Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us to discuss PagerDuty's first quarter fiscal year 2023 results. With me on today's call are Jennifer Tejada, PagerDuty's Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer, and Howard Wilson, our Chief Financial Officer.
Before we begin, let me remind everyone that statements made on this call include forward-looking statements based on the environment as we currently see it, which 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.
These forward-looking statements include our growth prospects and future revenue, among others, and represent our management's belief and assumptions only as of the date such statements are made, and we undertake no obligation to update these.
During today's call, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures, which are in addition to and not a substitute for or superior to measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with GAAP.
A reconciliation between GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures is available in our earnings release. Further information on these and other factors that could affect the company's financial results are included in filings we make with the Securities and Exchange Commission. With that, I'll turn the call over to Jennifer.
Thank you, Christine. Our strong FY 2023 Q1 results extended our momentum from last fiscal year. Revenue grew 34%, an acceleration from Q1 in FY 2022, and our fourth consecutive quarter of growth over 30%.
Our operating leverage is increasing as we scale, with operating margin improving over 600 basis points year-on-year as we progress towards our goal of profitability for the full year FY 2024. Our long-term tailwinds, digital acceleration, cloud adoption, and DevOps transformation are top priorities for organizations worldwide.
We continue to capture demand from a large TAM as companies strive for efficiency and productivity. As a result, we are raising our full year top and bottom line guidance ranges. I want to thank our teams around the world who remain laser-focused on measurable customer success for measurable customer outcomes and continue to execute well.
As always, I wanna recognize our customers and partners. They place their trust in PagerDuty, and our success is driven by their success. Our customers are incredibly loyal. Our gross retention remains above 95%, as it has for over 5 years. Customer expansion was also strong during the quarter, with dollar-based net retention increasing to 126%, above 120% for the 6th consecutive quarter.
The mid-market and enterprise segments continue to drive growth, with customers spending more than $100,000 annually in ARR, up 43% year-over-year. These consistently strong results are driven by a robust demand environment, market leading multiproduct platform innovation, and in-period field execution from our go-to-market teams. Our customers' digital transformation and cloud adoption initiatives are strategic multi-year projects.
In order to innovate to deliver superior customer experiences and optimize talent, they require a platform for action that orchestrates and automates their digital operations. PagerDuty is essential infrastructure in their drive towards digital maturity and a strategic partner accelerating long-term digital transformation.
Our market conditions remain favorable. Digital infrastructures are increasingly more complex and interdependent, driving demand for our platform throughout our customer base and across our target markets. Digital transformation is often underpinned by distributed architectures, data density, and continuous deployment, resulting in service proliferation outpacing human capacity.
Developers, SREs, IT and security teams, and leadership are overwhelmed. Interrupt work, which is unplanned, unstructured, time-sensitive, yet often mission-critical, has quickly emerged as the standard mode of operations for knowledge workers. Surging incidents, customer expectations, and demand for innovation all compete for developer attention, where manual firefighting is the enemy of innovation.
Unmanaged, this interrupt work and its impact on in-house experts can hamper growth and stifle strategic high-value initiatives. Built on the foundation of our digital operations platform, PagerDuty's Operations Cloud enables both orchestration and automation for all types of interrupt work by leveraging our proprietary data set and extending our integration ecosystem.
The Operations Cloud is quickly becoming the standard for modern work. It's cloud native, designed to simplify the complex, built for distributed organizations, easy to deploy, and trusted by developers and technical leaders behind your favorite brands.
PagerDuty is the most trusted and resilient digital operations platform at scale, with nearly 670 integrations serving both traditional DevOps use cases and new ones like robotics and data operations. Our AI-based insights and workflow automation rapidly identify time-sensitive opportunities and incidents while freeing up capacity and improving efficiency.
In this tight talent environment, this has become increasingly important. During Q1, a leading online recruiting platform significantly expanded their deployment with us. As typical with our customers, they initially implemented PagerDuty for their site reliability engineering teams in 2014.
They upgraded to our digital operations plan this quarter on the back of several user expansions. With the addition of Event Intelligence, they've already achieved 22% reduction in events. We project an expected ROI of nearly $2 million in the first year. This rapid speed to value is a hallmark of PagerDuty products. In our March product release, we highlighted new process automation solutions now generally available.
Process Automation On-Prem 4.0 enhances security, stability, and usability while making it simple for our customers to handle incident response and service request use cases across geographically distributed infrastructure, including those who require zero-trust communication.
We also released PagerDuty Runbook Automation, a new cloud-native SaaS offering, that provides customers with a fast start to process automation that is both highly secure and available without having to manage automation infrastructure. These releases build on our incident response and AIOps offerings and enable enterprises to accelerate their digital operations from manual and reactive towards proactive and preventative.
PagerDuty is the only cloud-native digital operations platform to combine automation across observability, engagement, and action with the ability to service diverse teams across the enterprise.
The integration of automation is an essential step in bringing customers along their digital operations maturity journey. Our process automation customers start by using PagerDuty to capture and automate common repetitive tasks and to diagnose and remediate recurring incidents. For example, automating diagnostics to fix an online shopping cart failure.
Quantifiable cost savings and efficiency gains then spur expansion of PagerDuty beyond DevOps, IT, and SRE teams to realize gains in other areas of the business, most commonly security and customer service. SailPoint, an identity security platform, has been a PagerDuty customer for nearly a decade.
This quarter, they deployed PagerDuty Event Intelligence in addition to expanded use of incident response for their customer support teams. This enabled them to consolidate what were 50 individual incidents into a single incident and achieve an 85% reduction in overall incidents while improving their time to acknowledge and resolve them.
PagerDuty is helping SailPoint achieve their true service ownership and to communicate to customers more proactively during incidents. Regardless of company size or existing commitments, our customers tend to repeatedly expand our relationship as they move up the digital operations maturity curve.
Even our largest customers expand their investment in PagerDuty through new product adoption, user expansion, and new use cases. Every customer presents a new expansion opportunity as digital acceleration initiatives span the entire enterprise. Demonstrating this land and expand motion, a leading financial service institution launched PagerDuty in 2019 with an initial purchase for a group delivering applications for high-value clients, then expanded rapidly across other teams through several additional purchases to over $1 million in ARR.
As it became evident that teams on PagerDuty resolving issues up to 75% faster, they made an additional seven-figure investment this quarter. They added thousands of new users standardizing on PagerDuty for incident response and deployed AIOps and automation across multiple teams. Relationships like this drive our high dollar-based net retention rates, a measure of our durable and growing relationships with our customers.
PagerDuty's Operations Cloud now offers four land products and multiple cross-sell and upsell expansion opportunities while delivering value for customers at all five stages of their digital maturity curve, be it manual, reactive, responsive, proactive, and preventative. This quarter, we bolstered our executive leadership team with two key hires. Catherine Calvert joined PagerDuty as our Chief Marketing Officer, bringing deep experience in brand building and go-to-market execution for award-winning SaaS companies.
She owns extending our leadership by developing brand awareness, trust, and demand for PagerDuty's Operations Cloud in the C-suite and with developers across the world's most innovative startups and largest industry leaders. We also appointed Shelley Webb as the company's new Senior Vice President and General Counsel. Shelley fortifies our position around security and privacy.
She has deep leadership experience in legal and policy strategy across litigation, contracts, M&A, and compliance, while being highly regarded for driving impactful business results with top customers and strategic partners. In April, PagerDuty released our second annual impact report, detailing the company's ongoing commitment to philanthropy, our employee engagement and volunteerism, and our ESG commitments.
In 2021, we deployed funding to more than 660 organizations globally, 75% of which were led by women and leaders of color. 92% of Dutonians volunteered time or donated to a cause, resulting in more than 5,000 volunteer hours.
We also announced the launch of PagerDuty Impact Labs, a new program that provides funding, product credits, volunteer technical support to time-critical health partners with a specific focus on leveraging our product and technical expertise to ensure critical time-sensitive care to patients in need.
Our social impact work also reminds our teams that success for our customers extends beyond financial returns. PagerDuty customer Cambridge Cognition is a U.K.-based neuroscience company that quantifies the cognitive health of patients for healthcare organizations.
PagerDuty enables them to quickly identify suicide risk factors through patient survey data and engage clinicians if patients need immediate attention while ensuring HIPAA and GDPR compliance. Using PagerDuty, Cambridge Cognition delivers real value and saves lives.
Our mission to revolutionize operations and build customer trust by anticipating the unexpected in an unpredictable world has never been more timely or relevant. Given the economic background, companies need to grow profitably by both increasing their velocity and improving their efficiency. We are in the best position at the right time, with a proven, resilient, scaled cloud native platform to address the needs of the digital first economy.
The current environment calls for heightened financial discipline, and we are actively evaluating our expenses to ensure an agile, lean cost structure that supports our ongoing investments in innovation and growth. We are committed to delivering both durable top line growth while improving our operating leverage as we scale, and to become profitable in Q4 and for the full year in FY 2024.
Our focus will remain on customer success. We exist to empower teams with the time and efficiency to build the future. We anticipate sustained demand for our products and services as our customers seek to efficiently accelerate their digital businesses and more efficiently manage their operations in an evolving macroeconomic climate. Traveling to see our teams and customers has reinforced my confidence in our people, our customers and partners, and our multiple engines for growth.
Our vision for an equitable world where we transform critical work so all teams can delight their customers and build trust is realized more each day. We're excited to share more about PagerDuty at our annual summit series beginning on June 7, and encourage our investors to join us virtually. With that, I'll turn the call over to Howard, and I look forward to your questions.
Thank you, Jen, and good day to everyone joining us on this afternoon's call. We continued our cadence of strong quarterly execution and delivered rock-solid financial results in the first quarter of fiscal 2023. In an environment of scarce talent and rising costs, the expanding functionality of the PagerDuty digital operations management platform, covering the full cycle of detection to auto remediation, is allowing customers to revolutionize their operations.
Overall, the value proposition of our platform in incident response, AI ops, customer service ops and automation continues to resonate with customers who are intent on driving innovation, efficiency and productivity. As we expand our platform, we open up new avenues for both land and add-on opportunities, such as with our new process automation releases this past quarter.
As I go through our results for the quarter, unless otherwise stated, all references to our expenses and operating results are on a non-GAAP basis and are reconciled to our GAAP results in the earnings release that was posted before the call. Revenue was $85 million in the first quarter, up 34% year-over-year, an acceleration of more than 600 basis points over Q1 of the prior fiscal year.
International revenues remain sequentially unchanged at 24% of total revenues. We delivered dollar-based net retention in Q1 at 126%, compared to 121% in the same period one year ago. This marks the sixth consecutive quarter of DBNR above 120%, and we expect to continue to be at or above 120% throughout this fiscal year.
Q1 ended with 655 customers with annual recurring revenue or ARR over $100,000, up 43% from a year ago. We ended Q1 with 15,040 paid customers, up 8% compared to a year ago, our second quarter of sequential increase. Free and paid companies on our platform grew to over 21,000, an increase of 26% year-over-year, with free continuing to provide a funnel for future paid growth.
Our Q1 gross margin at 84% was once again within our target range of 84%-86%, and we expect gross margin for Q2 to be at a similar level as Q1. Our operating loss was $2 million or 3% of revenue, an improvement compared to a loss of $6 million or 9% of revenue in the same quarter last year.
Compared to our first quarter guidance, operating margin was favorable due to improved sales and marketing efficiency and headcount growth shifting materially to the second quarter. We reiterate our expectations for better than break-even in Q4 and non-GAAP profitability in FY 2024. One final note on operating margin before moving to cash.
The joint venture announced after the close of Q1 to establish PagerDuty Japan with our partner Japan Cloud is expected to reduce full fiscal year operating margin by approximately 100 basis points.
Now to cash. First quarter cash from operations was -$3 million, and free cash flow was -$6 million. As a reminder, Q2 is seasonally our highest cash consumption period due to outflows from ESPP, annual vendor renewals, payments on the convertible debts and summit.
Similar to last year, we expect operating cash flow and free cash flow to improve in Q3 and Q4. Turning to the balance sheet, we ended the quarter with $467 million in cash equivalents and investments. The sequential decrease in this metric is from our acquisition of Catalytic, which closed during Q1.
Total deferred revenue ended the quarter at $167 million, up 33% year over year. Quarterly calculated billings were $82 million, which was an increase of 38% year over year, exceeding the high end of the range we provided during last quarter's call. This included approximately $3 million of benefit from early renewals and revenue from Catalytic. We expect billings growth for Q2 to be in the range of 25%-30%.
On a trailing twelve months basis, billings were $344 million, an increase of 34% compared to a year ago and above the estimate previously provided. We expect trailing twelve months billings growth exiting the second quarter to be at or above 30% over last year. Turning now to our guidance.
For the second quarter of fiscal 2023, we expect revenue in the range of $87 million-$89 million, representing a growth rate of 29%-32%. Net loss per share in the range of -$0.09 to -$0.08, with basic shares outstanding of approximately 88 million. This implies an operating margin in the range of -9% to -8%.
For the full fiscal year 2023, we're increasing revenue guidance to $364 million-$369 million, representing a growth rate of 29%-31%. We are improving guidance for net loss per share to -$0.21 to -$0.17, with basic shares outstanding of approximately 89 million. This implies an operating margin of -5% to -3%.
We continue to deliver strong revenue growth while actively driving efficiencies across the company. We've improved operating margin year-over-year and will continue to do so each quarter. Ensuring a lean cost structure so we can continue to fund innovation is a leadership priority. I want to thank our customers for their trust in us and our team for delivering another outstanding quarter of product innovation and go-to-market execution.
I remain confident in our business and performance given the current market demand, the acceleration of our product innovation, strong tailwinds, and our consistent execution. With that, I will open up the call for Q&A.
Thank you. To our analysts, please feel free to raise your hand so that you can be added to the queue. First we're going to turn to Matt Hedberg at RBC. Let me bring you up, Matt. Go ahead.
Hey, this is Simran Biswal for Matt Hedberg. Thanks for taking our question. I was wondering if you could talk a little bit more about the overall demand environment and how you feel about the pipeline in the second half?
Sure. Thanks for being here today. I'll take this, and Howard, if you wanna add anything, please do. You know, we continue to see a very strong demand environment. We haven't seen any change in the demand signals from our customers. I think that is driven by the long-term tailwinds that we've talked about before, digital acceleration, DevOps transformation, and cloud adoption.
These digital transformation projects are multi-year projects, and they're going to continue. I'd also say that, you know, our customers are looking for solutions to help them automate, reduce their costs, their cash burn, and improve their productivity.
The investments that we've made in innovation over the last several years have really put us in a good position for this moment. Frankly, I'd add that PagerDuty really has become essential infrastructure for most of our customers.
We see them continuing to invest, and in fact, like I said, double down in areas like Event Intelligence, Customer Service Ops, and automation. So far, you know, very consistent demand environment.
Great. Thank you.
Pleasure.
Okay, next we'll be going to Sanjit with Morgan Stanley. Sanjit, please go ahead.
Thank you for taking the questions on really, a very clean and crisp and well-executed quarter in Q1. I just want to pick up on just how you guys are thinking about a potential slowdown. I think, in your script, Jen, you said the demand environment looks pretty great to you. Some companies are just trying to embed the risk of a potential slowdown into their guidance.
Maybe Howard, maybe comment on how you are at least, encapsulating maybe some of those risks into the guidance. Then for Jen, the question for you would be around, on one hand, the value proposition is around automation. We have a slide that supply-demand imbalance between engineers and the number of services that these engineers support, which is sort of the long-term tailwind.
At the same time, we're seeing a lot of companies sort of go through layoffs. If you look at the tech space, the pickup in layoffs over the last 3-4 weeks has dramatically increased. I wonder if you could sort of give us your view as to does that represent a risk to the business in the near term versus what seems like a clear value proposition that you were gonna have to automate more to support all of these mission-critical services?
Yeah. I mean, obviously we are gonna continue to monitor the macro environment very carefully. We're spending a lot of time talking to customers, kind of understanding where they're at. Mostly what I'm hearing in the market is there's still a very tight talent market for software engineers. People have moved most of their revenue models to digital experiences.
Those digital transformation efforts are still well and truly in train, and in fact, in some cases being accelerated because they deliver long-term cost savings and productivity improvements. We continue to see this, like I said, strong demand for applications and services that help you improve the productivity of your existing headcount, free them up to focus on, you know, important innovation work.
In fact, you know, interrupt work is a big part of the problem, and it's not gonna go away regardless of the market cycle we're in. Now I've lived through a few of these market cycles. I'm old enough to have been around for 2002 and 2008, et cetera. In this case, our customers have stronger balance sheets.
They are, like I said, very committed to their digital transformation programs because they are business imperative, and we have become essential infrastructure. So, you know, we see strong pipeline looking ahead. We see customers that continue to look to us to help them find ways to improve their productivity and shrink their, you know, their spend where they can. That's where we're staying focused.
You can see that in, you know, both the stickiness of our platform, you know, gross retention above 95% for years, right? When I talk about essential infrastructure, and likewise, you know, strong attach.
To your point, you know, we, like other companies, are gonna be judicious about our expenses and our discretionary spend, really focused on having an agile, cost base that we can grow from and remain very committed to, both profitability in Q4 and, for the full year FY 2024, but also in continuing to improve our operating leverage as we demonstrate that we are a durable growth company.
I really appreciate the thoughts, Jen. Thank you very much.
My pleasure.
Okay. Next, we'll hear from Matt Stotler with William Blair. Matt, go ahead.
Yeah. Hey, Jen. Hey, Howard. Thanks for taking the questions. Maybe just to start with one on the Catalytic acquisition. You've talked about this a little bit already. Seems like a very, you know, compelling extension of the workflows that you can address into finance, HR, supply chain, et cetera. Would love to get maybe just some more granular thoughts on how this expands, you know, I guess, effectively your TAM or your wallet share within the customer base as well as the stickiness of the platform.
I can take a crack at that, and then Howard, if you wanna jump in. I mean, first of all, one of the things that Catalytic does for us is it allows us to increase the flexibility in the workflows for our existing customers. It brings more applicability and I think utility to our incident response teams.
That's super important because the types of incidents that they're seeing, the capability and the skill sets of the types of people working on those incidents is sort of widely variable, and so that's super important.
To your point, it also enables us to add users across the business for different types of use cases. By having flexible no-code workflow offering, it also means that we're not governed by our own ability to create verticalized workflows or products.
You know, I think that does expand our TAM over time, but we're very focused on making sure that we can continue to grow with our core audience and enable those adjacent teams to start to build for themselves, and over time, build an ecosystem of different use cases on the platform.
You can start to see, you know, early leading indicators of that in our integration ecosystem, where I mentioned, you know, we had an integration for a robotics provider this quarter and an integration in data operations. Those things are just starting to build on top of the platform without us having to drive them directly.
Yeah. I would just add that you'll be able to see some of the ways in which Catalytic is already starting to be embedded in our platform at our summit events that start next week. We're not selling Catalytic today as a standalone product, but the intent, as we discussed when we did the acquisition, was really to put that technology into the platform and then to be able to drive the different use cases where our customers are already taking us to those different use cases, but this just makes it a whole lot easier.
Right. That's super helpful. Just one follow-up on the partner ecosystem. You know, obviously you've talked about AWS recently, but you know, I guess for the past 12-18 months, we've also had, you know, Deloitte, Tata on the SI side, on the ISV side, Microsoft, Salesforce and others. Any update on that ecosystem, you know, the influence that ecosystem is having on your business, and how you see, you know, some of those key partnerships trending going forward?
Yeah, we really try and be focused and prioritize key partners, and one of the reasons that we've talked specifically about Salesforce, for instance, is because they've been a great partner as we've rolled out our customer service operations offering. We really look for for partners who are the best at what they do and who have shared values and kind of a shared value proposition where we can go to the market together in a very strategic way.
I think our customers have grown to really depend on us for highly reliable, scaled offerings that very quickly deliver return on investment. You'll continue to see us be very focused there. You know, similar with AWS, there's an obvious large opportunity around cloud adoption and cloud migration there.
Again, you know, shared values, that shared audience, so just a good pairing, and we're gonna continue to double down and likewise look for opportunities with other partners where it's meaningful for us. Focus is really important to me right now, keeping our teams focused on, you know, the priorities that can deliver near- and long-term return on investment. Super important.
Sure. Thanks for taking the questions.
Thanks, Matt.
Okay, next hearing from Chad Bennett. Chad from Craig-Hallum.
Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions.
Hey, Chad.
It looks like I'm glowing. I'm glowing about your quarter, but I'm not really glowing. Just-
I really like your background, Chad.
Yeah.
Good branding.
I had to say that because I know it looks odd. Yeah, I mean, the very clean quarter, like the prior questioner said, and the secondary metrics look like very strong. I guess one of the secondary metrics that looked very strong was the customers over 100 grand ARR.
You know, almost double year-over-year and uncharacteristically up from Q4 sequentially, you know, up like 20% or 10%. Like, what I mean, what kicked in this quarter, you know, in terms of that? You know, for a Q1 to come out of the gate, I think that's strong. Was there something from a cross-sell/upsell standpoint that obviously kicked up on net retention?
you know, just, you know, customers just, you know, a cohort graduating up to that 100K plus class? Like, was there something that really triggered that type of strength in a Q1?
I think it's really the consistency with which we're executing. Even our transactional business, Chad. Like, so many of our customers start small. They land with a small deal, then those teams expand usage. Then it becomes the standard, you know, in engineering. And then they start to look to add new products.
They often trade up to Digital Operations Management. And then over time, you know, we see other teams like Customer Service Ops, you know, come into play as well. And I think we're just doing that more and more effectively. You know, if you think about over the last, call it 12 quarters, all of the innovation and investment that we've talked about, you're starting to see those investments really start to pay out.
You know, I'm just really proud of both our engineering teams and our go-to-market teams because we've pushed them really hard over the last couple of years, and it's great to see the attach rate. You know, more than 50% of our customers have more than two products. It's good to see the multi-product platform strategy really coming to life. Howard, I don't know if you'd have anything to add to that.
Yeah, I would add in, you know, as a product-led growth company, I think we're seeing the benefits of that showing up too, because we've made it easier for customers to make, you know, smaller incremental purchases, right? They don't have to go and do the big tickets purchase, like, out of the gate.
They can do a small purchase, but then they can easily grow with us. Self-service is available to all of our customers, not only in the SMB space. Also we've improved our product in product discovery so that an existing customer, for example, can trial Event Intelligence and can see whether it makes sense for them.
That also means that it's making multi-product more accessible. That really complements the efforts of the sales team, because now the product is helping do some of the lifting. The sales team is really being set up well to be able to engage with the customer in something that the customer can already see the value of.
Got it. Then maybe one follow-up with a couple sub-segments for Howard. One hundred and twenty-six percent net expansion popped up. I think historically you've always said the main driver in net expansion has always been user growth, right?
Yeah.
We've like Jennifer said, a ton of product innovation over the last two plus years. You know, you've got Rundeck, you've got AIOps, you've got customer service, you know, and a lot of things going on, Event Intelligence and so forth.
Right.
How do you think about cross-sell, up-sell in terms of, or I guess, is it moving the needle on net expansion in a bigger way? How should we think about that going forward?
Yeah. It's still, you know, you've highlighted the combination of factors. User expansion is still the most obvious way because, you know, the success with one team often leads us to success with another team. As we've been able to broaden the platform and to be truly multi-product, that is playing a bigger part.
We are seeing an increasing number of customers using multiple products, and that ARR coming from multi-product customers, you know, has continued to increase. As we said, you know, in the last call at the end of Q4, we had over 50% of our ARR was coming from customers with two or more products. That's definitely proving to be an additional driver from a an expansion perspective. The other dimension not to lose sight of is things like Customer Service Ops, right?
We've created like a new land with Customer Service Ops. We've created a new land with automation, and those effectively are able to come into PagerDuty on their own to begin with. There's now multiple ways of expanding with PagerDuty. It's not as though you have to start an incident response and go from there. You can actually start in another place and expand from there.
Yeah. Got it. Well, thanks. Great job again.
Thank you, Chad.
Thanks, Chad.
Okay, next we'll hear from Shrenik Kothari .
Hey, yeah. This is Shanik from Baird. Congrats on a great clean quarter. Really great enterprise and mid-market execution, and that we just elaborate on Jen and Howard. On first look, the overall paying customer growth is really strong at about 88% year-on-year, relative to like typical seasonal trends as well.
Just relative to the 100K customer expansions that you saw, like really strong. Just kind of was wondering, the enterprise and go-to-market execution super solid. But can you talk about the dynamic at play for like customers little down market or less than 100K?
Are you seeing kind of more of macro at play on the lower end of the market that we have been hearing from other places saying about the dynamics? The top of the funnel is still very strong, growing 26%, as you said, Howard, sequentially growing to 21,000. Just curious, like is there any macro effects that you see kind of a little bit down market?
When we look at our SMB business or our very small business segment, that tends to be tech startups. Think about it that way. It tends to be, you know, smaller companies or smaller teams that are using us for project work. In fact, in Q1 that business was very strong. We refer to that as PD Online internally, and the team there is executing incredibly well.
Again, I have to attribute much of that to our product-led growth motion. The fact that those very small customers can self-serve, try the product, start in free, if that's what they prefer, discover new capability, and then PagerDuty very quickly becomes a standard inside of their business and grows with them. You know, we haven't seen a change in demand signal there. In fact, that segment's been performing very robustly.
Got it. Thanks for the color, Jen. Just one quick follow-up on the international side. You guys have called it out as your key growth driver and source of expansion, and you have taken initiatives there. That was like essentially flat at 24% of the total, if I heard that right. Just wondering like about any Forex impact and like on constant currency, would that look any different? Or what would it look like? Yeah.
Yeah, sure. Srini, you know, for us as a company, today, well, all of our contracts are in U.S. dollars. No matter where our customers are, they contract with us in USD. You know, foreign FX exposure for us is really limited largely to expenses.
However, we do look very closely at our customers and whether the change in FX or the strengthening of the U.S. dollar is having a negative impact, like is it impacting on their ability to buy. What we've seen to date is that, you know, the value that we drive for our customers is just so high that the fact that it's becoming more expensive in local currencies has not had any material impact on their engagement or the demand.
Got it. Yeah. Thanks, Howard. Yeah, thanks and congrats again on a great quarter. Appreciate it.
Thank you.
Thank you.
Folks, it looks like that does it for questions today. Jennifer, to you for final comments.
Well, I just wanted to first say how confident I am in our future and optimistic I am about our ability to continue to build a durable and over time, profitable growth company. I also just wanted to recognize our teams for their great execution and our employee resource groups who recently have celebrated Asian American and Pacific Islander Heritage Month last month and have just kicked off as well Pride Month at PagerDuty.
These teams work really hard in addition to their day jobs to make sure that we are celebrating ID and E within our company and around our community, and I personally appreciate it. With that, I just wanna say thanks to our customers and our shareholders and wish you all a great day. Thanks for being with us today.