Hi, everybody. Welcome to Okta's Fourth Quarter and Fiscal Year 2022 earnings webcast. I'm Dave Gennarelli, Vice President of Investor Relations at Okta. With me in today's meeting, we have Todd McKinnon, our Chief Executive Officer and Co-founder, Brett Tighe, our Chief Financial Officer, and Frederic Kerrest, our Executive Vice Chairman, Chief Operating Officer, and Co-founder. Today's meeting will include forward-looking statements pursuant to the safe harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including but not limited to statements regarding our financial outlook and market positioning. Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual results, performance, or achievements to be materially different from those expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements represent management's beliefs and assumptions only as of the date made.
Information on factors that could affect the company's financial results is included in our filings with the SEC from time to time, including the section titled Risk Factors in our previously filed Form 10-Q. In addition, during today's meeting, we'll discuss non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP financial measures are in addition to, and not a substitute for or superior to, measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP. The reconciliation between GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures and a discussion of the limitations of using non-GAAP measures versus their closest GAAP equivalents is available in our earnings release. You can also find more detailed information in our supplemental financial materials, which include trended financial statements and key metrics posted on our investor relations website.
In today's meeting, we will quote a number of numeric or growth changes as we discuss our financial performance, and unless otherwise noted, each such reference represents a year-over-year comparison. Also note that the acquisition of Auth0 closed on May 3rd, 2021, and unless otherwise specified, each reference to Okta refers to the combined company inclusive of Auth0. Now I'd like to turn the meeting over to Todd McKinnon. Todd?
Thanks, Dave, and thank you everyone for joining us this afternoon. We closed out another fantastic fiscal year with strong Q4 results. Our consistent execution was fueled by our market-leading products for both workforce and customer identity, coupled with our relentless focus on customer success. We experienced strength in both core Okta and Auth0, which reflects Okta's position as the leading cloud-native identity management platform addressing the $80 billion identity market opportunity at scale. The three megatrends that are driving Okta's business, the deployment of cloud and hybrid IT, digital transformation projects, and the adoption of Zero Trust security in an environment of increasing incidents and breaches are only gaining momentum, and Okta is best positioned to capture the market that is moving toward us. Nowhere was the momentum more evident than in our results.
I'll start with a quick recap of our Q4 financial results and then get into some of our other notable highlights from the quarter. In Q4, RPO grew 50%, and current RPO grew 60%. Total revenue grew 63%, and subscription revenue grew 64%. Okta standalone total revenue grew 39%, and Auth0 revenue was $56 million. We're reaching more customers than ever before. We added over 1,000 new customers in Q4, which was a record. Our total customer base now stands at 15,000 and grew an impressive 50%. We continue to do very well with large enterprise customers. In Q4, we added a record 275 customers with $100,000+ annual contract value or ACV. These new $100,000+ ACV customers continue to be balanced between new customers and upsells.
Our total base of $100,000+ ACV customers now stands at over 3,100 and grew nearly 60% in Q4. We also continue to have strong momentum with even larger contracts. We had record new adds of customers with both $500,000+ and $1 million+ in ACV. We now have nearly 600 customers with an ACV of $500,000+ and nearly 200 customers with an ACV of $1 million+. Both of these groups grew approximately 60%. Our momentum in these large customer wins is a good proxy for our business with large enterprise and government organizations. It's clear that the focus and energy we've put into better serving these largest customers is driving results. Here are just a few notable examples of large enterprise wins in Q4, which come from a wide range of industries.
Fifth Third Bank, a Fortune 500 financial services company, was a fantastic new business win for Okta because it included both Okta Workforce and Auth0 CIAM solutions. As Fifth Third Bank continues on its digital transformation journey, implementing a cloud-1st identity solution to support its workforce and its digital banking platforms is critical to their success. Kyndryl, the world's largest IT infrastructure provider, was a great new customer win for both Okta Workforce and CIAM this quarter. Kyndryl has approximately 90,000 employees and was formed from the separation of IBM's managed infrastructure services business and is a great example of how Okta can help customers as they navigate the complexities of mergers, acquisitions, and divestitures. A great upsell in the quarter was with Block, the parent company of Square and Cash App.
Block had been using Okta for its workforce when the company needed an identity solution that would support its M&A activity, integrate with its systems, and preserve its brands. This quarter, the company expanded its investment with Okta as it integrates its recent acquisition of Afterpay. With this expansion, Okta will continue to support Block's M&A agility, allowing the company to seamlessly integrate thousands of employees who will have access to internal applications while also preserving the company's branding across its numerous businesses. Similar to last quarter, we continue to see early success in cross-selling between Okta and Auth0 customers. A great example in Q4 was Carvana, a Fortune 500 e-commerce platform for buying and selling used cars. Carvana has been a long-time Okta Workforce customer and recognizes the critical role technology plays in providing an exceptional car-buying experience and sought to modernize access for all users.
Building on this initial success, Carvana recently expanded the partnership and selected Auth0 to provide its partners and dealerships access to its marketplace platform, which provides Carvana customers with a broader selection of vehicles. I mentioned that we experienced strength in both core Okta and Auth0. Now let's take a look at the split between customer identity and workforce identity in terms of ACV. For this particular metric, the growth rate is inclusive of Auth0 in both comparison periods. Total CIAM ACV grew nearly 60% and now represents 37% of total ACV. Within this, Okta standalone CIAM ACV grew 47%, and Auth0's ACV grew 81%. Workforce ACV grew 37% and represented 63% of total ACV. That's fantastic growth across the board.
We're still less than one year into the combination with Auth0, and to date, we've been able to accomplish job number one, which was to maintain the momentum of both businesses. We're even more excited about the future because starting just last month, the go-to-market organization has been unified under Susan St. Ledger's leadership. One team driven by the relentless pursuit of making our customers successful. One team selling both Okta and Auth0. One team providing customers with market-leading solutions to meet their unique use cases. This all crystallized with an incredibly energetic annual sales kickoff meeting that we held in person a couple of weeks ago.
There is nothing else in the market today that even comes close to Okta's capabilities, and the combination with Eugenio and the team at Auth0 is helping us realize our vision of identity as a primary cloud, deliver best-in-class experiences for our customers, and win the CIAM market faster. Now let's talk about product updates. Customers are seeking a cloud-1st approach to their identity governance needs. Last quarter, I mentioned the beta for our new identity governance offering. The feedback has been amazing. Diya Jolly, our Chief Product Officer, and her team have spent the past couple of months prioritizing enhancements to the product. This month, we are excited to initiate early access to a limited number of customers as we fortify our go-to-market team and partners with content for enablement. We expect Okta Identity Governance to launch in North America by mid-year and globally by year-end.
Okta Identity Governance is a natural priority to bring to market scale as the use cases of modern identity governance align well with Okta's sales strengths with existing products like Workflows and Lifecycle Management. The opportunity for Okta privileged access are significant as well. We're making great progress developing new PAM functionality, and we will have more news on these developments over the course of this year. We'll talk more about both products at our Oktane 2022 event. After two years of hosting Oktane virtually, this year, we're excited to host Oktane in person in San Francisco. To do so, we've moved out the date of the conference to the 2nd week of November, so be sure to mark your calendars. Oktane is always a fantastic event to connect with customers and partners and share our vision for identity.
It's also a great event to hear from our customers as to why they turned to Okta. Time and time again, you'll hear customers highlight Okta's independence and neutrality. Okta provides our customers the freedom to deploy best-of-breed applications and does so with deep integrations that other monolithic platforms can't provide or don't want to provide because of their competing products. Today, identity has become a strategic component of any organization's infrastructure. In a world where cloud adoption continues to proliferate, we believe that in a few years from now, there will be just a few primary clouds that really matter inside an organization. Together with Auth0, we are establishing Okta as a primary cloud and the standard for digital identity. We're doing this by adding more users, more customers, and increasing the use cases we can address, all of which accelerate network effects.
Identity is the connective tissue to all of the other primary clouds as it facilitates choice and flexibility while enhancing security and reducing risk in other technologies. In summary, the Okta and Auth0 teams accomplished a tremendous amount in FY 2022. There are so many highlights to the year. For example, we surpassed the $1 billion revenue mark. We added over 5,000 customers. We now have nearly 30% of the Global 2000 as customers. We expanded our portfolio of products, including Okta Identity Engine, our next-generation identity platform, which is now generally available. Both Okta and Auth0 were recognized as leaders in Gartner's Magic Quadrant. We continued to attract and retain incredible talent, growing our employee base by nearly 80% to just over 5,000.
We made tremendous progress on the ESG front, including our achievement of 100% renewable electricity for our global offices and remote workforce, and submitting to the Carbon Disclosure Project for the 1st time. With each passing quarter, Okta is further strengthening its market leadership position. We've come quite a long way since Frederic and I founded the company 13 years ago. We're proud of the great progress we've made as a team, but as we look ahead, we know we are just scratching the surface of the $80 billion total identity market opportunity. I want to thank our employees, our customers, and our partners who place their trust in us every day. Before we get to the financial review, I want to congratulate Brett Tighe on his appointment as our CFO. Brett has been an incredible asset to Okta since he joined seven years ago.
He's one of the primary architects of our long-term financial model and has really excelled in both the internal and external-facing responsibilities since stepping into the role. Now here's Brett to walk you through more of our Q4 financial details and how we're raising our outlook for FY 2023.
Thanks, Todd, and thank you everyone for joining us. I'm excited to officially take on the role of CFO. I've seen tremendous growth during my seven years at Okta, and we are still just scratching the surface of the $80 billion identity market. I look forward to working together with the team to capture this opportunity. Before I get into the results, I wanna take a moment to share my top priorities as CFO. First and foremost is executing against our near-term financial targets as well as our long-term financial goals. I'll detail the near-term targets in a few minutes. Our long-term financial goals anchor on at least $4 billion of revenue in FY 2026 with organic growth of at least 35% each year, and 20% free cash flow margin in FY 2026.
To achieve these targets, we must continue to scale the company from a people and processes standpoint, including investing in talent across all areas of the company, as well as in systems to prepare us for the next phase of growth. I'm focused on ensuring that Okta will continue to make the right investments that support our growth. At the same time, we will continue to be prudent with how we allocate capital. My 2nd priority is ensuring that we continue the seamless integration of Auth0 across all facets of the company. Now that the back office and go-to-market teams have been fully integrated, we will continue to refine our systems and processes to ensure that the tremendous growth opportunity we see will be realized. We are off to a great start and recognize there is still a lot of work to do.
With that, I will now highlight some of the results for the 4th quarter as well as provide our business outlook. Total revenue for the 4th quarter accelerated to 63%, driven by a 64% increase in subscription revenue. Subscription revenue represented 96% of our total revenue. On an Okta standalone basis, total revenue grew 39%. Auth0 revenue net of $2 million and recognized purchase accounting adjustments was $56 million. RPO or backlog, which for us is contracted subscription revenue, both billed and unbilled, that has not yet been recognized, grew 50% to $2.69 billion. Current RPO, which represents subscription revenue we expect to recognize over the next 12 months, also experienced strong growth of 60% to $1.35 billion.
This strong growth in CRPO was driven by strength across new and existing customers for both Okta and Auth0 as demand for our products remains robust, fueled by the macro trends that have been driving us for years. Total and current calculated billings grew 91%. Calculated billings includes the effects of billings process improvements that were implemented at the end of the 1st quarter of FY 2022. Excluding the billings process improvements, calculated billings grew 71%. Turning to retention, our dollar-based net retention rate for the trailing 12-month period increased to 124%. This was driven by the strong upsell motion we are seeing with our existing customers across both Okta and Auth0 as they expand on both products and users. Consistent with prior quarters, gross retention rates remain very healthy and reflect the value of our products to our customers.
As always, the net retention rate may fluctuate from quarter to quarter as the mix of new business, renewals, and upsells fluctuates. Before turning to expense items and profitability, I'll point out that I will be discussing non-GAAP results going forward. Now looking at operating expenses. Total operating expenses grew 81%. The growth in expenses is primarily attributable to the inclusion of Auth0. Total headcount now stands at just over 5,000 employees, up 79% year-over-year. Moving to cash flow. Free cash flow was $5 million, which yielded a 1.3% free cash flow margin. The sequential decline was driven by investments we are making to scale the business and were primarily related to higher headcount. We ended the 4th quarter with a strong balance sheet anchored by $2.5 billion in cash equivalents, and short-term investments.
Now let's get into our financial outlook. The secular market tailwinds and our leadership position in the identity market continue. We're making great progress integrating Auth0 and continue to be prudent and thoughtful about the rate and pace of near-term synergies. This is reflected in our guidance. With that as a backdrop, for the 1st quarter of FY 2023, we expect total revenue of $388 million-$390 million, representing a growth rate of 55% year-over-year. Non-GAAP operating loss of $51 million-$50 million, and non-GAAP net loss per share of $0.35-$0.34, assuming weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 155 million. For the full year FY 2023, we are raising our revenue outlook by $35 million from our preliminary guide provided last quarter.
We now expect total revenue of $1.78 billion- $1.79 billion, representing growth of 37%-38% year-over-year. Additionally, we expect non-GAAP operating loss of $185 million- $180 million and non-GAAP net loss per share of $1.27- $1.24, assuming weighted average shares outstanding of approximately 157 million. Included in this outlook are expectations for increased sales and marketing investments to help us capture the large market opportunity in front of us. This includes further investments to build out our go-to-market operations in key areas such as CIAM, international, and public sector. Lastly, I want to provide a few comments to help with modeling Okta. First, for Q1, we expect current RPO to grow in the low to mid-50% range.
Second, the billings process improvements that were implemented last year has led to some confusion, so I'm going to provide specific billings commentary on a one-time basis for clarity. We expect Q1 FY 2023 billings of approximately $385 million-$390 million. When viewed on a like-for-like basis, Q1 billings growth would be approximately 50%-52%. For the full year FY 2023, we expect billings to be approximately $2.18 billion-$2.19 billion. The FY 2023 billings growth rate experiences a headwind of approximately nine percentage points due to the process improvements impact. When viewed on a like-for-like basis, FY 2023 billings growth would be approximately 35%-36%. Be sure to reference the supplemental slide in our earnings presentation, which outlines this modeling detail.
From a seasonality perspective, we anticipate billings in the 2nd half of the year to represent roughly 60% of the full year total, which is consistent with normal seasonality. Finally, we will continue to invest in our growth in FY 2023 and beyond. As such, we expect free cash flow margin to be down a few points year over year. To wrap things up, we had a great quarter and end to the fiscal year and are extremely excited about the $80 billion market opportunity in front of us. Okta is very well positioned to build on its strong foundation and market leadership position in both Workforce and CIAM, which gives us continued confidence in our near term and long-term outlook. With that, I'll turn it back to Dave for Q&A. Dave?
Thanks, Brett. I see that there are already quite a few hands raised, so we'll get right into them, and I'll take them in the order that they came. Identity in it, you got maybe some identity from Oracle or CA, the management crew, the management vendors. It's different now, and we're successful because identity is so prevalent in all these trends. To be successful, to successfully get all this cloud technology to your employees, to reimagine your customer experience and do it all securely, you have to have an identity system, and that's what we're out there offering to customers of all sizes in all verticals, and that's why we're having these results. The reality of it is that not everyone knows this yet. If you talk to 10 CIOs, maybe three of them would say, "Hey, this is the future.
Identity is the central platform. Identity is one of my primary clouds. It's gonna unleash all this potential for me and keep me more competitive." Only about probably three out of ten know this, and I bet two of them are our customers. The good news is that more and more people every day are learning this and people that are making technology decisions, and they realize that if you wanna do Zero Trust, if you wanna have choice in technology, you need to do it with Identity, and we have the leading identity platform. That's what we're focused on, making sure everyone understands that. Specific to COVID and the pandemic, a lot of people ask me about how has it impacted your business.
I think it definitely had, you know, some incremental positive impacts as people rushed to do remote work, and it had some headwinds as people maybe their own business was. They're not sure how their own industry is gonna be impacted, or they just had other priorities they were working on. They weren't sure about the future. Our own investment level was a little bit. We weren't sure about the future, how much we should invest, what the environment was gonna look like. I think when, as now we end the year, you know, the acute phase of the pandemic and world starts to get back to normal from a pandemic perspective, I think it probably, you know, maybe had a little bit of a headwind on us.
What's powered our growth are these macro trends. When I look out in the years ahead, our priority is very similar to what it's always been. It's like we have to establish this vision of identity as this primary platform, and it's gotta do both use cases that are customer identity and workforce identity. It's gotta get to scale. It's gotta meet customers where they're going, and that's why I'm so excited about the CIAM business momentum. It's why I'm excited about the results. Competitively, we're very differentiated. We have point competitors that can't don't have the scale or the breadth. We have the big platforms, companies like Microsoft, that they have identity, some of the things that look like us, but they're not neutral.
They're at the end of the day trying to sell you their collaboration or their infrastructure, and they're not about giving customers choice and flexibility. That's, I think if you unpack the results a little bit, those are some of the things that are driving them.
Super helpful. Maybe just a quick one for Brett. First of all, Brett, congrats on the promotion. I'm wondering from your op margin guide, how much of that is Auth0? Maybe how should we think about the timing of return to sort of more positive op margins?
Absolutely. Thanks, Matt, and thank you for the kind comments. You know, from the operating margin guide, you know, it's really both businesses. I would say, you know, as a reminder, Auth0 is an earlier stage business than Okta standalone is. You see some of those unit economics that are a little bit less than what Okta is on a standalone basis. Now, from a long-term perspective, you're probably asking in regards to the long-term framework that we've talked about. Look, we're gonna operate the business the same way we've operated the business from day one, which is we've always looked at the rule of forty and balanced revenue and growth together. You know, when there's great growth opportunities, we're gonna go get them.
Obviously, when there's margin opportunities, we're gonna go get those as well. It's, you know, something over the long term we've done for years now, and we'll continue to do so in the years to come.
Thank you.
All right. Let's go to Jonathan Ho at William Blair.
Hi, good afternoon. I just wanted to maybe start out with the integration of Auth0 and, you know, maybe can you talk a little bit about, you know, sort of that Salesforce integration effort and, you know, maybe where you're seeing some successes, things that have surprised you. Thank you.
Yeah. Thanks a lot for the question, Jonathan. We are very excited about the integration of Auth0. You know, we're very excited that it's been done in just under a year from where we are because we actually announced the acquisition a year ago tomorrow. As you know, to start with, I think the most important part is the go-to-market organization which we unified under Susan's leadership on February 1. You heard Todd talk about one team, which I think is a great position to be in. We put together a lot of the core systems that we're using to run the business. Those are all running on one platform, so we have one pane of glass, good visibility into all that and how it's working.
There's a couple more pieces we need to finish up in terms of ticking and tying some of the systems on the back end. Those are, you know, just making sure that we're working as one organization going forward. So far you can see the results. I mean, the results speak for themselves. This is even before we had this one go-to-market organization. We've got great opportunities in these large organizations where we're landing with Okta Workforce and Auth0. We've got these great cross-sell opportunities like Carvana, where they've been a long time Okta Workforce customer and then became an Auth0 customer. I think there's a lot of different synergies that we're starting to see already. As Todd mentioned, the businesses are both going very, very well overall.
When you look at where CIAM is and how far it's come, 60% year-over-year growth, we're very excited about that. I think we're just getting started in this big opportunity, and that's the fun and exciting part for us.
Yeah. Hey, Jonathan, one thing I'll add there to Frederic's comments. If you look at the 1st three quarters, the strategic reason for this acquisition was that identity is one of the most primary important clouds in our customers' environments. To be that primary cloud, you have to support both use cases. You have to support workforce and customer identity. Furthermore, the customer identity use cases were really divided between what the Okta CIAM platform does and what the Auth0 platform does. The Auth0 is more developer-centric, more you can customize it, extend it, control every bit and byte. The Okta platform is more pre-integrated and low code. The idea was that these were complementary platforms. When I look at the results, you see that bear out in the results.
You see 81% growth in the Auth0 platform over the last year-over-year comparison, and you see nearly 50% growth for the Okta CIAM platform. You're seeing two complementary platforms helping us drive toward be very successful in this market, which unlocks this concept of being this critical primary cloud for every organization in the world.
Thank you. I'll stick to one question, but congrats, Brett. Thank you.
All right.
Let's go to Ittai Kidron at Oppenheimer & Co.
Thanks, Dave. Brett, my question is for you. I wanna dig into Matt's question around the operating margin loss target for fiscal 2023. I have to say, I mean, great quarter, but that was certainly a number that caught me a little bit off base. Can you give us a little bit more detail on the plans for the year as far as headcount additions? And what is the run rate loss that you expect to have exiting the year? Is fiscal 2023 a peak year? I mean, are we finally from here moving into a much more accelerated path towards profitability? I think some of the comments I'm getting from investors here, this was certainly a little bit off base with regards to their core assumptions.
Any more color on, clearly there's opportunity, but if you could be more specific on where and why, and the ROI behind it, I think hopefully that will provide a little bit more comfort and logic behind it.
Absolutely. Totally. I'm happy to talk about that. If you think about, you know, SaaS business anywhere, right? You gotta invest in front of the demand or invest in front of the opportunity, and we've only got a $1.79 billion guide, which by the way, we're very excited about in terms of revenue for FY 2023. We've got an $80 billion market out there. We feel the best opportunity is out in front of us to be able to invest into that opportunity. Areas where we're spending additional money. Adding quota AE or quota carrying AEs, adding, you know, salespeople across the board, whether it be sales engineers or, you know, areas in pipeline generation.
You can see by the momentum in the business, it's clearly a huge opportunity in front of us. You know, that's what we're gonna invest for. We're gonna invest in. Additionally, we're also gonna invest in the product side of the house and supporting our customers, right? When you add this many customers, you gotta be able to support them. Really it's gonna be up and down across the P&L from an investment perspective because we're just scratching the surface. I said it earlier in the call, we've got so much upside in this market opportunity that it wouldn't be the right decision not to invest into the opportunity because we do see a tremendous amount of momentum in the market today.
Is this a peak year? Are we improving thereafter?
Is this a peak year? What do you mean by peak year?
as operating loss.
Well, I mean, I think if you look at our long-term, you know, goals that we've got out in front of us, right? We've got, you know, revenue of $4 billion growing at least 35% each year between now and then, and also the 20% free cash flow target. You know, we are going to balance growth and margin just like we have in the past. You'll see that as we move through this time period between now and FY 2026.
Very good. Good luck. Thanks.
Thank you.
Okay, let's go to Andrew Nowinski at Wells Fargo.
Good afternoon, everyone. Congrats on a great quarter. I have a few questions maybe on your upcoming IGA product launch. It sounds like it might be generally available a little bit t han previously expected. Can you just talk about whether there were any sort of significant changes coming out of that beta test phase that you wanna implement before making it GA?
The IGA product is actually a little bit ahead of schedule. There might be some confusion on when we talked about it last year, being available in the 1st quarter of this year. Were we talking about AE or beta or GA? The internal schedule, which has been clear all along, we're a little bit ahead of that. The beta which is going on right now is going very well. We're seeing success with a lot of different size of customers. We're seeing a really natural, it's a natural complement to our Okta Lifecycle Management product with significant new value for customers and new things they can do to automate their business with its access requests or access certifications, which is a very natural extension of our core product line.
We're very bullish on that. On the PAM side, I think PAM is actually a little bit behind what we originally thought. The reason why is because, as everyone knows, our product Advanced Server Access is really in the PAM market today, very focused on server admins and controlling access to servers. We've done a couple shifts where we've learned a little bit more about the requirements in the PAM market, and we've made some decisions to put some of that capability into the Advanced Server Access product and then put more additional capability, which is gonna take a little bit longer in the PAM product. You're gonna see that.
That's a little bit delayed, but still we're expecting to make a bunch of progress on that this year, and we'll be talking more about that as the year unfolds and then also leading up to Oktane in the fall.
Thanks, Todd. Just a clarification. Did you include any contribution from the IGA solution in your revised annual outlook given that it'll be GA in mid-year I think you said?
No. It's making a very conservative assumption that it won't have any contribution there.
Wonderful. Thank you.
Okay. Let's go to Adam Tindle at Raymond James.
Okay. Thanks, Dave. Todd, I just wanted to maybe take a step back on the fiscal 2023 plan. You talked before about going through a strategic planning process into this. Just wanna know maybe the different outcomes that you considered. I'd imagine that you've had some that were involving showing consistently improving profitability, for example, and maybe the flip side or risks to a more profitable growth plan and what got you comfortable deciding on more aggressive spending near-term.
Yeah. I'm happy to give you color into that. I'm kinda laughing a little bit because it's actually pretty simple the way we think about it, and we've been consistent on this over the last five or six years, which is that we look at our internal efficiency of our investment across the business, whether it's the most direct link between investing and payback in terms of new revenues and sales and marketing. So we just look at that efficiency. As long as we can continue to drive up efficiency, we continue to invest. We're never gonna burn cash. We wanna increase cash flow. Over long term, we wanna increase the free cash flow margin to that stated goal of 20% over time, but we're gonna make sure we're efficient.
We can grow, we can serve customers, we can make them successful, we can take market share, and we can do it under this efficiency framework. We're gonna do it. It's been relatively simplistic. The main things are, how's the efficiency internally? How's the growth rate? And, what's the market? How's the customer success? And that's what we can do to capture the opportunity?
Yeah. I would add to that a little bit. First and foremost, we've always had a bias toward growth. We've also, to Todd's point, always looked at efficiency and always managed on a rule of forty. The guidance you've seen today and the commentary earlier in the call still reflects that. We are definitely managing at a rule of forty, and we believe that's the right thing to do to go capture the opportunity out in front of us, 'cause it is a massive one out in front of us. We feel that the time is right to go and grab as much market share as possible.
Makes sense. Brett, maybe just a follow-up for you. Just wanted to marry sort of the qualitative commentary versus the quantitative messaging here. Qualitatively, we're seeing a lot of acceleration in large customers. The demand environment is incredibly healthy. You're investing in public sector. In the past, you've talked about focusing on CRPO as a key metric, and
Mm-hmm.
It was outpacing subscription revenue growth in the past, and that was kind of an indication of acceleration. That's starting to invert based on your guidance. Just wondering if you could double-click on why that would be the case and how CRPO should track for fiscal 2023. Thank you.
Yeah. Thank you for bringing that up. I'm so happy you brought up current RPO. It's my favorite metric. Which you can see clearly was a strong quarter in Q4 and, you know, the guidance we've given you today of, you know, low to 50% range for current RPO in Q1 is also quite a strong guide. If you think about, you know, the impact on the fiscal year 2023 revenue guidance, you know, the combination of those two factors is translating directly into that increase of $35 million up to $1.79 billion, you know, growing 38% year-over-year at the top end of the guidance.
Okay. Thank you.
Okay. Next we'll go to Eric Heath at KeyBanc Capital Markets.
Great. Thanks, Dave. Thanks, Todd and Brett. Brett, congratulations. Todd, Brett, I did wanna ask on the quarter, on Okta standalone. I think most of your peers showed some acceleration this quarter. Looks like Okta standalone decelerated maybe 1 point. Just anything you'd call out in terms of the quarter that might've been a little bit softer than you might have expected?
Yeah. We're very excited about that 39% Okta standalone revenue growth. Eric, thanks a lot for bringing that up. When you look at the size of the business, I mean, the, you know, the workforce business is already 63% of the total business. It's a billion-dollar business at this point, and it's growing significantly year-over-year. You add in what's going on on the sign-in side of the house, and we're very pleased with that as well. We look at the business holistically at this point. Obviously, there's a big opportunity when it comes to Workforce. That's gonna be a very nice business for us in years ahead. You know, you can hire account executives who know how to sell enterprise IT. They know where to go find it.
There's a lot of legacy, Oracle, IBM, CA, RSA, that over time, we're just gonna slowly rip and replace. Obviously, our dollar-based net retention continues to be very strong. It's up 124%, up from 122% last quarter. That's because our motion of landing and expanding inside these large organizations is going very well. On the Workforce side, that business is gonna continue to go very well. That's why you see us coming into these natural adjacencies of IGA and PAM. It's not as though we're sitting here and wondering what we should be building next. I mean, a lot of that is customer demand. Todd talked a little about IGA and the early access this month to a limited number of customers.
I mean, that's gonna launch in North America by mid-year, globally by year-end, and that's a natural priority for us, which aligns with a lot of what we're doing around workflow and lifecycle management. When you think about customer identity and access management, I mean, that market's gone from zero when we went public five years ago to a $30 billion TAM today, where we are the clear leaders with the only cloud-native identity management platform, whether you're looking for bottom up or you're looking for top down. That's why you're seeing in that business the almost 60% year-over-year growth of that. That the competitive landscape, which we haven't really talked about, it's all greenfield. I mean, the opportunity is just helping customers be successful, and they have a shortage of developers. They need to focus on their core businesses.
The more we can make it easy for them to just take identity off the shelf and put it inside their applications and infrastructure, the better off they're gonna be. We see that as a huge investment opportunity, back to the previous question. We're very excited about the overall growth in the business. You know, you know, if you'd told me when we started that we'd have this business today of 5,000 employees, being on almost $400 million revenue quarter, growing 63% year-over-year and accelerating, I would have taken it on in a heartbeat. What I would tell you, though, Eric, is we're very excited about 15,000 total customers. We're very excited about adding a record 1,000 last quarter. It should be 50,000 and 100,000, and that's the exciting opportunity for us ahead.
That's great. Then just one follow-up on that point. I mean, great to see the large customer adds and the NRR kind of tick back up. Any way we should kinda think about the change to the formula for 2023 in terms of large land versus expansions, maybe what effect that might have on the NRR rate?
Yeah. I mean, what I would say is, you know, we have continued success with large enterprise, obviously. We gave everyone, I think in April of last year when we had Investor Day, we gave everyone an update on $500,000 [guess] customers and over $1 million ACV customers. I mean, those numbers now are almost 600 and almost 200 respectively. I think that's growth about 60% year-over-year compared with 50% year-over-year a year ago. 30% of the G2K are now customers. You know, Todd talked a little bit about some examples early on. I mean, that's great. Again, I think the opportunity ahead is the really big one.
Look, when you come out with these new products, things like IGA that are critical to our organizations, it's not about the 2,000 companies maybe today that are using an on-prem IGA solution. It's about the next 25 and 50,000 who want that kind of functionality and are never gonna implement an on-prem legacy product from yesteryear. They're looking for a modern cloud solution. Same is true with PAM. You look at Advanced Server Access, the beginning of that PAM product, I mean, Zoom, for this very webinar that we're on right now, they use Advanced Server Access to protect all of their production infrastructure for all their servers around the world. Those are the kinds of future opportunities that I think are gonna be very exciting when we think about where we're going and how we're gonna get there. Absolutely, the land expansion is very good.
Historically, we've talked about a 115%-120% range. I know it's ticked up over that. You know, I'm really sorry. I know when it gets bigger, that means that we're cross-selling and upselling too much. I know when it goes down, people are upset that we have so many new logos. We're doing the best we can to balance it, but we're very happy about where we are, and I think it shows a very good balanced approach to helping customers to be successful with our solutions.
Great. Thanks, Frederic. Congrats again.
Thank you.
Great. Let's go to Alex Henderson at Needham & Company.
Thank you very much. I wanted to go back to the PAM commentary. My understanding is the PAM, the only thing you gave guidance on in terms of time of launch was on the governance side. Can you give us any clarity on when you expect the PAM products to launch and how we should be thinking about that product in terms of the timing to get to market?
It's an important area for us as we expand on the Workforce side of the house. We expand what the platform can do. If you look at what customers are more and more customers are building software themselves, which means they have critical servers and containers and things they need to secure. What better to do that than the leading access management platform mapped to those resources? That's what our Advanced Server Access product is. A customer like Zoom can get tons of value out of it as they have to manage tens and tens of thousands of servers and many, many operations people and developers accessing them in a secure way, which, by the way, is remote, right? Because they don't all go to the same office and access a dedicated data center. It's in cloud data centers and remote work.
A data platform like Okta is really well-positioned to provide value there. In terms of the expectations, in terms of the financial results, we're taking a very conservative assumption this year that PAM is not gonna contribute revenue to this year. It is an important area we're working on. What we're doing as we develop the product is we're balancing out the existing product and what capabilities we add into there, and then what capabilities do we put in the follow-on to that, which is the PAM module, and how we balance those out. We made the decision to put things like managing Active Directory-based servers. We decided to put that into ASA, so it's taking that a little longer, so the PAM module is gonna be pushed out a little bit.
Yeah, we'll be talking about more details in terms of when it's gonna be available to customers. From an investor perspective, for this year, there's no dependency there.
You don't have a date for the launch of that product at this point. The 2nd question I had for you is on the operating spending. I really was trying to get a handle on what rate of staffing capacity you're adding specifically to the sales capacity. Obviously, the spend is up substantially. You're much more aggressive. Is the capacity adds to setting up not just for this year, but for next year coming in at close to a 50% increase in sales capacity reach?
Absolutely, Alex. I'll take that one. You sound like you know our business really, obviously, clearly very well. Whenever we're building capacity, we're not building it just for this year, we're building it for future years, right? You know, we've historically built capacity in year for the following year, and so we're gonna continue to do that, and that's part of the investment levels you see in FY 2023. You know, when Todd talked a few minutes ago about, you know, our sales efficiency, that's something we always look at when we're thinking about, okay, what's the right balance here to add as much as we possibly can while also balancing that efficiency level, as we go after this market.
Is that 50% number reasonable?
You know, I'll let you draw your own conclusions. You know, we're trying to grow as fast as we possibly can.
Thanks. Can't blame a guy for trying.
All right, let's go to Rob Owens at Piper Sandler.
Thanks for taking my question. Curious around Auth0, any high-level guidance as we think about next year? I know you're gonna tell me we're not gonna break it out for you. That being said, anything with regard to seasonality and kinda how should we think about the growth of that and CIAM overall?
Well, we're investing a lot in making sure CIAM is successful, and the proportionate investment is a lot of that's going to Auth0, but we're also investing a lot in the Okta CIAM platform. It's a big strategic important thing for us. You're right, we're not gonna break out the specific expectations around growth rates beyond the guidance we've already given. If you look at the top three priorities for the strategic plan of the company next year, number one is winning that market. You can imagine that has a lot of importance and priority based on being successful with the developer motion of Auth0. Also, broadly speaking, growing the CIAM business aggressively. It's a big.
You know, if we wanna execute on this vision of a primary cloud, like I've said before, you have to provide both. You have to be the leader in Workforce and the leader in CIAM, and we are the leader in Workforce, and we're making sure we're gonna be the leader in both. That's the top strategic priority we have as a company.
Rob, this is Brett. You know, we'll going forward, we're gonna continue to break out Workforce versus CIAM on a fairly regular basis like we have in the past. We'll definitely keep everyone informed on the progress in both markets 'cause they are obviously both very important to us.
All right. Thanks.
All right. Next, let's move to Adam Borg at Stifel.
Hey, guys. Thanks so much for taking the question. Maybe just on the channel business. I'd love a quick update on the overall channel strategy and how that performed in the quarter. Maybe just as a quick follow-up, I know Auth0 is more of a bottoms-up sale to developers, but I was just curious what kind of opportunities there are to get the channel more involved with Auth0. Thanks again.
Thanks, Adam. Yeah, we are very excited about partnerships in general and the channel specifically. You know, when we think about channel there's obviously a lot of different constituents, many of who have been involved with large organizations for many years, helping them, whether it's on the security side of the house or digital transformation side of the house. For us, it's you know, everything from the large account resellers to value-added resellers. There are regional security providers and partners out there. There's obviously the global system integrators, and then there are the large platform players out there, which we also consider channel. I mean, when you think about the large system integrators, I think Kyndryl that Todd mentioned earlier is a great example.
I mean, this is an IT infrastructure provider formed from the separation of IBM's managed infrastructure services business. These are the folks of IBM services, 90,000 employees. They came from IBM. They started a new company last year, and they didn't go with IBM, they went with Okta. Now, part of that was they wanna use Workforce, part of that is they wanna use CIAM, but also they said, "Hey, a big part of this is we wanna get used to and understand how this works because this is the platform that we wanna go and integrate for our customers going forward." When you're starting to get that kinda reach and that kind of scale off, out of the gate, that's a big deal for a company like ours.
You know, obviously we're very excited about the results and 5,000 employees, an amazing team that's growing very fast. We talked a little bit about the sales organization and organizing it as one unified team with Auth0 and Okta starting February 1, and that's all going very well. When you add in, you know, almost 100,000 employees at the number one service provider in the world, that's a huge kind of reach, number one. Number two, you know, when we think about what's going on out there, independence, neutrality, the freedom to deploy best-of-breed technologies, that's what customers are asking for today. I mean, that is what is driving our business. That's why, you know, things like our partnership with AWS, for example, where we're the only managed identity provider. I mean, they have 9,000 reps.
Those reps get paid commission and quota credit on selling Okta. The same is true when you think about what's going on at Google or you think about the large software as a service providers, whether it's, you know, Salesforce or Workday or ServiceNow. I mean, they're all giant customers of ours, and they bring us into all these deals because we make their solutions get deployed much more quickly and successfully. For us, the channel is really this whole world around us of the world is going to more independence, more neutrality, and there's a lot of people who have a, you know, aligned interest with us on making their customers successful with identity. We're very excited about that. When it comes specifically to Auth0, you know, they have this amazing model of developer up.
That was the 2nd part of your question, I think. They have this amazing model of developer up, where they do a lot of landing. They've got thousands, tens of thousands of free accounts, tens of thousands of developers paying credit card monthly, and then they upsell them into the enterprise. That's something that we're just putting all together as well. I mean, you know, we just have the go-to-market organizations as one, as of a month ago. We're just starting to understand really how all that works. Yeah, I mean, that's another huge opportunity. I mean, you could think of developers as a channel. They're out there talking to each other about what are you using and how are you using it, and they're recommending the best solutions.
You can just see by the tens of thousands of successful and happily deployed developer and free accounts on the Auth0 system that clearly that's working very well. Yeah, I mean, there's a lot of opportunity. It's early days, but you know, we're very excited about how that might work and working with a lot of the folks who are out there making our joint prospective customers successful.
Yeah. One more thing I'll add too is Auth0 before three, four quarters ago didn't have a huge presence with the Global SIs. Now that they're part of Okta, we're really working on getting it in the hands of the Global SIs because what do the Global SIs do? They wanna build stuff. They wanna build digital transformation projects for their customers. What do you need to do that? You need identity platform for developers. That's a big area of boost, I think, in terms of our relationship with the global systems integrators having Auth0 to work with them on.
Awesome. Thanks again.
Great. Well, I still see nine hands raised. We're getting short on time, so let's try to keep to one question. The next will go to [guess] at BTIG.
Hey, Hamza for Gray. Thanks for taking my question. On IGA and PAM, I know you said that they're not really baked into the guidance, but how should we think about the potential for them once they go generally available? How quickly should they contribute to billings once they go live?
I think about this long term. They do two things. One is that they allow more value prop of the platform, so you can. It's basically an upsell value. Also it's just gonna provide a broader set of capabilities, so it just tips over the center the mass that it takes some of these big older companies to adopt a new identity stack. Many customers adopt a new identity stack piecemeal one by one, and that's how Okta traditionally has been very strong. It's very, you can take it as a component, you can use it for one use case, and then slowly expand over time.
As we build out on the workforce side, the entire suite, the PAM, IGA, in broader workforce capabilities, access management, and the other things, lifecycle management, what we do, gonna become really overwhelming, the value and the. It's gonna lead to more, I think, big new lands as well. So the platform approach and having this suite of products is gonna help both there. In terms of the pace of bookings contribution, we haven't really modeled that out in detail, so I can't really speculate on that.
Got it. Thank you.
All right. Let's go to Trevor Walsh at JMP.
Great. Thanks, team, for taking my question. Todd, you mentioned at the outset around kind of some of the key drivers, one of those being Zero Trust initiatives. Can you give us a little bit more detail of how in the field that plays out around those engagements? Maybe this is a good one for Frederic to chime in on too, just in terms of, is it a broader RFP where there's kind of the network component, the identity component, you're all coming at the same time? Or have they kind of made their choices, and then they're bringing in Okta kinda after the fact to layer in that piece? What does it look like in those when a customer has that as their kind of main focus as their why they're bringing the identity piece?
I think that I would divide it in two camps of customers. One is customers that are really trying to nail down what it means to them, what Zero Trust means and how they get there. For those customers, you see them making more of a traditional identity management decision, where it's they think about, okay, we need to do maybe multifactor authentication. We need to have ease of access to apps. We wanna provision some apps on the back end. It's more traditional. Then as they figure that out, we can help them say, "Hey, here's the roadmap," or, "Here's the blueprint on how you get Zero Trust.
Now that you've made this identity decision, here's the other pieces you need." They can look at our integration network and the 7,000+ pre-integrated systems, and we can help them guide them down that Zero Trust journey. There's another, I call them a more advanced set of customers that they know what they want for Zero Trust, and they're coming to leaders like Okta, leaders like Zscaler, leaders like CrowdStrike, and they're saying, "These three components are what's gonna give me my Zero Trust solution. We're gonna buy it together." I've been working on many big accounts with the teams from Zscaler and CrowdStrike, and there's other players as well, but the three of us seem to have been having some success together.
Yeah, just adding some specific examples. I mean, I think we recently saw some surveys. I think north of 80% of the Global 2000 now have stated initiatives around Zero Trust security. Very good examples for us are FedEx, which is a very good, successful, happy customer of ours. We've been working with them for a couple years. They really wanted to deploy Okta very quickly when COVID hit two years ago. They had a much longer rollout plan, but they fast-forwarded it. When we went down and met with them originally, I mean, they had on the whiteboard, "This is a Zero Trust initiative." That was their initiative that Okta was baked right into the middle of. Certainly, I think you're seeing a lot more of that.
What you're also seeing on the public side is, you know, OMB is now recommending to all federal government agencies that they need to have a Zero Trust security. It's really gone from a buzzword, you know, three years ago, where people were like, "Yeah, Zero Trust, but I'm not sure what to do about it," to now we really have the architectural documents where you can present templates to customers and say, "This is what organizations like yours in your industry or of your size and scope and scale are thinking about." I think that's provided a lot of value to customers out of the box because they feel like, "This is great. I'm not the guinea pig anymore. There are other very good examples.
They're public, they're referenceable, and they're working very well." Yeah, I mean, I think that that is a big underpinning of what's also happened, over the last couple years, and I expect that to continue, in the years ahead. I mean, that is a long, big, durable growth factor that we see ahead for sure.
Great. Thanks.
All right. Let's go to Taz at Guggenheim. Taz, maybe on mute. No? All right. Hamza, we're gonna go to you. Morgan Stanley.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Brett, I'll add my congrats to your official appointment. Look forward to seeing you all next week. Todd, maybe a question for you. If I look at the bookings growth for you and some of your peers as well, it seems to be a lot more back-end loaded than it has even in prior years. I'm curious, you know, as we return to the office or, I guess, some semblance of normality, are you seeing some of those larger, like, strategic digital transformation initiatives start to come back? Is that starting to contribute more to your bookings? How would you characterize the pipeline going into 2022 relative to how you were feeling going into 2021?
Pipeline is strong. Yeah, I'm very excited about the pipeline. It's you know quality, depth, maturity. It's really good. I think the back-loaded question. I don't actually have that analysis in front of me, but it didn't seem any different this past year than it had been in previous years, just from a kind of a qualitative perspective. I think your question about the big digital transformation deals. If I were to paint with a broad brush, I would say these things are. They're maybe during early parts of the pandemic, they were put on hold as more people went after really tactical remote work to get people productive.
Pretty soon after that, these started rolling again, like these big customer identity projects or these big new initiatives that weren't a specific reaction to employees working from home or business continuity. That's been, you know, that probably ran through all of last year and continues into the pipeline into next year.
Thank you.
Okay, let's go to Brian Essex at Goldman Sachs.
All right. Thank you very much for taking the question. I appreciate it. Brett, congratulations from me as well. Certainly looking forward to it. Yeah, I was wondering, you know, maybe for Todd as well, you know, if you could speak to some of the organizational changes that have happened, particularly at the top end of the company. I know when we had you last month, you were super excited about integration of the sales forces, and it's great to see kind of Susan, you know, running that. You know, looks like, you know, Eugenio is handing the baton off for the Auth0 team, and it looks like you've had some changes in the Chief Marketing Officer seat as well.
Just maybe if we can make sense of that a little bit to see how you're aligning things and how the culture between the two organizations is maintained, as you are trying to be very careful of the balance and making sure that you maintain that momentum with the Auth0 franchise.
Yeah. Eugenio is just I wanna be clear. He is the CEO of the Auth0 product unit, so
Okay.
He doesn't have sales working for him anymore, but he has basically everything else, whether it's R&D, whether it's customer success, much of the demand gen. It's a very important, significant role. What we're getting is synergy really on the sales side. We have all of the Okta reps now can sell all the products. We increase the capacity, we increase what they can actually sell. There's tons of upside from that. Eugenio has a big job to do with the Auth0 product unit, driving that. They just delivered. You heard the results. They delivered over 80% growth, and we expect them to produce a lot in the year ahead.
The other changes, Brett is a big appointment for us. As you would expect, when we decided to make a change in the CFO, I went out and talked to many candidates and looked everywhere and no one could get over the high bar that Brett has set. I'm very excited to get Brett in the seat permanently. That's really exciting. I'm also really excited about the CMO, John Zissimos. He's off to a great start. That was a little bit of an unexpected change there. His predecessor wasn't as here as we would've hoped for. It was a little bit unexpected. John's stepped into the role, and he's doing a great job. I think some of the change is unexpected, but a lot of the change is directly involved with what we're trying to accomplish, which is win the CIAM market, scale this company out, grow aggressively. I'm very, very excited about the future ahead of us.
It sounds great. Thank you very much.
Yeah, for sure.
Okay, we're gonna go into overtime a little bit here. We'll try to get to a couple more. We'll go to Patrick Colville at Deutsche Bank.
Hey, thank you so much for taking my question. Echoing congratulations to Brett. Let me ask another question about margin, but I'm gonna shake it up a little bit and ask about subscription gross margins. They were down this quarter 170 basis points. Is this due to mix? Is it due to discounting? Is it due to competition? Just, can you talk to that? Then, how should we model this line for fiscal 2023? You know, what's baked into your operating margin guidance? Is there continued ablation on the subscription gross margin line?
Yeah. Thank you for the question. Thank you for the kind comments. Around subs gross margin, you know, in Q4 and also into FY 2023, that's us investing, you know, the upside back into the business, right? We wanna be able to prepare for future growth. You can clearly see that in the revenue guidance and the CRPO results from Q4 and then my commentary around Q1 CRPO growth as well. It's us, you know, putting money back in there and ultimately investing to be able to deal with the demand out in front of us. In terms of being more specific on FY 2023, there's probably a little bit of a headwind on subs gross margins.
Mm-hmm.
That's one of the areas that we're investing in to get out and capture this massive market in front of us.
All right. That's very clear. Thank you so much.
No problem.
Let's go to Rudy Kessinger at D.A. Davidson.
Great. Thanks, guys. If I look at Auth0, I think last time you gave the growth rate in Q2 was 63% year-over-year, and then this quarter, 81% year-over-year, so pretty big acceleration in Auth0. Like, what—how much cross-selling into the Okta installed base, how much has that been a driver versus just core strength and new customer acquisition and upsells within the Auth0 base?
It's really been both, frankly. You can see in some of the references we've talked about today, you know, it's really, you know, strength in the market from just Auth0 on its own. You've heard about even in prior quarters where some Okta customers may not have been as comfortable with a private company, but now Auth0 is part of the public company umbrella of Okta. You see it helping on that end. I would also argue there's help going the other direction as well, right? Auth0 customers who may not have had a workforce solution, you know, that's also been helping us as well. We've mentioned a few of those references, you know, last quarter in our earnings script as well as today in some of the prepared remarks.
Okay, let's go to Joshua Tilton at Wolfe Research.
Thanks for taking my question, guys. Just a high level one from me. There was a stat out in February that only 22% of Microsoft Azure Active Directory customers have MFA, and that kind of struck me as pretty low. I'm just curious, how does that compare to your customer base? How do you guys think about the broader MFA opportunity? Do you guys expect any tailwind to your MFA business, now that Salesforce is mandating MFA on all their products?
I think the opportunity is big for MFA. We talk a lot about these advanced customers that have figured out the Zero Trust architecture and are strategically picking vendors, you know. Frederic mentioned FedEx. Many customers are still doing what some people consider relatively basic things like adding MFA to all their environments. Many of the hacks you see are still basic things like accounts aren't locked down when they should be or disabled or there's an easy to compromise account that doesn't have multi-factor authentication. The reason why it's not is not because people aren't trying hard or they're not smart. It's because it's been too hard.
What we do is we have this pre-integrated solution that you can connect it to all your applications, and you can set up our MFA, and you can even set up other MFAs connected to the Okta platform. It connects to everything. Now, our MFA platform is doing very well, and it can let you do your multi-factor from Face ID or Windows Hello, and more and more customers are using it. That's a big part of the strategy to help our customers be more secure with technology.
Okay, last, we're gonna bring it home with Fatima Boolani at Citi.
Thank you for squeezing me in. I appreciate it. Brett, this one's for you. I'll keep it tight. You didn't mention sort of process improvements, so I'm assuming it's sort of a non-issue here. Can you just update us that if you've mechanically sort of achieved all of the sort of timestamping on the contracts and if the entire installed base has been sort of recalibrated under the operational process improvements umbrella? Then relatedly, how should we think about billings and cash flow seasonality for fiscal 2023 as we lap some of those compares working through the year? That's it for me. Thank you.
Yeah, absolutely. Yeah, I mean, the process change has been fully implemented, so the entire customer base is on it. I mean, now, granted, not everybody's had a billing since then, but the entire customer base is on there. In terms of billing seasonality, you know, we expect about 60% in the back half of the fiscal year, which is in line with historical normal that we've seen over the last few years. Then free cash flow will follow more or less the same historical seasonality that we've had in the past. Not really much different in terms of billing seasonality nor free cash flow seasonality.
That's great. Thank you.
All right. That's it for today, folks. Thanks for tuning in. Before you go, I wanna let you know we'll be attending a few investor events this quarter. We'll be at the Morgan Stanley conference, which is in person in San Francisco on March 8th. There's also the Daiwa Investment Tokyo conference that we'll be attending virtually on the 8th as well, and the Wolfe Research Software conference that we'll attend virtually on March 23rd. That's it for today. If you have any follow-up questions, you can email us at investor@okta.com. Thanks.