles that we offer accountants.

And we've also learned some important things about how long and how deep we need to make the core QuickBooks online discount for the small business. A lot of that's reflected on our website now, but you should also know we're running other tests as we speak and we may continue to adjust as we get closer to the fall. But I would just say that every day our team gets smarter in both testing pricing scenarios and discounting and what bundles make the most sense and that's what continues to drive acceleration in the business. Thank

Speaker 1

you. Thank you. Our next question comes from Jen McDonald of First Analysis. Your question please.

Speaker 16

Brad, great working with you and congratulations, Sasan. Brad, on the small business, could you tell us how you're thinking about price, especially with the services side?

Speaker 3

Hi, Jim. It's been great working with you as well. And you and I go back chapters even before this company. So I don't want to date either one of us, but it's been a good run. We look at services and in some cases, we choose to bundle them in to the subscription.

For example, when you get to different countries, payroll, we may not be charging for payroll in the U. K. Because that may be what the market dictates or what we think is the right thing to get adoption of the customers. So really the answer varies by the market we're in. But today, I would tell you that we see a real interest in customers attaching these services and it gives us a chance to get them in with a pretty low friction point.

They can come in and they can try it for free. They can begin to use it for 90 days. And then if they like it, they can go ahead and activate the service and pay going forward. But it really is a case by case basis. Each one of the countries and each one of the services depends upon what the market will support.

Speaker 16

Okay. Then I had a follow-up for Michelle. I mean, under 606, we've seen a lot of cases where the expenses get spread out. Can you talk a little bit about the impact of 606

Speaker 4

question. Yes, that may be the situation with some other folks when you look at 606. For us, the only real impact that exists for us has to do with sales commissions and it just has a completely immaterial impact for us. So, if you take a look at that, you'll see that our expenses are basically the exact same under either accounting standard.

Speaker 16

Okay, great. Thanks a lot.

Speaker 3

All right. Take care, Jim.

Speaker 16

You too.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Raimo Lenschow of Barclays. Your line is open.

Speaker 17

Hey, this is Apry Gadi for Raimo Lenschow. I was curious about if you could talk about ARPU for small business and self employed. Our math shows that it's been kind of constant, but there's some moving parts between international growth and self employed versus small business. Can you talk about ARPU at more of the cohort level if it's been increasing or decreasing?

Speaker 3

I can and I'll share with you that at Investor Day, we provide a pretty deep dive into what does ARPU look like by cohorts. In other words, what's the self employed ARPU look like? What's it look like for core QBO in the U. S, what's it look like internationally, what's desktop look like and then you throw it onto the stew and blend it. If I had cut to the chase, each one of those cohorts, the ARPU continues to get stronger and improve.

At the same time, when you put them all in and do an average, ARPU looks flat and in some cases could be slightly down because the faster growing parts of the mix are the self employed customers, which tend to have a lower ARPU and the international units, which tend to have less attach right now and so they have lower ARPU as well. But net net, when you put it together, each cohort is getting stronger. When you think about QuickBooks Online Advanced, which is the enterprise version of QBO that we'll be introducing here in the next couple of weeks in a stronger fashion. It's in the market now. You're going to see us continue to move up the line and get even higher ARPU.

But net net, because of mix, it's going to be a very false lead. That's why we ask everybody stay focused on online ecosystem revenue. We say we'll keep that growing north of 30%. This quarter, it grew 43%.

Speaker 17

Great. Thank you. And Michelle, just curious about the data centers that you guys sold recently. Has everything shifted to the public cloud now? Or are you still getting kind of double tax for AWS payments and maintaining some of your data centers?

Speaker 4

Thank you for the question. Right now, we did sell our data center as part of our cloud strategy, the data center that is in Quincy, Washington. However, we do still have some of our offerings that are in that data center. We are just leasing it back. We made some great progress over the last couple of years in FY 2018.

That was one of the areas that we reallocated resources to, so that we could accelerate the move. We are not all the way there. But for instance this year TurboTax was completely in AWS for 2nd peak and we're now focusing a lot more on moving the QuickBooks stack. Great. Thank you.

Speaker 3

All right.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Ken Wong of Guggenheim Securities.

Speaker 18

And my best both Brad and Sasan as well. So you guys have talked about the 3,000,000 filers that churn off annually, kind of rough calculations would be kind of give or take 8% churn there. How do you guys think that number can improve over time?

Speaker 3

Yes. Well, we will look forward to sharing the actual retention results at Investor Day, we have seen the opportunity to continue to turn that dial up and keep more of those customers. And with the TurboTax Live, we think we have the chance to really advance that even further. When you look at the total opportunity, there is an aspirational goal, which is we would like to retain 100%, because when you get underneath the hood of why customers leave us short of those who are no longer filing taxes, the number one reason is a life event change. Has something changed in their life that causes them to lose confidence?

We think TurboTax Live is our biggest advance forward and really starting to say you no longer have to leave. You can talk to a CPA, a tax attorney and enrolled agent right here on the screen and get that question answered. So we'll see how high is that, but right now our aspirational goal is to keep every customer that we get with the exception of those who no longer have to file taxes with the government.

Speaker 18

Got it. Got it. And then, Michelle, as we think about the impact of Live going forward, I mean, to the extent you guys have upside on what you guys plan to execute there, what would the impact be on margins, if any?

Speaker 4

Well, I would tell you, Ken, that as we look at margins, we really do look at that at a total business level. We're not looking at it at the excuse me, total company level, not looking at it at the business level. We may have some opportunities with TurboTax Live that has been factored into our guidance for the upcoming year. As Brad said, we're really pleased with how it's performed. We think there's a big opportunity there.

And I would say to consider what we've given with our guidance.

Speaker 3

Got it. That's great. Thank you. Yes, I was going to say we had a rock and roll year in TurboTax Live and the margins in the consumer group were fantastic. So we do not see this as a dilutive business model.

Speaker 18

Looking forward to analyst data, seeing some more guys. Thanks a lot for taking my question.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Brad Reback of Stifel. Your question please.

Speaker 19

Great. Thanks very much. Brad, best of luck. Michelle, maybe just a quick question on the desktop business. I think you talked about unit decline moderating to the single digits from 15% this year.

Can you just sort of go over what's going on with the coverage there? Thanks.

Speaker 15

Do you want me to? Yes,

Speaker 3

so the desktop business as you know we've had customers who are ready and able to move to cloud move over. In fact, we had about 184,000 migrate this year. It's about 500,000 in total over the last few years. The ones that have stayed behind tend to be the more complex customers and they also tend to be QuickBooks Enterprise. Now that we're moving QBO to QBO Advanced and starting our early journey to get an enterprise version in the cloud, we may open up opportunities for customers to move over there, but that business continues to grow well.

So what you heard in the forecast that Michelle provided is that we really are down to the point now where the customers on the desktop that is the best solution for them. And so we don't expect that decline to continue to be the mid teens like we have. We've moved most of those customers

Speaker 2

over to the cloud and the ones that are staying

Speaker 3

are staying for a reason. Once we over to the cloud and the ones that are staying are staying for a reason.

Speaker 2

Once we get QBO Advanced built, then we

Speaker 3

may have an opportunity to get them over into the cloud as well. Great. The new customers are all

Speaker 18

Great.

Speaker 20

The new customers are all coming in on QBO. And so while we've got a little bit of migration and those good customers staying, we aren't really restocking the pond on

Speaker 14

the desktop side. The new guys

Speaker 20

are coming over to QBO and so you're just seeing some natural attrition in there as well.

Speaker 13

Got it. Thanks.

Speaker 3

All right.

Speaker 1

Thank you. Our next question comes from Michael Millman of Millman Research. Your line is open.

Speaker 9

Thank you. So the IRS seems to be very concerned at least publicly about under withholding under withholding and I assume that they're very concerned about taxpayer shock. Do you agree with this? And if so, will this suggest that there might be some more movement to assisted and TurboTax Live? Or do you see this also creating much more walking out of particularly out of assisted and to some extent generally less filing while people try to figure it out.

Speaker 3

Yes, Michael, that's a pretty deep philosophical question that the IRS has put out there, which is our people basically paying the appropriate taxes. I can tell you that the entire industry and certainly TurboTax and our pro products works very hard to make sure 2 things happen that people get qualified and access to the deductions they've earned, but then they pay the taxes that they owe. And we spend a lot of time making sure that those two things happen. I do think that with any tax change, you're going to have people who are going to want to talk about it. Sometimes they talk about it to a friend or family member and we have that with our life community in TurboTax.

Sometimes they want to talk to a pro, which is why TurboTax Live is so important. I can't see any major catalysts or shifts that I think is going to cause people to run back to assisted because of this question the IRS has put out there. I do think it's the right question for industry to continue to solve is how do we make sure people pay the amount they owe, but at the same time get access to the deductions and the things that should stay in their pocket. That's what our job is. And we have to make it very clear and very simple for people to understand.

Speaker 9

Is part of it political and it's a 1 year impact?

Speaker 3

For me, Michael, I have to avoid those political questions tax laws the way they're written and at the same time make sure the taxpayers get the just deductions they deserve. So I don't know what the motivation is. I know the IRS as a partner is a great partner. They've been very objective. They've worked very hard with dentistry to make sure that we're doing the right thing.

And I'm not sure what the motivation was for some of the comments that you're referring to.

Speaker 9

Okay, great. Thank you.

Speaker 3

All right, Michael. Take care.

Speaker 1

Ladies and gentlemen, I'm not showing any further questions. Would you like to close with any additional remarks?

Speaker 3

Sure, Latif. Thank you. And thanks everybody for your participation in your questions. I know we're about 15 minutes over the allotted time, but your kind words along the way and over the many years are also deeply appreciated. I can say this, we are 1 year into the next chapter of growth.

We really feel like we found a new gear. We've got some exciting new services that are coming up with TurboTax Live, QuickBooks Online, Advanced and a whole host of others. We really see evidence that our ecosystem is coming to life. We're unlocking new value customers, for partners and for Intuit. And I firmly believe our best days are ahead of us and we're looking forward to demonstrating that to you and everyone else as we enter fiscal year 2019 beyond.

So thanks again and I'll look forward to speaking with you soon. Take care everybody.

Speaker 1

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for participating. This concludes today's conference call.

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