Good afternoon, and thank you for joining Atlassian's earnings conference call for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2022. As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded and will be available for replay from the investor relations section of Atlassian's website following this call. I will now hand the call over to Martin Lam, Atlassian's Head of Investor Relations.
Welcome to Atlassian's fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2022 earnings call. Thank you for joining us today. Joining me on the call today, we have Atlassian's Co-Founders and Co-CEOs, Scott Farquhar and Mike Cannon-Brookes, and our Chief Revenue Officer, Cameron Deatsch. Earlier today, we published a shareholder letter and press release with our financial results and commentary for our fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2022. The shareholder letter is available on Atlassian's Work Life blog and investor relations section of our website, where you will also find other earnings-related material, including the earnings press release and supplemental investor data sheet. As always, our shareholder letter contains management's insight and commentary for the quarter. During the call today, we'll have brief opening remarks and then focus our time on Q&A. This call will include forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks, uncertainties, and other factors that may cause actual results, performance, or achievements to be materially different from any future results, performance, or achievements expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements. You should not look upon forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. Forward-looking statements represent our management's beliefs and assumptions only as of such statements were made, and we assume no obligation to update or revise such statements should they change or cease to be current. Further information on these and other factors that could affect the company's financial results is included in filings we make with the Securities and Exchange Commission from time to time, including the section titled Risk Factors in our most recent Form 20-F and quarterly Form 6-K. During today's call, we will also discuss non-IFRS financial measures.
These non-IFRS financial measures are in addition to and are not a substitute for or superior to measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with IFRS. A reconciliation between IFRS and non-IFRS financial measures is available in our shareholder letter, earnings release, and investor data sheet on the IR website. Please keep in mind that we'd like to allow as many of you to participate in Q&A as possible. To facilitate that, we'll take one question at a time. Please rejoin the queue if you have a follow-up or another question, and we'll do our best to come back to you later in the session. With that, I'll turn the call over to Scott for opening remarks.
Thank you for joining us today. As you've already read in our shareholder letter, we ended fiscal 2022 with strong Q4 results across all three of our markets, Agile and DevOps, ITSM, and Work Management. Cloud revenue grew by 55% year-over-year in Q4 and ended the year with over 242,000 customers. Atlassian is uniquely positioned, having great momentum and a differentiated business model. Now, while we can't predict what the future holds at a macro level, we're forging ahead with conviction and vigilance as we look to continue to fuel durable growth over the long term and deepen our strategic advantages. We're incredibly proud of the way we continue to execute against our long-term goals, and we're excited to take this momentum into fiscal 2023.
I also want to take this time to mention that this quarter, I am operating as interim CFO. This will be my first and last earnings call as interim CFO, as we welcome Joe Binz as our incoming CFO. We are so excited to bring Joe on and introduce him to you in the next earnings call next quarter. With that, I'll pass the call to the operator for questions and answers.
We will now begin the question and answer session. If you have a question, please slowly press star followed by the one on your phone. If you'd like to withdraw from the queue, please press star followed by the two. Your first question comes from Fatima Boolani from Citi. Please go ahead.
Hey, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. Just one around the cloud growth expectations for fiscal 2023 that you've reiterated, which is very encouraging, as well as the reiteration of the magnitude of migration impact to that cloud growth. What I'm curious about is, when you think about the fiscal 2024 dynamic, which is similar to fiscal 2023, how much of the migratory impact from the prior year, i.e., fiscal 2023, what type of purchasing or expansion behavior from those migrated customers are you expecting in the base in fiscal 2024?
Scott here, answering that question. Look, as we mentioned previously in our Investor Day a few months ago and reiterating now on this earnings call, we expect cloud growth to be approximately 50% year-on-year for FY 2023 and FY 2024, and so that remains the same. We've also said that there's high single digits of that growth comes from migrations in any given year, and so we expect, again, that to continue. We haven't looked in terms of the FY 2024 dynamic of how that goes. What we do see, though, is our migrating customers expand at a similar rate to the customers we have in our existing instances.
We've also stated that previously, we have a net expansion rate of 130% in cloud and 140% for our larger customers in cloud. That's all I can give you on that at this stage.
I appreciate it.
Just to clarify, we're expecting 10 points of growth up to 50% growth in cloud for the next two years.
Understood. Thank you. I'll jump back in queue.
Your next question comes from Michael Turrin from Wells Fargo. Please go ahead, Michael.
Hey, great. Thanks and congrats on a strong end of the fiscal year. Scott, I know we won't see it often, but nice suit photo, v ery CFO with the materials as well. There's a great stat you emphasized just in the letter on 90% of fiscal year revenue coming from. We know you've generally always run a consistent long-term playbook. Just wondering if that number fairly consistent with prior periods. On the other side of that, if we do see some moderation of the newer cohorts, are you confident that there's a catch-up as the newer cohorts you're landing can similarly contribute to the model as you work through it, just given the experience and expertise you've gathered there? Thank you.
Yeah, thank you for the compliment on how good I look in a suit. I appreciate that. You're right, we won't see that too often in the future. We've said historically, yes, that 90% of our revenue in any given year comes from our existing customers. We were trying to foreshadow on this call that if you think about the results we're getting this year, they are seeds we planted years ago, and the seeds we're planting this year, you know, come to bloom, you know, in the years in force. This is not a business where we are, you know, trying to have a very expensive enterprise sales force, you know, produce a particular number in a particular period.
We think very carefully about the long-term, you know, return characteristics of all the investments that we make at any point in time. That 90% number, we continue to see that, like, that's not likely to change in any particular time. We really think about the long term. The investments that we're making now are paying off over a, you know, two- to three-year period.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from Arjun Bhatia from William Blair. Go ahead, Arjun.
Great. Thank you guys for taking the question and, congrats on a great quarter. As you know, I know you guys addressed the macro a little bit in the shareholder letter, but I'm curious, as it relates to migration specifically, would you expect the shape of migration to change at all, just given the macro situation? Do customers pause a little bit? Do they reconsider or do they say, "Hey, the total cost of ownership is there, and I'm gonna go full steam ahead"? What are you seeing and hearing from partners and customers on that front?
This is Cameron, and I'll take that one. As you know, this migration journey has been going on for a couple of years now. You know, we announced the server End of Life over 18 months ago and gave customers more than three years heads-up to make a decision on migrating to the cloud. None of this is a surprise. Many are in the different stages of their planning, whether that's from technical perspective or budgetary perspective. We are increasingly getting good at those conversations about, honestly, the larger ROI savings that customers get when they move to the cloud. You know, whether that's reducing administrative costs, their own hardware costs, and of course, unlocking a ton of new innovation in our cloud.
In addition to that, we have a Forrester Total Economic Impact report where we've actually done deep research into the overall cost savings that customers get when they actually move to the cloud. The short answer is no. Our migration plans continue as planned, and we are very, very happy with the results to date. You saw a lot of that in our recent Q4 results.
Your next question comes from Jim Fish from Piper Sandler. Please state your question.
Yeah. Hey, guys. This is Quentin on for James Fish. Thanks for taking our question. You know, sticking to the demand side for just a second, is there anything you can call out from a geographic perspective in terms of weakness or relative strength? You know, looking at the numbers here, it looks like really strong growth across all geos, but wondering if there's one specific place that you're maybe keeping your eye on more than others. Thank you.
Oh, thank you, Quentin. Cameron here again. You know, I'd say we are being exceedingly vigilant across watching all stages of our funnel, whether that's migrations funnel, the additions, upgrades, retention rates, and of course, our new customers coming in. This really sped up with the Russia-Ukraine war back starting in February. We have been keeping a very special eye in the EMEA region. The good news as of today is we have yet to see any specific trend geographically or even in industry segments or in customer size that gives us pause or worry to date. Something we've continued to watch like a hawk, but there's no new news to share today.
Your next question comes from Gregg Moskowitz from Mizuho. Please go ahead.
Okay, thank you very much, and congrats on a very good quarter as well. Has there been any change to the mix of products sold over the last few months? Anything different with regard to customer prioritization? Then just a quick clarification just to help everybody with their models, if I may. I believe consensus was projecting data center revenue growth somewhere in the low to mid-20s% for fiscal 2023. Given the comment in the shareholder letter about moderating growth after Q1 being somewhat big, I'm just wondering if you're able to tell us if you're comfortable at this time with where those consensus numbers stand. Thank you.
This is Cameron. I'll speak to the mix. I'll let our new interim CFO handle the second part of that question. As far as the overall mix, no, we have not seen any significant shifts in customer demand across our product lines. I do have to continue to call out the strong demand we continue to see with Jira Service Management, as one of our strongest cross-sell motions, surpassing 40,000 Jira Service Management customers to date. We just seem to have struck a vein there in the market with a very compelling offering that's very feature complete, very easy to use, as well as highly competitive from a pricing perspective. That, I don't wanna take away from our other products.
Jira Software, Confluence, Trello, you name it, continue to see strong demand across the board as we continue to see people embracing digital transformation and needing tools to help drive the, you know, take these large technical projects that they're running, and our tools help manage those projects throughout. As well as this cultural transformation we continue to see as all of us are figuring out this new way of working, whether it's remote, back in the office or hybrid, we continue to see demand for collaboration products continue to be strong. Second off to Scott there.
Yeah, just your question around you know DC, the shape of revenue. Again, just a reminder for those people who are new to the Atlassian story, we have End of Life our server offerings and you know so they have to make a choice whether they move to our cloud directly or if they're you know it's a longer process or a longer timeframe, they may choose to move to data center as a stepping stone to moving to cloud. We've been really happy again with all our migrations and actually happy about a third of our migrations come. We said that you know our Investor Day, about a third of our migrations come from our data center customers already. We really you know all directions head towards cloud.
Now, specifically in our shareholder letter, you know, we highlighted in terms of the data center revenue maintaining, you know, high growth through Q1 before moderating over the remaining three quarters. We can't give any sort of more details than that, but really that's just to give you a hint to the seasonality that we might see over the next four quarters in terms of you know, how we think those migrations might end up happening.
Okay. Thank you both.
Your next question comes from Brent Thill from Jefferies. Brent, please state your question.
Thank you. This is Luv Sodha on for Brent Thill. Wanted to ask a real quick question on, you know, margins this quarter. It looks like, you know, there was, you know, an increase in investment in R&D, and it sounds like you're planning to continue that into the next year. Could you maybe give us some color on where these investments are being directed to? Thank you.
Yes. Thank you for those questions. If sort of starting our Investor Day, we had a discussion with you, our shareholders, about the incredible opportunities we are seeing across our business. Those opportunities are kind of in every corner of the business. As a management team, we think long term, and we think about how do we invest behind those opportunities. You know, there are myriad of them, but, you know, a couple we've highlighted in the past are our customers migrating to the cloud. We're seeing incredible demand for that migration, and if we can improve the throughput of those customers migrating to the cloud, that's great for them and it's great for us. We've also seen incredible demand for our ITSM products in that market.
Again, you know, there are some features we can add there, and getting our customers onboarded to those products is great for us and for them. I can go on. As a result of all these opportunities, we made a decision to invest heavier behind these opportunities than we had before. As we said in our Investor Day, we expect margins for FY 2023 to be in the mid-teens. Those areas of investments, as you mentioned, are largely in R&D. You know, we are sort of really seeing huge investments there because of the features and, you know, getting our cloud to the stage where it can accommodate 100% of our customers requires some more features.
You will also see some investments kind of in other areas of the P&L because, for example, there are, you know, some handholding to get our customers across. You know, that doesn't show up in R&D as well as it shows up in other areas in the P&L. Largely R&D, but you may see some other areas of the P&L impacted, just through the way that we're helping our customers migrate.
Perfect. Thank you.
Your next question comes from Alex Zukin from Wolfe Research. Alex, please state your question.
Perfect. Thanks so much. Hey, congrats on a great quarter. I guess maybe just two from our side. You know, when you think about the macro impact that you are seeing in the business, I think you called out a slightly slower conversion of free customers to paid customers. I guess when you dissect what's happening in the pipeline, why do you think that's the only macro impact you're seeing versus migration delays or versus longer sales cycles in the larger customers, or we're not seeing, you know, kind of some of the other impacts that other companies are seeing? Is it like what are you learning in real time as you analyze the data and the demand environment? I've got a quick follow-up.
Yeah, I can cover that first piece. This is Cameron again. So as you mentioned, and you see this in our Q4 results, you know, across the many funnels we operate, whether that's our migrations, our additions upgrades, our cross-sell of products, our overall retention, you know, continues to be exceedingly strong. That's been great to see, and that's been supporting our net expansion rate we've already discussed on this call here. Largely what you see is existing customers continue to have demand for what our products do to help their teams work, more productively, in the future. As far as that slight thing that we mentioned in the shareholder letter, just so you all realize that we land all of our net new customers in free plans.
This is relatively, we're about two years into this experience, but we continue to have many thousands of customers signing up in free plans, and they either need to add an 11th user, which then they get to pay the 11th user, or simply they want more premium capabilities in our standard and premium editions. Those are the reasons people enter their credit card. The one thing that's worth calling out that we've seen literally just in the last month is that the cohort of customers that came in in the April, May and June timeframe are converting to those paid plans at a slightly slower rate than what we've seen in previous quarters. Now, I'd love to say that's, you know, specific to a product or a geography or an industry. There's no specific customer segment there.
It just seems that, in general, those cohort of customers that have signed up in the last quarter are using the products. They're activating, they're getting value, but they simply just haven't put those credit cards and hit those paid walls yet. That's one of those areas that we continue to be vigilant. We have multiple analytics teams, multiple growth teams, as well as our onboarding and R&D teams that are focused on ensuring that those customers remain active, and it gives us more chances to convert them to paid plans in the future. That does not take away from the, you know, continued growth we see in our existing customer base that also drives more than 90% of our revenue in the existing year.
Perfect. I guess maybe just going back to the data center part of your business. The extraordinary growth that you're seeing, I think accelerating growth in the quarter, how much of that growth is from data center customers expanding versus, you know, understanding what the existing customers are growing like within data center to get a sense of the growth that you're seeing in data center coming from server migration to data center? In addition, I apologize for the multi-part question, just the range of migration activity from data center to cloud versus server to cloud in that 10 points of migration as a driver for the 50% cloud growth.
Gotcha. I think I can address that. Overall data center demand, I'll hit that first, and then we can talk about the server to cloud or data center to cloud journey. Good point. As we've already mentioned, this server End of Life message, we give customers more than three years heads up. What you see customers doing every quarter is increasingly optioning out of going to cloud, which obviously that's where we lead with. That's where we have been putting all of our incentives to get customers to go to cloud, so they get the most innovation as possible, or they can choose data center. Many are seeing either way, it's an increased investment and commitment to Atlassian long term. We see that, you know, those are two good decisions for customers.
However, when those customers jump to data center, and we see this again and again, they're seeing that as just a stepping stone to that cloud journey. It gives them more optionality down the line. Of course, data center is a fantastic product. Historically we said it's roughly 30% of our cloud migrations come from data center customers, which proves that stepping stone statement. I don't specifically track how much that drives into the overall 10% growth that we show, and that drives our overall cloud growth. You can see roughly one-third of our customers are coming from data center. That's all I have to share. Scott, did you have anything to add on that? Okay.
Your next question comes from Adam Tindle, from Raymond James. Adam, please state your question.
Okay, thank you very much. I just wanted to touch on the investment period and operating margin trends. You talked about mid-teens in fiscal 2023 playing offense, and I think you said lower in the second half of the year. I'm wondering, you know, if that's indicative of a multi-year period of investment here. You certainly earned the right to invest based on what we've seen so far. I just wanted to level set investor expectations since I think Street is modeling improvement in fiscal 2024. I'm not sure if that's consistent with how you're thinking about things. Thank you.
Thank you, Adam. Just a reminder to everyone what we said back at our Investor Day, which is Atlassian has an incredible business model. If you look historically over the arc of time, both before us being a public company and during the seven years we've been a public company, this business model does generate large amount of, you know, free cash flow and margin returns. Like, that's sort of the fundamentals that we have in the business. We look at the long-term opportunities like they're more abundant than we've ever seen before, and that's the reason to invest. Now, in your, you know, specific investment period, what we've said is that FY 2023 is going to be investment year, and we guided to the mid-teen margins for FY 2023.
We haven't given any guidance for FY 2024, and we'll be doing that at the end of FY 2023.
Your next question comes from Peter Weed, from Bernstein. Peter, go ahead.
Thank you. So taking a look at kind of your overall migration plan, I think you had originally anticipated maintenance shrinking down a little bit more than maybe it's seen now, and you're talking about a year from now getting to $75 million, which I think was maybe a little bit of a slower ramp than at least I had been anticipating. How are you seeing that roll off of your existing customer base? Has it been stickier, and is it something where you're having to spend more time and effort encouraging customers to migrate? How do you see that affecting the velocity of the cloud migration itself?
Yeah, this is Cameron again. As we've mentioned, you know, migration demand remains very strong, you know. That server customer base, they effectively have till February 2024 to make a decision on whether they wanna option out, whether that's going to data center or whether that's going to cloud. Obviously, we continue to remove any blockers or any reasons why customers would not adopt our cloud, and we give people plenty of incentives along the way to move to our cloud offerings. The good news across the board is we continue to see retention rates maintain high for the entire server customer base throughout this. As we continue to see server renewals happen, we see people option out to data center and cloud.
The good part there is we continue to see these customers continue to remain loyal to Atlassian and largely they're figuring out what the best technical and business decision long term is for their companies. We have been focusing on cloud, and as we've already mentioned, we are largely in line with our migration plans to date. We'll continue to be vigilant there over the next year as we continue to incentivize our customers to choose cloud.
I think you've been investing in some cloud migration personnel. Do you see that being kind of like fully built out, or are you seeing that you're gonna have to continue to expand that personnel to you know, see this success through?
This is Cameron again. We have a dedicated cloud migration management and migration support engineers as well as a dedicated migration tooling and a variety of people that can come and help these customers through the more technical migrations. We did make significant investments in the previous fiscal year across those teams, and we believe they are fairly stable to date and can handle the volume that's coming in over the next coming quarters.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from Steven Koenig from SMBC Nikko. Steven, please go ahead.
Great. Hey, thanks for taking my question. So let's see. I'm wondering regarding your hiring and your investing that you've been talking about, your comments on your plans to hire are certainly borne out, you know, by, as we look at your job postings there, you know, remaining pretty solid, you know, whereas a lot of other vendors are, you know, cutting their hiring plans. I'm wondering how your hiring is progressing relative to plan in terms of your progress in finding the talent that you want? Then if I can just add a quick addendum, any tactical pricing adjustments of note since your February 15 th price increase on server and data center. That's all from me. Thanks very much, and congrats on a great quarter.
Hey, Steven. It's Mike here. I can take that. It's been a lot of product questions on today's call, so let me jump in and take one of the talent ones. Look, we've been pretty clear, right, that we're playing offense. We continue to tell that quarter in, quarter out. We're using this period of time to deepen our strategic position and increase the advantages we have over the competition, right? There's less VCs out there with wheelbarrows of cash funding competition, and so we think we have a really good opportunity going forward. We also have spent a lot of time retooling our hiring pipeline over the last two years and are really excited with where we stand at the moment.
We've had, I believe, our two biggest quarters of hiring in the last two quarters, and we continue to do so. Obviously, we don't just look at the volume of hires, although that's sort of an absolute number marker. We continue to push quality of the talent that's available, and we think that will get easier in difficult circumstances. And also, obviously making sure that the cultural fit and other things at Atlassian, which is incredibly important and incredibly difficult and a huge challenge for us to do as we continue to scale. There's no doubt, as Scott mentioned, the majority of that hiring is going to R&D to try to again deepen those strategic positions that we already have.
The last thing I would say is just a reminder that we made the same or similar sort of play in the 2008, 2009 period. We paused for a little while then, and then we realized that we were in a very strong position as a company relative to the other companies out there. We hired well through that period, and we saw the benefits of that for the three, four, and five years afterwards as we got a real updraft with the products coming out and the results of those products. We believe we have massive opportunities in front of us in all three of our markets, and as such, we're hiring behind them.
That's great. Can you guys comment on are there any pricing actions of note, say in the last, you know, six months since that February price increase?
Yeah. So this is Cameron. As you already mentioned, we did have price increases on our server and data center products in February. All of our pricing changes are made public, and we across the board, and they're all available on our websites for all of our customers, as well as we give our customers a relatively decent heads up on these price changes so they can plan their budgets accordingly. No other price changes to mention, and our pricing strategy remains consistent.
Great. Well, thanks very much for the color.
Your next question comes from Keith Weiss from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead, Keith.
Thank you for taking the question. This is Sanjit Singh on for Keith. Somewhat annoyingly, I had another question on sort of the case for investment. As you sort of look at where the business stands today, you have, you know, a $3 billion business. You have a 250,000 customers, I think 10+ monthly active users.
If you look at sort of where you're trying to take the business, say, to 1 million customers or 100 million monthly active users, expanding from developers and IT to line of business teams with the Work Management initiative. As you expand into these newer markets and these long tail of customers, are the unit economics from here gonna be as attractive in terms versus what the business is built today to get to this $3 billion and 250,000 customers? I was wondering if you could just sort of frame out how you think expanding into the long tail of users and customers and product markets, what does that do to the sort of unit economics of the business?
Sure, Mike, I can take that again. Look, I think obviously we feel bullish about our unit economics at the moment, and I don't see why that would change going forward. We've always been very prudent stewards of capital in the business and continue to invest in very high ROI opportunities as we look forward. You know, you mentioned some of our numbers there. Obviously there are millions and millions and millions of businesses in the world. There are approximately 1 billion knowledge workers. So we have a huge amount of expansion possibility even just inside our existing customers. As Cameron mentioned earlier, you know, we remain north of 130% in our NER numbers and north of 140% in the large customer segment.
We saw that again this quarter. From the point of view of expansion in those large customers, we have many millions of employees that we do not touch in those existing customers. You see that in, specifically in our Work Management segment, where Trello, Confluence, and Atlas are continuing to get further and further into an organization and look more to the wall-to-wall access to wall-to-wall employees within those companies.
I think the other thing I would say is that we continue to, as Cameron mentioned earlier, be incredibly focused on not just the unit economics of our funnel, the product-led growth funnel in terms of free and our evaluations and trials, and we're obviously incredibly well-instrumented there, and we really understand the value of spending $1 on marketing or sales and the conversion rate and expansion through our customer base. We've got 20 years of experience doing this. I believe we're absolutely best in class and continue to improve and evolve every single year. We also are really, really good at the enterprise and premium expansion activities when it comes to bringing in more human power and more activity to expand customers across the product sets. Again, we've got a whole lot of new products coming out.
Also the same focus on being very capital efficient when it comes to those sales motions. We don't just take it in the automated product-led growth funnel. We take it at the same time in all of our sales activities. We're very proud of how we do that, and we have to keep raising the bar on that every year. I don't think long term it should change the unit economics.
Really appreciate the thoughts and then congrats on the great, data center and cloud subscription results this quarter. Thank you.
Your next question comes from Ari Terjanian from Cleveland Research. Ari, please go ahead.
Hi, team. Thanks for taking the question and congrats on the great results. Just want to double-click on the Deutsche Bank cloud deal that was called out in the press release or the shareholder letter. I was just hoping if you could provide some more detail on that opportunity. Is that, you know, migration complete or is it just the signing? You know, what do you think caused them to pull the trigger? 'Cause, you know, I know regulated industries, banking, Germany, Europe, you know, these are areas that historically more hesitant to move to cloud. I was just wondering if you could please provide some more color on that deal and if you think it could be a beachhead and cause others in these geos and verticals to start moving. Thank you.
Great. So Cameron again. Yeah, I was deeply involved with Deutsche Bank for quite some time. In fact, you know, they've been a customer for many years. They have been a data center customer for many years, and we've been speaking about the cloud opportunity and journey with them for quite some time. But it shows, I think you nailed it right there. It's a you know German bank, highly regulated, massive scale. Like, you name it from a requirements perspective, they had it for our cloud. It's a testament to the investments we've made over the last couple years in performance and scale in regulated things like BaFin, specific financial services regulation requirements in Germany, that allowed us to open up that door and have that serious conversation about getting them to the cloud.
To answer your question, no, we have just started the cloud journey. They have checked all the boxes to get them to adopt our cloud, and we've started our migration planning to begin moving their users and data. That'll be a multi-month or multi-quarter journey the size of deployment and complexity that they have, as well as how mission critical our applications are for the bank. I mean, they literally are running on us every single day. You know, many of our customers are saying that our applications are more important than email for getting their work done inside the organization. It's something that we have to plan out very diligently with them.
They've been incredible partners throughout this exploration of cloud, and we are looking forward to having them 100% on the cloud in the upcoming quarters.
Thank you.
As a reminder, if you have a question, please press star followed by the one. Your next question comes from Fred Havemeyer from Macquarie. Fred, please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you. I wanted to ask about your net retention rate, because throughout this year you've been posting or discussing strong 130%, rather north of 130% cloud net retention rate. I saw in the shareholder letter today that you noted that larger customers were topping 140% cloud net or rather net expansion rate. I wanted to ask, can you help to characterize what's driving that? Is that something that is a seat-based expansion, cross-sell or up-sell, reaching to non-technical departments, expansion with new technical departments? Anything to kind of characterize that can help us understand where this growth is coming from would be greatly appreciated.
Sure. I appreciate you asking the question. Yes. The numbers you quoted are correct, and I think we've stated them in our financials today, last year, and reiterated some of them in our shareholder letter today. Now, if you think about Atlassian's business model, it has been historically and continues to be a land and expand motion, where we land inside a part of an organization, maybe a small team, a couple different teams, or even multiple teams across the organization that maybe aren't even coordinated with each other. From there, they see the incredible value in our products, and they expand on a number of vectors.
Those vectors are... They expand the number of seats, you know, maybe starting with one small team all the way up until, you know, large enterprise deployments, such as Deutsche Bank that we talked about with tens of thousands of seats. There's a seat aspect where, you know, you land and expand there. We also see that customers expand on a product basis. They start with one product, they then see the value that they've got. They come back to Atlassian and discover what other products that we have, and they can solve their problems and how well that these products work together, particularly in cloud, where they're deeply integrated. That is another one.
We have different editions now with premium and enterprise, and so customers love the functionality and they wanna, you know, unlock additional functionality in the products, and so they're willing to pay for our premium and enterprise versions as well. I can go on, but one I wanna touch on is also our third-party application marketplace. We have one of the best marketplaces in enterprise software, and customers can easily adopt incremental functionality or whole new areas of functionality in our marketplace. We see expansion across all of those vectors in various ways. There's not typically one specific path that we see our customers take.
We're very comfortable and feel very great about that going forward, given how sticky our products are and you know how much additional functionality they can unlock across their organization once they've started becoming a customer.
Thank you. If I can get another one in here, be rude and take up more time. I wanted to also ask about scaling, because in the shareholder letter today, I think you also noted that 35,000-user cloud instances are now available to your entire customer base. If I recall, getting to that scale has been a journey. Looking across the market, some of the other project management tools that are out there have some difficulty scaling, really achieving scale for large numbers of concurrent users. I wanted to ask, what has that journey been like? Generally, what does it take to build such a, you know, highly scalable, collaborative live project management tool? Would you view that as a competitive moat?
Sure. I can take that question. It's my cue. Look, there's no doubt it's a testament to our R&D teams and specifically the infrastructure engineering teams there in terms of scaling our offerings in the cloud. There's a few things I would point to there. A reminder for anyone listening with a single instance of Jira Software in the case that you mentioned there, we started our cloud journey at about, I think, 1,000 or 2,000 seat range. We expanded to five, then to 10. I think we've ended 25, and now we've just GA'd 35, and I believe we have 50,000 in early access programs. Continuing to scale a single instance of Jira Software.
At the same time, we've scaled lots of other parts of our back-end infrastructure to allow further increase beyond that amount in a single Jira Software instance. You see that in our enterprise edition where you get unlimited instances. You can have lots of 35,000 user instances at the moment, and obviously from an identity and scaling perspective, you can go beyond there. I would say it's really a testament to our continued investment in our customers and the continued, you know, the world-leading amount of revenue that we spend on R&D because this stuff is hard. It's just one of those problems that's very, very difficult.
You need a lot of hard work and discipline over a long period of time to continue to work out what parts of your infrastructure aren't scaling and continue to obviously be ambitious and push that ceiling upwards. We have many customers on premise and data center who are well beyond the 35,000 limit. You won't see us stop there. We'll continue to push that limit higher and higher as we work with those larger customers. Lastly, I would say it's a testament to the platform that we built because most of that scaling doesn't actually happen in the Jira Software world.
It happens in the Atlassian cloud platform, in our infrastructure layers below that, everything from the networking layer all the way through to databases, various shared services we have, et cetera, all have to scale to handle that, whether it's serving videos or whether it's mentioning users. You know, collaborative software is all about connecting with other people on your team. If you mention a user and it takes an awfully long time, it's a very poor customer experience and you get low customer satisfaction. It's not just about scaling the sheer numbers, it's making sure that all the user experiences happen at scale very, very fast.
You know, there's a huge amount of smarts in AI and machine learning, for example, to make sure that when you mention a user, we dig across your 35,000 employees and find the exact person that you're trying to find with a couple of keystrokes, as fast as we can. Look, we spend lots, an awful lot of time and effort on that, and we'll continue to do so. Probably reflected in our NER and great cloud numbers, and more to come
Your next question comes from Kash Rangan from Goldman Sachs. Kash, please go ahead.
Hi. Thank you very much. I wanted to say congratulations on not only the quarter, but hiring Joe Binz. A terrific executive. On that thought, how comfortable are you with a new CFO of Joe's caliber coming in, that you have reset the margin and that we can be very comfortable that you have factored in all possible investments that the company needs to make to achieve this cloud transition? Because I would imagine that a new CFO coming in, probably wants to ensure that this Street level set with respect to margin guide, because Joe has a background at Microsoft's monumental cloud transition. I'm just wondering how did Joe get comfortable with the level of investments that have already been spoken for and guided into the model?
That's it for me. Thank you very much, and congratulations.
Thank you. This is Scott here. I'll answer that. Mike and I have been around for 20 years running Atlassian. We just celebrated our 20th anniversary in the last few months, and we're in public for seven years. While each individual CFO coming into Atlassian brings a whole bunch of their experience and their opinions around, you know, how we should work, their philosophy about how we run the business and how we set guidance and how we interact with you, our shareholders, in an open and transparent way, that is really set from Mike and I at the top. We're really excited for Joe to get here with his deep experience with Microsoft, who we know they had their own cloud transition.
I don't expect there to be any material changes to the way we guide, to the way we invest, and the way we interact with you, our shareholders, as a result of that. I'm super excited to have Joe on board because I think he's gonna be a great addition to the team. I'm super excited about his ability to help us allocate capital across the amazing opportunities that we have in front of us. That's really exciting given he's done that extremely well at his previous positions.
Your next question comes from Michael Turits from KeyBanc Capital Markets. Michael, please go ahead.
Hi, this is Billy on for Michael. Thanks for taking the question. Can you just give us an update on the regulatory work you've been doing around, you know, the public sector FedRAMP and maybe different industry verticals and how much opportunity you think is out there once you unlock these avenues?
This is Cameron. I can speak briefly to that. As we mentioned before, you know, over the last couple of years, actually many years with our cloud platform, we continue to invest in not just scale, as Mike just mentioned, but all of the regulatory data and compliance requirements that our very, very diverse customer base has. In addition to that, we've been able to knock off these cloud requirements, and you see this every single quarter. Every single quarter, as we announce these new capabilities, a new cohort of customers gets unlocked to start their cloud transition. In addition to that, we do publish all of our future-looking roadmap in this area up on our public cloud roadmap.
That gives just increasing confidence for our customers so that they can plan ahead as well as engage with our teams on, you know, when they should actually start their migration journey. That's been a critical part of our overall conversation going forward. We've done HIPAA in the last just 12 months, HIPAA, BaFin. We have all of our SOC 2 compliance, and we continue to have additional requirements across the board. We are continuing to do our work on FedRAMP. Our federal customer base is significant, and we do have customers across the federal customer base, all on server and data center today. Great part there is the, you know, overwhelming majority of those agencies actually have cloud-first mandates.
Like, all of them are simply looking for the ability to go to cloud, and we continue to invest in our cloud platform to hit up those specific requirements. It doesn't stop with FedRAMP. There's still many other specific industry-related regulatory efforts that we will continue to invest in. In addition to that, I do wanna call out our Forge platform, which was our new capability to allow marketplace apps to be run within the Atlassian cloud infrastructure. This has opened up even more opportunity for our customers to build and deploy apps, as well as our marketplace partners to build apps and have them basically secured within the cloud platform, giving our customers even more confidence if they're in highly regulated industries.
Thank you. That concludes our question-and-answer session. I will now turn the call over to Mike for closing remarks.
Thanks, everyone. Just thank you for joining the call. Two small things before we sign off here. Firstly, congratulations to Scott on his interim CFO role. I think he did a fine job today. We're super excited to have Joe join to take the wheel. Barring any emergencies, we look forward to him joining us on our October call. Secondly, as you saw in our shareholder letter, building on the success of Team 2022 earlier last quarter, we'll be holding unique events now tailored to each of our markets. We'll kick things off in September on the 29th of September in San Francisco in the Chase Center with a work management specific event that we're calling Work Life.
Please come, check it out and see how teams can work differently together. With that, thank you everyone for joining our call today. As always, we really appreciate all of your continued support, helpful questions. Last but definitely not least, thank you to all the Atlassians on a fantastic year. We will talk to you all next quarter.