Hello, and welcome to today's N-able first quarter 2022 earnings call. My name is Bailey, and I will be your moderator for today's call. All lines will be muted during the presentation portion of the call, with an opportunity for questions and answers at the end. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. I would now like to pass the conference over to Griffin Gyr with N-able. Griffin, please go ahead.
Thank you, Bailey, and welcome everyone to N-able's first quarter 2022 earnings call. With me today are John Pagliuca, N-able's president and CEO, and Tim O'Brien, EVP and CFO. Following our prepared remarks, we will open the line for a question-and-answer session. This call is being simultaneously webcast on our investor relations website at investors. N- able. com. There, you can also find our earnings press release, which is intended to supplement our prepared remarks during today's call. Certain statements made during this call are forward-looking statements, including those concerning our financial outlook, our market opportunities, our continued expectations following the spin-off of our business from SolarWinds in July 2021, and the impact of the global economic environment on our business. These statements are based on currently available information and assumptions, and we undertake no duty to update this information except as required by law.
These statements are also subject to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those related to the spin-off transaction completed last year. Additional information concerning these statements and the risks and uncertainties associated with them is highlighted in today's earnings release and in our filings with the SEC. Copies are available from the SEC or on our investor relations website. Furthermore, we will discuss various non-GAAP financial measures on today's call. Unless otherwise specified, when we refer to financial measures, we will be referring to the non-GAAP financial measures. A reconciliation of certain GAAP to non-GAAP financial measures discussed on today's call is available in our earnings press release on our investor relations website. Now I will turn the call over to John.
Thanks, [Jeff], and thank you all for joining us today. We are pleased with both our execution and financial performance in Q1. Our revenue growth was 12% on a constant currency basis that exceeded the high end of our outlook, leveraging the strength of our data protection as a service and security offerings. Operationally, we are on track with the initiatives we outlined last summer in preparation for our spin-off. Our investment in partner success is resulting in better retention figures, more cross-sell opportunities, and a better customer experience. Our increased investments in product has allowed us to reestablish our cadence to bringing additional offerings to our MSPs and is delivering a disruptive data protection offering that is winning in the marketplace. Our investments in additional sales motions and channel expansion is unlocking opportunities in new geographies and areas.
As I mentioned on the last call, this year we are rallying behind the phrase earn more N-able fans. So far in 2022, it has really galvanized our strategy and accelerated our momentum. As you know, we call our MSP customers our partners because our relationship goes deeper than a mere transaction or a sale. Our partners look to N-able to provide them with world-class technology that allows them to efficiently and securely scale their business and support the IT needs of the customers they need. Despite all the noise in the market, we remain focused on a different kind of disruption, placing powerful and disruptive technology and business tools in the hands of our partners, enabling them to achieve their growth goals and increase their value to their customer base. Because when they grow, we grow.
We know that in order for us to earn more fans, we need to execute on our mission to empower MSP partners to solve their most pressing problems and keep them secure and ahead of their competition. We have made a long-term commitment to our partner success and continuously improve on all fronts. We've talked about our industry tailwinds. The digital evolution continues to accelerate and pose both opportunity and challenges to SMEs. The levels of IT complexity, labor scarcity, and rising cyber threats are increasing in a way that underscores the importance of IT service providers. This aligns with our strategy and our business model. First, IT complexity is rapidly increasing. What this means for MSPs is that their customers will continue to ask them to manage widespread digital assets with increasing IT demands.
So they will need to automate and secure new processes and workflows to ensure their SMEs, their customers, remain productive. N-able's commitment to allow MSPs to manage everything means that our partners are able to meet this move toward a hybrid work and manage the additional complexity of diverse device types, cloud computing environments, and SaaS applications. Second, labor scarcity, specifically for tech talent, affects everyone from SMEs and larger enterprises who are relying on outsourcing to fill in talent to MSPs themselves who need to do more with less labor. Our technology is designed and built to allow technicians to automate and MSPs and the businesses they support to scale.
Third, cybersecurity threats are on the rise and make the work our MSPs do not just more important, but in fact mission-critical to business continuity for hundreds of thousands of businesses around the world. In our current geopolitical situation, both state and non-state actors pose a heightened threat to businesses in Europe and around the world. MSPs are looking to us to provide them with enterprise-grade security solutions with the ease of use that SMEs require to help them stay ahead of the security curve and provide this core risk management function. A lot of our activity on the product front directly addresses these industry tailwinds. I mentioned briefly on our last call that we had launched N-able DNS Filtering in February as a new security offering to our partners.
This is a cloud-based, AI-driven content filtering and threat protection service that is designed to let MSPs better monitor, manage, and proactively protect and secure their customers' network, regardless of location or connection. This is ideal for hybrid work environments. We have seen a strong pickup since launch, and we expect continued acceleration into the second quarter. We have for a long time been on the cutting edge of data protection, with one of the first true offerings of cloud-first data protection as a service for MSPs. Last week, we announced the launch of Cove Data Protection.
We believe that Cove is disruptive to the market for its fundamentally different architecture that enables MSPs to modernize their approach to data protection and allow seamless backup, archive, and recovery of data, eliminating up to 90% of labor time and moving roughly 60 times less data, simplifying operations with this transformative solution. Leading into this launch, we celebrated a few milestones that validate the power Cove Data Protection brings to the market. We received the Backup and Disaster Recovery award from Cloud Computing Magazine, which recognizes excellence in the advancement of cloud computing technologies, celebrating our cloud-first data protection and quick and reliable recovery from events such as ransomware attacks.
We announced in February, since launching our backup solution for Microsoft 365 domains in December of 2019, we are protecting more than 4,000 N-able partners across more than 25,000 customer domains and over 900,000 Exchange mailboxes. Since that announcement, we are now protecting over 33,000 M365 domains as of the end of April, and that number continues to grow. We believe traditional local-first image backup does not suit the needs of our modern IT environments, and certainly misses the mark for MSPs. Our solution was built from the ground up to be cloud first, unlike other solutions that claim to be in the cloud, but are simply legacy architectures with bolted-on secondary cloud features that add complexity. Cove Data Protection provides appliance-free, direct-to-cloud capability with advanced disaster recovery benefits and designed-in cost efficiency, scalability, and reliability that MSPs and their customers require.
I'll illustrate this with a feature that is currently in customer preview and slated for general availability in early Q3. It's called Standby Image, and it's an elegant tool set that allows MSPs to have backups sent to the cloud while they maintain a standby image at the location of their choice, allowing for fast and flexible disaster recovery without the need to purchase proprietary appliances. Architecturally, Cove addresses the primary need for modern data management systems. Our partners are telling us, for example, that with Cove, they're able to go from 40 hours spent per month on backup down to four hours, from three full-time support technicians down to around a 0.5 Of a full-time equivalent, and from 95 tickets per day down to nine. That is a massive impact for services-oriented organizations and allows them to focus on more strategic value-add work.
Data protection has long been a growth driver for N-able, and we believe the launch of Cove will accelerate its importance to our business. A recent report from William Blair estimated the TAM for data management at 37 billion in 2024, highlighting the market potential. Though we are not yet known or well-known in the backup and disaster recovery space, we have seen time and time again that when our partners or new prospects switch from a competitive solution to N-able, they consistently come back with very positive feedback on our data protection capabilities. As we put effort behind establishing our brand in data protection, we expect to see even greater growth.
We just announced that our N-able Mail Assure email security solution has been awarded first place in the latest VBSpam comparative review, receiving the highest score both in this latest testing in March 2022 and in September of last year. The tests were conducted by Virus Bulletin, an industry-renowned test laboratory and an important reference for specialists and businesses concerned with computer security. We received the highest VBSpam+ rating with a malware catch rate of 99.96% and 0 false positives. In addition, we are conducting an external preview of an additional feature called Mail Assure Private Portal, which secures emails beyond managed devices to the recipient with audited access and encryption. This is a high-demand feature for our MSP partners, and the feedback we are getting so far has been very positive.
Finally, we are in the midst of a soft launch of our new professional services offering, which is designed to help MSPs better deal with one of the industry dynamics I mentioned earlier, specifically labor scarcity issues. Known as N‑able N‑hanced Services . We've structured this offering to help our partners rapidly unlock the potential of N-able products, optimize their teams and technician efficiency, and accelerate time to value by delivering solutions to their customers faster. The guidance and training we provide is instrumental in helping MSPs grow their business and improve efficiency in everything from migrations to onboarding to ongoing support. Above the base level services we've always provided, we are introducing a fee-based premium level for partners who require more of a differentiated support experience for their business needs.
This is a direct response to partner feedback and the culmination of a significant investment we've made in service delivery that goes to the heart of what N-able's partners value about us. We believe this will open the door to even larger scale opportunities. Now, as I did on our last earnings call, I want to continue the practice of sharing some notable wins. First, we won a large six-figure N-central deal with a multinational medical research and testing company based in Europe. They were looking for a single pane of glass to manage their global assets and the ability to automate maintenance tasks over and above standard patching requirements. Though they initially contacted us based on our remote management reputation, they were sold on N-central's advanced security and full visibility to their highly dispersed and specialized global infrastructure.
Second, we sold in a near six-figure deal for our Cove Data Protection solution to a large MSP that is primarily a Mac shop. Not only was this a great win to replace a competitor, the partner was convinced by our superior value in technology and service, which allows them to reduce and refocus their technician time. They also liked that Cove provided them with a significant advantage in terms of the profitability and scalability of their business. We also had some notable expansion deals in the quarter. First, we had a significant expansion deal of close to $300,000 ARR with a managed security services provider, or MSSP, who is already a large partner of ours for N-central. They were being courted by a competitor for their primary security suite.
After we came in with a competitive solution, including SentinelOne EDR, our significant edge was our support, access to professional services, and the ease of integration with their current offering. Second, one of our smaller RMM partners in the U.K. was acquired by a larger MSP, who was using a mixture of homegrown and competitive tools. They were considering how to scale themselves for the integration and the growth they had planned. We demonstrated that N-central was the right tool for them to expand their service offerings as they consolidated their business. Just as importantly, compared to the competitors they were actively assessing, we were the right long-term, attentive partner that would focus on their technology and their business above all. The result was a near $200,000 ARR expansion deal, initially managing more than 20,000 endpoints.
Third, in a mid-hundred K ARR expansion deal, a California-based N-central and security partner was exploring replacing their backup solution, looking to reduce complexity, improve their reliability and efficiency, and optimize the time and people resources it was taking to offer backup services to their customer. Our solution drastically reduced the time they spent on backup, provided them with on-demand support to augment their team, and gave them the scalability to grow their business. In the first half of 2021, we reorganized and changed the way we engage with our customers by providing dedicated partner success reps. We put the focus on what our customers need, not on what we are trying to sell. And by changing the lens and experience, we are exposing sizable opportunities alongside our partners.
Since our change, we have seen the opportunities created by our partner success teams have had the highest close rate of any opportunity we've created. As we continue to invest in the expansion of our channel teams in a new market, our overall sales output continues to improve sequentially, continuing the trend we saw throughout 2021. We generated a quarter-over-quarter increase in our total sales pipeline, with March our biggest month for pipeline creation in the last two years. Looking ahead, we will be executing in the near term on Cove, N-hanced Services, and other product launches we are working on, and working on articulating our value proposition to ensure our potential and current partners are aware and taking full advantage of our holistic solutions. Before I turn the call over to Tim, I want to discuss N-able's business in Ukraine, Russia, and Belarus.
We have a de minimis amount of revenue in those regions, and aside from the impact that is having on the global economy, our operations, financial results, and business have not been materially impacted by the situation there. We operate much of our development activities outside of the U.S. throughout Canada and Europe, including operations in Belarus. If needed, we believe we have adequate resources in non-impacted regions to support our products and are taking actions to mitigate any potential impact as we deem appropriate. Now, I will turn the call over to Tim to discuss our financial results and outlook before I jump back on with some closing thoughts.
Thank you, John, and thanks to all of you for joining us on the call today. I want to review our first quarter financial results, then discuss our financial outlook for the remainder of 2022. As John mentioned, we finished the first quarter ahead of our outlook with total revenue of $90.9 million, representing 9% year-over-year growth, or 12% on a constant currency basis. Note that if FX rates had held at the rates used when we gave our guidance, revenue for the quarter would have been approximately $250,000 higher. Subscription revenue was $88.6 million, representing approximately 10% year-over-year growth, or 13% on a constant currency basis. Other revenue, which primarily represents maintenance revenue from our discontinued legacy license model, was $2.2 million, down 12% year-over-year, consistent with prior quarters.
We ended the quarter with 1,733 partners with greater than $50,000 of ARR, a 15% year-over-year increase. Partners with over $50,000 of ARR represent 48% of total ARR, up from 43% a year ago. We saw strength across our portfolio with our EDR and Microsoft 365 backup solutions continuing to outpace total company revenue growth. Dollar-based net revenue retention, which is calculated on a trailing 12-month basis, was 108%. The decrease relative to last quarter is exclusively due to changes in FX rates. Turning to profit and margins, note that unless otherwise stated, all references to profit measures and expenses are calculated on a non-GAAP basis and exclude the items outlined in the GAAP to non-GAAP reconciliation provided in today's press release.
Also note that historical financials for the periods prior to the effective spin-off date of July 19th, 2021, included operating expenses that were prepared using carve-out allocation methodology while we were still a part of SolarWinds. While the allocations and estimates in these carve-out financials are based on assumptions that we believe are reasonable, our standalone financials are not necessarily directly comparable to those prepared prior to the effective spin-off date. First quarter gross margin was 85.7%, compared to 86.6% in the first quarter of 2021. First quarter adjusted EBITDA was $27 million, representing approximately 30% EBITDA margin. Unlevered free cash flow was $13.5 million in the first quarter. Q1 CapEx was $3.8 million or 4.2% of revenue.
Non-GAAP earnings per share was $0.09 in the quarter based on 180 million weighted average diluted shares. We ended the quarter with approximately $70.4 million of cash and an outstanding loan principal balance of $348.3 million, representing net leverage of approximately 2.5x . Now I will provide our financial outlook for the second quarter and full year. There have been material changes to the foreign exchange environment since our last outlook, and we are updating our guidance to reflect the impact of these changes. Taking aside changes in foreign exchange rates, on a constant currency basis, our full year outlook remains consistent with our prior guidance. I want to start by reconciling our prior 2022 outlook based on current FX rates.
As stated in our previous call, we assumed FX rates for the euro and pound of 1.13 and 1.35 respectively. We also stated that every point on the euro equated to approximately $900,000 of annual revenue, and every point on the pound equated to approximately $300,000 of annual revenue. Accounting for updated FX rates of 1.05 on the euro and 1.23 on the pound, as well as other currencies, our prior 2022 revenue guidance of $384 million-$388 million translates to $375 million-$379 million, approximately $9 million of impact for Q2 through Q4.
As it relates to our prior 2022 adjusted EBITDA outlook of $118 million-$122 million, using these updated FX rates, our adjusted EBITDA outlook translates to $112 million-$116 million, approximately $6 million of impact for Q2 through Q4. While the global macro environment remains fluid and FX rates may continue to fluctuate, based on our current FX assumptions, we expect second quarter 2022 total revenue in the range of $91 million-$91.5 million, representing approximately 7% year-over-year growth or approximately 13% on a constant currency basis, up from 12% in Q1.
For the full year 2022, we expect total revenue of $376 million-$379 million, representing approximately 9% year-over-year growth on a reported basis, or a 13%-14% growth on a constant currency basis, in line with our constant currency guidance on our previous call. We expect second quarter adjusted EBITDA in the range of $26 million-$26.5 million, representing approximately 29% margin at the midpoint. For the full year, we expect adjusted EBITDA in the range of $112.5 million-$115.5 million, equating to approximately 30% margin at the midpoint. We reiterate that CapEx will be approximately 4%-5% of total revenue. We also expect adjusted EBITDA conversion to unlevered free cash flow to be approximately 70% for the full year.
We expect total weighted average diluted shares outstanding of approximately 181 million for the second quarter and approximately 182 million for the full year. Finally, we expect our non-GAAP tax rate to be approximately 24% in the second quarter and 26% for the full year. Now I will turn it over to John for closing remarks.
Thanks, Tim. As Tim pointed out, despite the fact that we had to update our outlook to account for adverse changes in foreign exchange rates, operationally, we are very much on track for our plan this year. We are starting to see the revenue acceleration we are projecting in the second half of the year. As you can see, we are executing well in our key investment areas, backed by a strategy rooted in the deep understanding of our market and a leadership team that is committed to our growth and our partner success. We see a great deal of opportunity in the current market environment, and it is creating a lot of energy and excitement up and down the company. Earlier, I mentioned that a major part of earning more fans is geared toward our partners and other external parties.
The real impetus and inspiration derives from my fellow N-ableites, who are the key to our success. I'm proud to say our teams are getting recognized for their exceptional work. We recently won two awards from Comparably for Best Global Culture and Best Company Outlook. We also just announced that we were honored with four American Business Awards, also called the Stevies, a Gold Award for IT Department of the Year for the spin-off, a Silver Award for Human Resources Executive of the Year for our CHRO, Kathleen Pai, a Silver Award for Customer Service Department of the Year, recognizing our partner success management team, and a Bronze Award for Achievement in Product Innovation for Cove Data Protection.
This external recognition underscores and validates our efforts to build a company that earns fans among our partners and their customers, our employees, and all of our stakeholders around the world. 2021 was a foundational year for us, with the rebrand, spin-off, and focus on hardening security into all layers of our operations, product development life cycle, and culture. In 2022, we are in full value creation mode for our partners and N-able. The work we are doing now will determine the trajectory for N-able moving forward, and as you can see, we are off to a great start. Operator, we are now ready to open the line for questions.
Thank you. If you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. If for any reason you would like to remove that question, please press star followed by two. As a reminder, if you are using a speakerphone, please remember to pick up your handset before asking your question. The first question today comes from Matt Hedberg of RBC Capital Markets. Matt, please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Oh, sure. Thanks, guys. Good morning. John, thanks for the comments. You know, I'm curious. You know, you had good results here, and you're guiding to effectively no change, well, no change in constant currency growth rates for the year. You've got broad exposure to kind of global SME trends. Can you talk about sort of the resiliency of those end markets if, you know, if the economic condition globally were to change and deteriorate? Just sort of maybe speak to the mission-critical nature of your solutions and how, you know, perhaps, they might do if there is a bit more of a challenged economic times ahead.
Thanks, Matt. You stole my phrase that I was gonna lead with on your question, and that is mission-critical, right? The services that our SMEs, excuse me, that our MSPs provide to the SMEs are mission-critical. This is not a discretionary spend or a nice to have. The MSPs effectively are making sure small, medium enterprises across the globe can do their jobs, can be productive, can collaborate, and can do so securely. And so we're really seeing, you know, no real degradation in demand for the MSPs. Security offerings, our data protection offerings, monitoring needs continue to be high throughout. We're not really seeing a degradation, neither from the SME or from the MSP. I think it speaks to the importance of the MSP community.
You know, the other thing, when we think about demand, the MSP is really a labor arbitrage as well, Matt, right? As SMEs look for better ways to scale, our solutions help MSPs scale their business, be more efficient, and drive their profitability up. Also in doing so, SMEs can also mitigate some of the costs that they might have with internal resources by leveraging the MSP. The supply chain, if you will, I'd say is actually a pretty good labor arbitrage for the greater SME needs that are out there for IT.
No, that makes a ton of sense. Obviously, you guys have a long history here, serving these end markets. Maybe the second question, you know, one of sort of your peers that serves MSPs is in the process of being acquired. I guess I'm curious, what does that mean from your perspective, you know, maybe from a consolidation standpoint? I mean, do you think, you know, it really speaks to the opportunity to further consolidate MSP spend from your perspective? Maybe just also, you know, sort of the sheer magnitude of this market. Just curious on your perspective there.
Sure. I get this question a good amount from folks internally and externally. Look, I think the pending transaction is somewhat of a validation point of the power of the model, right? N-able and folks in our space, we have a tremendous levered model where we gain access to the power of the SME IT spend. In doing so it allows us to really grow our business and grow our business profitably. That's why we continue to aspire to be a rule of 50 company with that blend of growth, but also profit. The way we gain that profit, Matt, as you know, is by leveraging the MSPs. We have 25,000 MSPs.
Those are effectively, our sales force as they go out and provide services to the SME. The transaction, for me is just a somewhat of a nod, that there's a power in this model. I look at this, as others have described, as the golden era for MSPs, and I think that pending transaction is more of a nod to the fact that we are in a growth market. It is a golden era, an opportunity for the MSPs and for vendors like N-able that support them. For us at N-able, you know, my message to my team is that we're focused, laser-focused really on our roadmap, our strategy in providing, solutions and business tools to help our MSPs grow. That will be our focus.
While others may need to be somewhat preoccupied with their integration plans, we get to be laser-focused on our agenda, our roadmap, and our partners.
Great. Great perspective. Thanks, John. Thanks. Thanks, Tim.
Thank you, Matt.
The next question today comes from Mike Cikos from Needham. Mike, please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Thanks. Thanks for getting me on the call today, guys. I did wanna circle up. I think in John's opening remarks, actually, you cited better retention figures. Is there any way you can provide more color on how those retention figures are trending? Then the derivative question that I have for you is the gross margins actually step down slightly if I look on a quarter-to-quarter or year-to-year basis. I imagine that part of that gross margin erosion is based on increasing expenses related to cloud-hosted offerings. But wanted to know if that is the case or maybe there's also a combination where you guys are hiring out a more robust customer success team, which in turn would be benefiting those retention figures that John previously cited.
Hey, Mike. Tim here. I'll take that one. On the retention figures, looking at, on a constant currency basis, that's more what John's comments were related to, both gross and net retention improved in Q1 compared to Q4. We're really starting. I think you hit on it, but the investment in partner success is starting to show the return that we expected on both the gross and the net retention. One, retaining customers at a higher rate, and two, driving on the opportunities that we're creating from that motion and the close rate we're having there, that's having an impact on the expand side of the equation as well. Then turning to your question on gross margin and how that's come down a little bit. It's. I would say it's a few things.
One is it's been some investments in the product to improve performance as well as functionality for our partners. Two is just a little bit of product mix in terms of some of the different margin profiles we have across the business. The third is a couple of one-time items that are impacting the quarter in Q1. I would expect things to steady out in that 86% range over the course of the year.
Terrific. Thanks. I know John had also discussed the geopolitical with respect to Europe and Russia, Ukraine, potential exposure to Belarus as well. Could you give us maybe some finer parameters around what you guys are seeing in Europe today? Potentially how much of your business from an operations standpoint is in Belarus. I'd just be interested in hearing anything you have to say on that.
Sure. It's just to reiterate what we said in the prepared remarks, right? The revenue that we have in the Ukraine, in Russia, in Belarus in the last quarter is de minimis, right? It's really an immaterial amount. No real revenue. The business does have an R&D center in Belarus and a couple of support folks as well. We believe we've, you know, the situation in Belarus, while the Ukraine war is a relatively new one, the situation in Belarus has been somewhat ongoing for a good amount of time.
We have resources in other geos, and we believe we are in a spot that we can support all of our products, if any situation were to change or to heighten.
Makes a ton of sense. Thank you very much, guys. I appreciate it.
Thanks, Mike.
Thank you, Mike. The next question today comes from Keith Bachman from BMO. Keith, please go ahead. Your line is now open.
Yes. Thank you. I wanted to come back to the macro question and try to frame it with some data if I could. It's really trying to understand what the potential impact to your business might be, if I look back to your numbers during the course of 2020, there was a lot of moving parts there. You had pretty meaningful slowdown from the March quarter to the June quarter. You know, SolarWinds, whatnot, there was quite a bit going on. I was actually gonna try to frame it using Datto's information. Datto called out during the brief impact from the COVID economy, so to speak.
You know, business slowed pretty meaningfully from, call it 18% in the beginning, you know, the March quarter and even the December quarter of 2019. Business slowed pretty meaningfully throughout the June, September, December quarters. While I agree that your technology is certainly important to running business, a lot of SMBs are negatively impacted by recessionary periods, much more so than larger enterprises, and either, you know, don't continue as a going business or need to cut back. So to a previous question, you talked about, you know, resiliency. That agreed it's important.
Why do you think your business might be different than, say, what Datto experienced during an economic recession, and why do you think you wouldn't be impacted if in fact there were a recession, of course, either late this year or into next year, who knows? Because, you know, the underlying fundamentals of the SMBs may in fact require less spending or again, concern about ongoing ability to keep doing business. Maybe if you could just speak a little bit about, you know, in particular during a recessionary period, how you might be impacted and/or why you might be different from what in fact happened to Datto during the COVID economy.
Good morning, Keith. This is John. Great question. Let's go back to that. We also experienced. Let's separate a couple of the what we kind of call meteors that were around the business. On Q2 of 2020, we refer to that as our COVID quarter as well, very similar to Datto. What did we see and what did MSP see? We actually saw an increase in demand for our security offerings and our data protection offerings. What we actually saw was a decrease in new customer acquisition, and we also saw a decrease in our MSPs adding new small medium enterprises. What happened? Our MSPs were thrust to the forefront. They were effectively the frontline helping small medium enterprises navigate through that COVID crisis, right?
When you do that, you focus on your book of business. Our MSPs rose to the challenge, frankly, and secured their customers and helped them navigate because they need to be productive. They need to be secure. They were 100% focused on helping their SMEs transition. We didn't actually see a decrease in demand. We saw effectively a lack of bandwidth. Our MSPs did not add new customers because they were securing and making sure their existing book of business was productive. Actually, our results were exactly that. Our cross-sell motion was strong. Our retention numbers, especially for the high end of our MSPs, were actually strong. We saw a little bit of a degradation on the lower end, but the demand for our solutions were actually strong.
What we saw slowing down were MSPs not looking for a new offering during COVID. That you know for me spoke highly of the importance the MSPs have on the SME. They went from talking to their customers once a month to talking to their CEOs of these small medium businesses daily to help them transition. They did so, there was a tremendous amount of effort. Frankly, without the MSP, a lot of the SMEs out there would not be in business today for the actions that those MSPs took to effectively mobilize the workforce of the small medium enterprise.
Yeah. Makes sense. I mean, frankly, a lot of software companies, you know, their existing customers' business remained fairly robust during COVID, but the, you know, the new logo adds, I think, for everybody slowed down. That makes sense. Maybe just to my follow on, if I could, is just a clarification. You indicated, look, currency is really tough for everybody. You guys are no different than anybody else. $9 million impact to revenues versus last guide. You did mention that there was a $6 million EBITDA impact. I was just curious why there's such a pronounced, you know, $6 million EBITDA impact on $9 million variance in revenues. Just maybe there's just some mechanics there I don't understand. If you could just clarify, maybe I heard the numbers wrong.
Just wondering why is there such a meaningful impact on EBITDA?
Hey, Keith. Happy to shed some light there. You had the numbers right. It was $9 million of impact on revenue, excuse me, and $6 million of impact on EBITDA. Most of it is related to the euro. You can kind of see by the color we gave on the euro for every point, it's about $900K of annual revenue. We have, I would say we're not naturally hedged on the euro from an expense footprint. Most of our international costs lie in GBP, as it relates to where we have our operations out of Scotland there. That's the driver there. It's about, you know, 2/3 to 70% kinda drop through from revenue to the bottom line from what we're seeing.
Right. Okay. Many thanks. That's it for me. Best of luck to you.
Thank you. Thank you, Keith. As a reminder, if you would like to ask a question, please press star followed by one on your telephone keypad. The next question today comes from Jason Ader from William Blair. Jason, please go ahead. Your line is open.
Yeah, thanks. Good morning, guys. I wanted to ask about Cove. You guys talked about how Cove is more efficient than traditional backup software. Can you just explain to us kind of in simple terms why?
Morning, Jason. Sure. A couple of reasons. First, our approach and our architecture is fundamentally different, right? We are a cloud-first architecture. What does that mean? That means the data flows from the target, the workstation or the server or the VM, and it goes directly to the cloud. It does not have to go first to an appliance. That means a couple of things. That means better economics for the MSP. That means better economics for N-able. It also means a more secure solution because that appliance effectively is a target for the bad guys. The fact that we go right to the cloud makes it more efficient. That's number one. Number two, we have what we call a TrueDelta technology .
What we're doing is we're looking at changes in the files and in the data. We'll take a backup, and then we'll go on to take the next backups. We're only looking at the changes there, the deltas that are happening, which therefore produces less data that needs to go back and forth and less of a storage footprint. Our competitors take an image, an entire image, and then take another entire image, and take another entire image, and that's just inefficient. The fact that we were born in the cloud with this architecture, leveraging this TrueDelta technology , just effectively gives us a more efficient offering. What does that mean for the MSP? That means less babysitting time, right? They're not needing to watch the or manage their backup.
It's less of a footprint on the storage that they might need to procure, or experience. It's less data that's moving back and forth again, producing a more of a scalable, efficient solution. This is disruptive. We win, and we're really excited to see how now with this new, I would say, reinforced go-to-market positioning, what Cove is gonna do and continue to be a growth driver for us.
Great. What's the impact on recovery times? Is your recovery faster because of the way you guys have architected this system?
Right. That's exactly right. Both recovery times, RTOs and RPOs are very efficient, and it's because of the way that we do that. It's also the fact that we're also going directly to the cloud and with our Standby Image, we also give MSPs the ability to test and to point to where they want to have their backup in whatever various target they want. It's a combination of a couple of things. The fact that we're cloud-first again is just a differentiator. Others in the industry claim cloud, but they're not architected that way.
Effectively, they're an appliance, and then they'll bolt on some type of cloud service to give them kind of that, you know, effectively that headline that they're cloud, but they're not cloud first. They might have a cloud piece of their structure, but it's inefficient, and it allows us to have a better, effectively better RTO and RPO times.
Great. Just a quick follow-up. Can you give us a sense, John, of how often you're landing with backup versus other products and maybe how that might change over time? I'm assuming that's one of the reasons you're kind of leaning in from a branding standpoint here. Is that part of the vision here that you could start to land more on the backup side and any kind of historical data on how much of your lands are coming through backup versus other products?
Sure. Historically, backup has been a cross-sell motion. It's been, you know, do you want fries with that type of motion where we were effectively landing with our RMM solutions and then using our backup offering that's integrated with our RMMs as a cross-sell motion, which has been hugely successful. With the culmination of all the innovation that we've built with our Microsoft 365, our M365 backup offering, that's all in one console. Really what we found, Jason, is that we're winning as a new customer acquisition. With Cove, you'll see us going to market in a more aggressive way to land MSPs.
Really, you know, what I'm basically saying is we're moving our complete data protection as a service offering from out of underneath the shadow of RMM and really bringing it to the forefront and going to market and allowing MSPs and honestly even mid-market companies to win and have this disruptive technology going forward. You're right. This is also a, it's a combination of our technology, but also of a change in a note to the market that we will be going with a full data protection suite that's inclusive of business class disaster recovery. We'll be going to market directly and winning directly, not as a cross-sell motion.
Very good. Good luck, guys. Thanks.
Thank you, Jason. There are no additional questions waiting at this time, so I'd like to pass the conference over to John Pagliuca for closing remarks. Please go ahead.
Thank you all. Thank you for your ongoing interest in N-able, and looking forward to talking to you in about 90 days.
That concludes the N-able first quarter 2022 earnings call. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect your line.