Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the LegalZoom second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. At this time, all participants are in a listen only mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you need to press star one. Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to Danny Vivier, Head of Investor Relations, to speak today. Please go ahead.
Thank you, operator. Hello, LegalZoom second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Joining me is Dan Wernikoff, our Chief Executive Officer, and Noel Watson, our Chief Financial Officer.
One moment, please.
Thank you, operator. Hello, LegalZoom second quarter 2022 earnings conference call. Joining me is Dan Wernikoff, our Chief Executive Officer, and Noel Watson, our Chief Financial Officer. As a reminder, we will be making forward-looking statements this call. These forward-looking statements can be identified by the use of words such as believe, expect, plan, anticipate, will, intend, and similar expressions, and are not and should not be relied upon as a guarantee of future performance or results. Results could differ from those contemplated by our forward-looking statements. We caution to review the Risk factors section of our reports and filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission for a discussion of factors that could cause our results to differ materially.
The forward-looking statements we make on this call are based on the information available to us as of today's date, and we disclaim any obligation to update any forward-looking statements except as required by law. In addition, we will also discuss certain non-GAAP financial measures. Our CEO and CFO use these measures in making decisions regarding our business, and we believe these measures provide helpful information to investors. Reconciliations of all non-GAAP measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measure are set forth in the Investor Relations section of our website at investors.legalzoom.com. The non-GAAP financial measures are not intended to be considered in isolation or substitute for results prepared in accordance with GAAP. Now I'll turn the call over to Dan.
Thanks, Danny, and good afternoon, everyone. I came to LegalZoom almost three years ago to lead a product transformation. During the pandemic, that journey took a detour. We leaned in hard to the strong tailwind created by COVID, and we clearly benefited from it. As we look ahead to a different macro environment, it's a clear reminder that products win markets, and our product is needed more now than ever before. In today's call, I'll outline how we are sharpening our focus along with clear actions to adjust to a different environment. I want to be clear in today's earnings call that while the comparables caused by lapping COVID are difficult, I don't place blame on the macro for our performance. Instead, I see our inability to gain material share in a very large untapped market as the issue, and the accountability for that squarely on me.
Today, I'll spend a bit more time talking about how we are adjusting to the current environment in the short term while also reiterating our opportunity in the long term. First, I'll give a brief overview of Q2 results. Q2 revenue came in at $164 million, up 9% year-over-year. Transaction revenue was down 9% in the period, while subscription revenue offset this weakness, growing 32%. Our business formations declined 16% in the second quarter, while the U.S. Census formations data was down 12%. During the quarter, we adjusted our marketing strategy, reverting to a more conservative, lower funnel focused approach given the external environment. This intra-quarter shift drove inefficiencies in our spend. Adjusted EBITDA was $18 million in the second quarter. Similar to reverting to a more conservative marketing approach, we've been taking quick actions to manage expenses.
We've completed a reduction in force and expect to eliminate hiring outside our most critical roles, primarily in product and tech in the near term. We're driving durable efficiencies, automating the order process, and driving down variable costs, leading to faster order fulfillment. In post-tax season, we brought staffing levels down, and going forward, we're adjusting our mix of experts to a more variable cost structure that will align with demand. We continued to repurchase shares under our current authorization during the quarter. Given our confidence in the business, we are and intend to remain active in the back half of the year. During the quarter, we continue to make progress against our three growth vectors, scaling the core business, building an SMB ecosystem, and integrating experts into the core experience.
We know we need to meet customers where they are, especially in this recessionary environment, and that means segmenting the lineup and innovating against the needs of cost-sensitive SMBs up to those seeking attorneys at an affordable price. Lineup testing remains on track. 20% of traffic is exposed to the test, and we have a pipeline of variant lineup tests in development. Our goal remains a national rollout by the end of this year, recognizing testing will be ongoing for some time. Although optimizing a new lineup will take some time, early results are promising, showing an increase in conversion rates, formation growth, and share gains. The results are strongest in mobile, and we'll continue to apply those learnings back into the desktop experience.
We're also seeing the mix shift in favor of subscription revenue, aligned with our long-term strategy of reducing both the upfront cost to form a business and our dependence on a transactional business model. In the past, our product experience was limited to the formations workflow, an artifact of a transactional focus. A priority to address this is MyLLC. MyLLC is the newly created experience that will become the hub of SMB compliance, driving engagement and therefore retention, while also creating a channel to introduce new services when SMBs need them after and outside of the formations channel. In the second quarter, 98% of new formations customers created a MyLLC account, up from 28% a year ago. Time on site is increasing as well. The integration with Wix is a great example of the opportunity with MyLLC.
LegalZoom customers can now create a custom website by linking directly to Wix from their MyLLC accounts. Soon, our customers will see a personalized site directly from their MyLLC account without any effort, leveraging the data they provided at formation. Finally, a quick update on LZ Tax. We exited the second quarter with over 22,000 paying subscribers, generating over $35 million of annualized recurring revenue. Having fully launched 12 months ago to our LLC base, there's a clear synergy between our core legal services and tax. This service is very early in its life, and there is significant room to improve. Our channel outperformed during peak season, with attach rates now stabilizing to pre-tax season levels. Given what we've learned, we have opportunities to make the service more accessible and relevant to SMBs that are pre-revenue through pricing and packaging changes.
Beyond pricing, we also had operational challenges in our first year that made engaging with accountants and completing a return too onerous. To be clear, the Net Promoter Score when engaging with our experts was the highest of any experience we deliver, but the process outside of that interaction was too complex. As a result, we are seeing higher attrition than forecasted. We can do better and are turning our attention to the next evolution of this service. The need is there, the channel is incredibly powerful, and it's ours to win. Stepping back and taking a longer view from the end of 2019 when I started, we are a vastly different company and business. Over 75% of our employee base and our entire leadership team is new since I arrived.
We've gone from forming under 300,000 SMBs to being on pace to do greater than 450,000 this year. We had just over 900,000 subscribers. We now have close to 1.4 million, with subscription revenue 80% higher than it was in Q2 2019. Part of that is due to the launch of LZ Tax and the acquisition of Earth Class Mail, further building out our ecosystem of services and incrementally reducing our dependence on the formation macro. Business formations are still healthy and have stabilized at more than 50% above pre-COVID levels. Remote work is enabling side hustles and new SMB tools and platforms are lowering the barrier to create a business. We're confident in the health of business formations and will also continue to expand our services beyond the formation stage.
That said, since we went public about a year ago, conditions have changed. As the macro moved from a tailwind to a headwind, we have to acknowledge that we still have a largely transactional business model. While we continue to drive improvements in mix, roughly 60% of our total revenue is still a result of transaction volume and the new subscriptions attached to a formation. While we made progress detaching our performance from the macro, we haven't made enough, and our back half 2022 guidance will illustrate that. During the IPO, we talked about extending our brand position and scaling our marketing efforts. That's gonna change as we begin leveraging the brand lead we have and doubling down on the product. Leaders consolidate in down markets, and the key measurement for us will be demonstrating material share gains.
Reducing brand spending commitments will also allow us to be more nimble. The reduction in media spend will impact our transaction and first-year subscription revenues. Additionally, as the economy contracts, we anticipate SMBs will spend less and scrutinize existing spend more, which affects our attach and renewal opportunities, particularly for our Registered Agent and compliance products. Given these adjustments, we are reducing full year revenue guidance by 7 points from a midpoint of $655 million or 14% year-over-year growth to a midpoint of $614 million or 7% growth. With this top line reduction, we are managing expenses closely. As I mentioned, we are reducing CAM, limiting hiring to only the most critical roles, primarily in products, eliminating discretionary spend, and accelerating our platform investments that drive durable efficiencies.
Despite our top line revision, we are increasing our full year Adjusted EBITDA guidance to $55 million or 9% of revenue. For the rest of the year, our focus will be on product-driven share gains, more efficient growth with reduction in expenses, and lowering CAM primarily in brand spend, allowing us to err on the side of being nimble and responsive to this environment. Given these changes, in 2023, we expect to grow share by 15% as a result of the new lineup while also delivering an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 15% as we begin to rely more on a product-led strategy to drive growth. The last two and a half years have been a dynamic period for small businesses.
We've seen the fear of the unknown due to COVID unlock into strong formations growth, small business innovation, and industry and sector rotations that continue to evolve with our understanding of and policies related to COVID. We've seen SMBs transform their businesses, filling in critical gaps in the economy, all while changing how they work. It's been an unprecedented time, and we're inspired by the ingenuity of the entrepreneurs that continue to build. We try to run LegalZoom with the same mentality. We're evolving our business model, innovating in new adjacent spaces, and doing it with a team that is adjusting how we work to evolve with the environment we're operating within. We're focused on what we can control and seek to mitigate the risks we can.
I'm more confident than ever in the growth opportunity in front of us and feel the changes we are making now will make us even stronger in the future. With that, I'll hand the call over to Noel.
Thanks, Dan, and good afternoon, everyone. I'll start today with a review of our performance in the second quarter and end with our outlook for the remainder of the year. Total GAAP revenue in the period came in at $164 million, up 9% year-over-year at the top end of our guidance range. As expected, transaction revenue was down 9% year-over-year at $67 million as we continue to lap challenging comparisons from the prior year's surge in business formations. We completed 113,000 business formations in Q2, down 16% compared to the same period last year. Average order value came in at $296 in the second quarter, up sequentially from the first quarter and in line with typical seasonal patterns in the business.
Year-over-year, AOV was up 5% due to an acceleration of fulfillment and discontinuation of our lower-priced DIY trademark products. Going forward, we expect AOV to decline year-over-year in the second half, primarily driven by the phased rollout of our freemium offering. As we've discussed, we expect the introduction of a free SKU to drive significant volume and share growth, but at a cost to our transaction revenue. Subscription revenue continued to perform nicely in the second quarter, coming in at $91 million, up 32% year-over-year. That said, we are expecting subscription growth to slow materially beginning in the third quarter and into next year. The primary driver is the impact of the slowing macro environment on our formation volumes, which in turn reduces the number of gross additions, particularly within our registered agent and compliance-related subscription offerings.
We are also beginning to see pressure in our retention rates for these core products, which we believe is a result of increasing spend sensitivity among our SMB customers. ARPU was $252 in the second quarter, up 10% year-over-year. We expect similar growth in the back half of the year, thanks to higher ARPU services like LZ Tax and Earth Class Mail becoming a greater share of our subscription business. Partnership revenue is down 21% year-over-year in the second quarter to $6 million as we lap legacy partnerships no longer in line with our strategic direction. We expect partner revenue to remain steady on an absolute dollar basis for the remainder of the year. Now turning to expenses and margins, where all of the following metrics are on a non-GAAP basis.
Gross margin came in at approximately 67% of revenue in the second quarter, down from 68% in Q2 of last year. The slight year-over-year decline was largely driven by prior investments we've made to grow our in-house CPAs supporting LZ Tax. Sales and marketing costs were $68 million in the second quarter, or 41% of revenue, up from 39% in Q2 of last year. Customer acquisition spend came in at $45 million, up 2% year-over-year. We incurred approximately $6 million of creative production costs in the period that we do not expect to incur in the second half of the year. As Dan mentioned, efficiencies were below expectations, largely due to inter-quarter shifts in our spend allocation.
We plan to reduce our media spend in the back half of the year and pivot to lower-funnel direct response channels, which we believe provides the greatest degree of flexibility to help us navigate an uncertain operating environment. Technology and development spend of $11 million and general administrative spend of $13 million both ticked down in the second quarter on an absolute dollar basis. We are rigorously managing our fixed cost structure and reducing non-essential discretionary spend. We're also limiting new hire activity to only the most critical roles, which we expect will largely fall into the tech and dev domain. Adjusted EBITDA was ahead of the top end of our guidance range at $18 million for the quarter compared to $22 million in the second quarter of 2021. Deferred revenue declined $1 million in the period.
In the second quarter, we continued to execute on our 150 million share repurchase authorization. We repurchased a total of 2.96 million shares of our common stock at an average per share price of $12.85, for a total repurchase of $38 million. We have continued to repurchase shares in the third quarter. As of June 30th, 2022, we have cash and cash equivalents of $260 million and no debt outstanding. As Dan hit on the key drivers of our revised guidance earlier in the call, I'll focus my comments now on the specifics of our guide for the third quarter and full year of 2022.
For the third quarter of 2022, we expect total revenue of $149 million-$151 million, or 1% year-over-year growth at the midpoint. We expect subscription revenue growth to decelerate in Q3, driven by multiple quarters of declining formation volume, pressure on our core retention rates, and a slight impact from LZ Tax seasonality. LZ Tax revenues skew toward the first half of the year when tax credit needs are greatest. We expect Adjusted EBITDA of $16 million-$18 million or 11% of revenue at the midpoint. As Dan mentioned, we are pulling non-committed brand spend in the third quarter to allow for greater flexibility. We expect customer acquisition spend to decline year-over-year in the third quarter, but we'll continue to respond dynamically based on market conditions.
For the full year of 2022, we expect total revenue of $612 million-$616 million, with 7% growth at the midpoint. We expect Adjusted EBITDA of $55 million, or 9% of revenue at the midpoint. In 2023, we are committed to managing expenses and realizing efficiencies from our infrastructure investments and are focused on driving leverage in our margins. As Dan mentioned, we expect to grow share by 15% while also delivering an Adjusted EBITDA margin of 15%. With that, let's open the call for questions.
As a reminder, to ask a question, you need to press star one one on your telephone. Once again, that's star one one. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Our first question will come from the line of Ron Josey from Citi. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks for taking the question. You know, Noel, Dan, I wanted to follow up maybe on your last comment on just, growing share in 2023. Can you just talk about the drivers and what might lead to that continued share gain as sub growth, you know, expected to decline materially in the back half of this year with formation slowing down? I guess a two-part question, Dan, Noel. One is, what gives you confidence to share gains in 2023? Is it the new products that are being launched in the national rollout? Just bigger picture, maybe more on macro and business formations overall. You know, what do you think needs to happen to maybe turn these results around overall to achieve those share gains going forward? Thank you.
Thanks for the question, Ron. Yeah, on the first point, you know, there's two big goals we've put out for 2023. One is to demonstrate margin of 15%, which is just the thing we can control, which is cost and ensuring that we're driving efficiencies as we scale this business. The other is a 15% share gain. The share gain is an early reflection of what we see when we innovate on our lineup. We talked about this in the past. We've had a lineup that is a premium priced DIY solution, and we know that we're a premium brand and many customers are willing to pay that premium on top of what they would be able to do with the Secretary of State.
We also know that there are other types of customers out there. There's people who are seeking expertise, legal expertise from an attorney, but they can't support it. We have a premium component to the lineup. Separately, there are people who are cost sensitive but really want some extra guidance. We're going after that group as well with the freemium component to our lineup. Early indication, and again, we've been testing this and sequencing different variants in different states, and, you know, the read that we're getting is very positive. We see, you know, customer growth relative to the control, which is our existing lineup. We see share gains. We see a mix shift going more aggressively towards a subscription model versus today's transactional model.
All of that's making us confident. When you start to look at it in some components of the test, like mobile, for instance, we see even a higher acceleration, which is giving us some indication of what we have to do to even see higher conversion rates than what we're seeing today. Yeah, it's a reflection of what we expect to see from a completely rebuilt lineup and a set of new offerings that are gonna be in market next year. On the macro, you know, that's a question that I think is multilayered. I mean, what we've done as we go into this guide is we've really been thoughtful about what we think is gonna be happening in the back half.
There's different sets of data that we have than maybe some of our peer group as well. I'll just walk through a couple of things. First off, just the macro itself, relative to our expectations, has been a little softer than we thought it would be. One of the things that we haven't talked as much about is, you know, we also have visibility into dissolution. We can see how businesses are not only forming, but we can also see failure rates. We've talked about this in prior calls that, you know, our 13-month retention rate has been going down while some of our older cohorts have been going up and overall churn has remained relatively stable. If you really think about the root cause of that, it's dissolution.
Dissolution from our data peaked at the end of last year, but you still have to work through that because we have an annual subscription renewal process. We're seeing some of that impact or some of that headwind still play out. The good news is the dissolution rates are getting lower than they had been all throughout 2021. We wanna see that resolve itself as well before we start to, you know, get bullish on the macro.
I'd say the last piece, as you think about how we're considering our guidance, we are anticipating, if we aren't already in one, that we'll be in a recession and that would impact some of the attach metrics that we have and some of the retention metrics that we have as well. That's just us being maybe a little bit conservative, but we wanna see that completely stabilized before we, you know, turn the corner and have a little bit more of a bullish point of view about the macro. Ron, I just wanted to build on Dan's earlier comment around share gains.
Just to also note, we've talked about being willing to trade off in the transaction revenue for the benefit of subscription. This is an example where incremental customer growth, formations growth, there is a trade off with average order value because we're offering a free SKU. It's really leveraging the benefit of the ecosystem that we've been building out in the subscription side to help drive long-term customer value, but at the trade-off of the upfront transactional revenue.
Great. Thank you, Dan. Thank you, Noel.
Thanks, Ron.
One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Andrew Boone from JMP Securities. Your line is open.
Good afternoon, guys, and thanks for taking my questions. Two please. I wanna understand more of the macro. It sounds like you guys are seeing a deterioration in terms of business formations in terms of the data you have. If you look at this morning, U.S. Census Bureau kind of reported July was down 4%. Are you seeing something different than what's publicly available via the U.S. Census Bureau, or how should we think about that? Then just going to marketing efficiency on a go-forward basis, can you guys just talk more about what your plans are in terms of increasing efficiency and just help us understand what changes there? Thanks so much.
Thanks, Andrew. Yeah, on the macro, I mean, it may be slightly redundant with what I just answered, but we definitely saw the macro a little bit lighter than we had expected. Yes, there was a publish today on the census data, and it was a 4% decline. We've also noted that there's, you know, month-to-month there are anomalies in the reporting that we see from the census data. If you recall, the prior month was much lower. I think the thing that, you know, is probably a little bit more of a unique data point that we see is we see the relationship between formations and dissolutions.
As I mentioned, dissolutions are a little bit of a foreshadowing for us around retention and renewal because we have some existing subscriptions that are annual subscribers, and they're looking for compliance on their entity. If their businesses fail, you know, we have to reflect that it will not be a renewal. Again, the good news is we're sort of working our way through that. We probably have a quarter or two, and we're starting to see some of that reversal already happening, but that is a little bit of a unique data point that we have. Then separately, I think, you know, I mentioned it, we are a little bit conservative in how we're thinking about the back half of the year. Small business and consumer sentiment is quite low right now.
You know, to Noel's point that he added on, some of our add-on subscriptions are very high ARPU. I mean, when we talk about our accounting subscription as an example, you're talking about, you know, a $1,500 subscription. We do expect those to be impacted if there is a recessionary type environment. On the efficiency gains, that's something we've been working at diligently for a long time. Before we could even go into the market with a freemium solution, we knew we had to automate everything in our back office. We've been working on a project which provides straight through processing so that orders kind of flow automatically through to the Secretary of State. Then when they're returned, they can be automatically compiled for the customers.
That project's gone better than expected, and we continue to accelerate not just the efficiency, but actually the customer experience because now orders are processed much faster than they used to be. We've, you know, really considered where we need to grow OpEx in the future, and we're focusing very much on product and technology as the place we continue to grow. We also are recognizing that there's areas where we can invest less and run a little bit leaner that are outside of that. You know, one additional point there is tax, which is, you know, we always mentioned in the first season, we were gonna solve for the customer experience and not so much for efficiency. Post tax season, we now have a really good sense of the curve.
We know what we should expect in terms of, you know, the number of CPAs required to support our small businesses, and now we're really executing on that.
Andrew, just to build on the marketing efficiencies question. You know, we did experience some headwinds and efficiencies this quarter. You know, historically, we've been shifting our spend more into our media mix modeling. This quarter, just given the uncertainty, we actually started to shift back into performance channels, which did create some inefficiencies in the quarter. The reason we did that is just given the uncertain environment, we wanted more flexibility and to be nimble and have performance-based marketing that can react quickly to changes in the macro, and so we can respond dynamically.
Yeah. Actually, that, you know, thinking about what that means in the back half, it means really bringing down more of our brand spend very specifically. But as we had seen in media mix modeling before, actually, that was, you know, looked like good returning spend. You know, media mix modeling is sort of looking back at history. If you're heading into a new environment, we just wanted to be cautious in terms of that spend.
Thank you.
One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Matthew Condon from William Blair. Your line is open. Great. Thanks, guys.
Wanted to dig into the retention comments a little bit more. You mentioned the dissolutions are one factor that's driving that higher. I think in the prepared remarks, it was also cited that LZ Tax attrition was higher than expected. Anything else that you're seeing that's driving the expectation to have churn higher in the back half besides just the sort of general macro concerns that you have?
Yeah, I mean, I think there's a couple things that and I'll just replay it. I mean, dissolutions is really interesting. We haven't talked about it before on a call, so it's probably worth unpacking. When the macro or when COVID hit, we actually saw formations accelerate and dissolutions almost go to 0% growth, which is really unique. They usually move in parallel. As you got to the late stage of stimulus, they were both growing really fast, which, you know, is a little bit more of a healthy environment, but we also feel like propped up because of stimulus. As we got then to the end of last year, growth in formations was going down, but actually the dissolutions was going up.
That's kind of the worst environment, and that's what we're sort of building out of right now. You can see that impact over a period of, you know, four quarters post that dissolution rate. You know, that's one thing that's, you know, always impacted our thirteen-month. We've talked about this, the 13th-month retention rate has been going down, and it's been, you know, offset because of older cohorts, which are actually showing a better profile. The reality is, as it builds over time, though, you know, that thirteen-month becomes a little bit larger. LZ Tax is different. You know, I would say two things happened.
We overperformed on the channel, meaning we attached way more people than we thought, and then we were not providing as strong an experience for those customers as we know we can. The attach rate was down. The overall result actually was pretty much what we had expected, but we just got there a little bit differently. The good news there is we understand pretty much exactly what we need to do to resolve the retention issue in LZ Tax.
Got it. Very helpful. Just one follow-up in terms of the subscription guide. Maybe it'd be helpful if you could help us understand how seasonality LZ Tax caused in the second quarter, because I believe even if we just assumed no sequential subscription growth in the back half of the year, we would be, you know, decently ahead of 20% subscription revenue growth? What are the components that are driving that, you know, maybe from a numeric perspective, subscription revenue to be sequentially down in the third and fourth quarter relative to the second quarter?
Yeah, I'm not sure we're gonna break that out into the specifics 'cause there's, you know, there's a few drivers. Obviously we're still talking relatively small dollars overall. But LZ Tax was a component of the drivers, just the fact that there is some revenue recognition timing that's tied to the timing of tax prep, and so you see it heavier in Q1 and Q2. That is a, you know, an important component of it. But it's also a reflection of the slowing in our core business. What we talked to in our prepared remarks is the slowing of business formations growth, the last couple of quarters, and that flows into our kind of gross additions on our subscription side.
There's a bit of a lag in terms of as you start to see that flow through our revenue, and so you're seeing some of the core slowdown as a reflection of a prior period slowing formations growth.
Got it. Thanks, guys. Appreciate it.
Thank you. One moment for our next question. Our next question comes to the line of Elizabeth Porter from Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.
Great. Thank you so much. It's really encouraging to see the focus on controlling costs given the tougher environment. I wanted to ask about the just the nascency of the market you guys are in today and kind of the education that's needed? What's the risk that lower CAM could impact demand despite having the new product line up? Alternatively, kind of how has the market matured for these solutions over the last year? Thanks.
Thanks for the question, Elizabeth. You know, just going back to that margin goal, the vast majority of it is really a combination of reductions through COGS and thinking about the efficiencies around it. Also, you know, OpEx and reductions outside of tech. A portion will also be non-media marketing spend, which I think, you know, that's an area where we can control it. We have some great creative production this year, and we probably won't be deploying it in the back half of this year. It's not like there's a significant amount of CAM reduction required next year to actually get to the margin that we expect to get to. So I think we still think it's really important.
What I would say is probably most important, and we've already demonstrated this through testing, is, you know, having the right offering. If you looked at our funnel, you know, and you think about the number of people who start with LegalZoom, you know, we get down to a very small portion of them that complete. The biggest drop off areas that we see that are controllable is when we get to pricing. When we think about the opportunity to drive more share, it's really completing the orders that are already going through our funnel by segmenting the offerings so that it meets them exactly where they are. If you're low cost, we wanna get you started and into our ecosystem, as easily as possible, and we'll monetize them over time throughout their life cycle.
If you're looking for an attorney, you know, we also wanna capture that. Today we just don't offer those front and center in our lineup. I think, you know, that's always been our plan is to, you know, sort of first couple of years is make sure we sort of develop the market. At a certain point it was, let's make sure we're innovating in the product to really drive that share gain.
Great. On the segmented, you know, lineup and understanding it's still pretty early, but on the free solution, any sort of early reads on how the free product might be attaching subscriptions or partner solutions relative to the paid product?
Yeah, great question. You know, it's hard to give you a very specific answer. What I would say is, you know, we definitely see lower attach rates, but we obviously see higher bookings because, you know, we're driving significantly more conversion through it when you're talking about subscriptions. That's exactly how we want it to work. You know, we don't think we'll be able to maintain attach rates to these customers, but we want the, you know, the number of customers to sort of overwhelm and overcome it to the point where it's just good in the aggregate.
This, by the way, is without customizing any of the subscriptions to also reflect the fact that they're coming in as a free customer. Over time, you would start to think about how do you segment your subscriptions. You would have a lower end Registered Agent subscription, and you would have a premium Registered Agent subscription. You'd really target it off who's coming into the lineup. The interesting thing here is, again, we're looking at a lot of early data, and we're encouraged. This is data that's really using the ingredients that we have in our lineup versus starting to build it out and innovate, specifically off those segments.
Got it. Thank you.
Thank you.
One moment for our next question. Our next question will come from the line of Mario Lu from Barclays. Your line is open.
Great. Thanks for taking the question. The first one is more higher level in terms of, you know, as we kind of enter a tougher macro environment, how would you describe the competitive landscape kind of shifting over the past couple of quarters? And do you view, you know, your $200 million+ cash on the balance sheet, do you see that as mostly an advantage compared to your peers? Or how would you compare the strategy in terms of capital allocation? Thank you.
Yeah, you know, it's, I think what's interesting is even starting in 2021 at the beginning of the year, given the fact that formations were starting to really take off, we did see more participation in our category by both low-end providers, but also from like adjacencies. Actually that's made our marketing spends a little bit tougher, right? Because if you think about a lot of the e-commerce players, I mean, they were spending into this pretty aggressively, and a lot of what they were spending into was actually, you know, our keywords, because they market directly to businesses that are just forming. I would almost say that that's made a bigger impact from a marketing perspective.
Then from a competitive standpoint, we haven't seen anybody do anything that we would say is terribly innovative, but they are competing on price, which is exactly why we're doing the freemium offering. The $200 million on the balance sheet, I think is a competitive advantage. I mean, we can be not only a little bit more aggressive and also knowing that we're cash flow positive, and playing offense during a time like this and consolidating. Again, that's why we're doing something like freemium, which may, you know, it may be a trade-off in the short term, to really drive lifetime value. You know, there are things that we're looking at to sort of think about how do we measure success. One is one-year bookings, but one's also lifetime value.
There's things that we might do there. Also, you know, there are opportunities to accelerate our roadmap through talent acquisition that I think are real opportunities where it can both be something that we desire to integrate into our platform, but also just an awesome product team, because hiring over the last couple of years has been very difficult, specifically in tech. Both of those are opportunities for us. We think in this environment, there's probably gonna be heightened activity or opportunities on the M&A side. Just having a strong balance sheet allows us to be opportunistic if those opportunities do come our way.
Great. Thank you both.
Thanks, Mario.
One moment for our next question. Our next question comes from the line of Brent Thill from Jefferies. Your line is open.
Thank you. This is John again for Brent Thill. I have two questions. On the subscription side, obviously it's been, you know, better than expected growth for a while now. Is there a way to think about, you know, how to disaggregate that between, you know, how much is from kind of maybe retention or converting of the base versus kind of formation additions? Then second, if you could maybe talk a little bit more about the, I guess the going forward trend on AOV and subs ARPU. You know, what's gonna be the dynamic and the drivers related to that? Thank you.
On the subs question and disaggregation, and I think you were pointing to the difference between retention versus the acquisition piece. You know, I don't know if we wanna necessarily get into breaking out those different components, and as I mentioned before, they have been moving based off both the growth rate in formations and the growth rate in dissolution. I think that the disaggregation that's maybe a little bit more helpful is there's our core subscriptions that are tied to entity compliance, and that's the registered agent and compliance subscription. Then there's the newer stuff, which is, you know, LZ Tax and things like Earth Class Mail. Those two are untethered by the formations growth right now because they're sort of in an early phase of being developed.
What we're seeing is, you know, really strong growth in those two. What you're seeing on the core subscriptions is exactly how we described it. You know, we're getting to five quarters now of kind of reduced or flat formations. You know, what that means is, you know, we're seeing both the dissolution rate impact them, but also just flat acquisition. The retention rates though have remained relatively stable if you think of the aggregate from a churn perspective. There's a dynamic underneath it where, you know, the 13-month is impacted by dissolution and the older cohorts are hardening better than we had expected. That's probably how I'd answer that. I don't know if you wanna hit the AOV one, Noel.
Yeah. On the AOV and ARPU side, I would say as it relates to AOV, and we touched on this in our remarks, we expect AOV to be down year-over-year in the back half. That's in part due to the testing that we're doing on freemium with our freemium offering, and that free SKU obviously puts downward pressure on AOV, and we would expect that to continue as that expands its rollout and then normalizes. On the ARPU side, we continue to see strength in ARPU. We expect that to be durable through the end of this year.
You know, to the extent that LZ Tax and ECM, which are higher ARPU offerings, continue to become a larger percentage of the mix, then that will continue to provide some upward pressure on our ARPU.
Yeah. It really comes down to focusing on the experience in LZ Tax so we improve retention and, again, we know what to do there. In ECM, you know, we have opportunities to better integrate it. The acquisition side hasn't yet inflected, and a lot of those changes are being made right now where we will start to see that begin to grow. Both of those will change the mix.
Thank you.
Thank you. That's all the time we have for Q&A today. This concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect. Everyone, have a great day.