Good afternoon and thank you for joining Atlassian's Earnings Conference Call for this First Quarter of Fiscal 2023. 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 first quarter of fiscal year 2023 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, our Chief Revenue Officer, Cameron Deatsch, and Chief Financial Officer, Joe Binz. Earlier today, we published a shareholder letter and press release with our financial results and commentary for our first quarter of fiscal year 2023. The shareholder letter is available on Atlassian's Work Life blog and the investor relations section of our website, where you will also find other earnings-related materials, 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 assumptions. If any such risks or uncertainties materialize, or if any of the assumptions prove incorrect, our results could differ materially from the results expressed or implied by the forward-looking statements we make. You should not rely upon forward-looking statements as predictions of future events. Forward-looking statements represent our management's beliefs and assumptions only as of the date such statements are made, and we undertake 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 our 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 recently filed annual and quarterly reports. During today's call, we will also discuss non-GAAP financial measures.
These non-GAAP financial measures are in addition to and are 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 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 another question or follow-up, 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. We're proud of our execution in Q1 against our long-term initiatives. We announced a new subscription offering in Atlassian Together, launched Atlas into general availability, and held Work Life, our first large-scale customer event focused on a single market. As you've already read in our shareholder letter, Atlassian is not immune to the broader macroeconomic environment, but we remain steadfast in our conviction that we have the right leaders, products, and strategies in place to capitalize on the incredible long, long-term opportunities in front of us. Turbulent markets provide an opportunity to shake up the leaderboards, and we're poised to play offense. We'll focus our investments to take share and strengthen our market position in this environment. We'll of course, balance our continued investments with the overall growth of our business and be responsive to the macroeconomic conditions.
We continue to have line of sight to $10 billion in annual revenue and believe we'll come out of this environment in a much stronger market position. I'm incredibly thrilled to pass the CFO baton to Joe Binz, who I want to welcome to his inaugural Atlassian earnings call. He's only been here since early September, but has quickly gotten up to speed and will do far better than me in my short stint as Interim CFO. With that, I'll pass the call to the operator for Q&A.
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 Keith Weiss from Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Excellent, t hank you guys for taking the question. I guess kind of well a top line and a bottom line question. You guys mentioned in the shareholder letter, and I appreciate you being upfront about kind of the macro impacts you're seeing. Free-to-paid conversion slowed down and some of the paid it sounds like NRR slowed down a little bit. What have you guys been seeing in kinda top-of-funnel trends? Is that kind of feeling as expected, or did that slow down as well? Then you are sustaining the operating margin guide for the full year, even with the revenues coming down a little bit. Where are the areas you guys are looking to get the increased efficiencies as we think about FY23? Thank you.
First off, this is Cameron. I'll speak to the top line for this and then hand off to Joe to talk about expenses. As we mentioned previous quarter, actually back in our August earnings, we spoke about how while we were seeing plenty of people coming in and trying Jira, trying our free versions of our products, and we continue to see that trend today, many more people coming in signing up and using our products, we saw them starting to slow down getting to that eleventh user entering their credit card information and becoming paid customers. That trend definitely came through throughout the quarter, and we see it today where we still have plenty of people coming in. Year-over-year growth of our free instances continues to grow, which is great, but just a little bit slower in the converting to an actual paying customer.
The new piece we saw in the previous quarter was that, towards the end of the quarter, we actually saw user expansion in existing accounts. This is largely, p eople going from 100 users in Confluence to 110 users, right? That's largely due to companies slowing down hiring, trying to constrain their own internal IT budgets and using more of the licenses they already have. Now, we continue to see growth, just that user growth wasn't nearly as strong as what we've seen historically. On the other side, on top line, so while the user growth slowed down, we do continue to see migrations tracking along as planned. Our editions work, getting people from standard to premium and enterprise versions of our products, strong. Cross-sell, Jira Service Management specifically continues to be adopted well.
While we are affected by, you know, basically hiring rates and how quickly people are adding people to their organizations, the big projects like migrations or choosing their new IT service management tools, we've seen no slowdown in those efforts to date. Joe, do you wanna handle the expenses conversation?
Thanks Cameron and t hanks Keith. There's really two focus areas. First and foremost, we're making reductions in our non-headcount driven discretionary spending. Then secondarily, we'll be moderating the rate of planned headcount growth in the second half of FY 2023. I'd say in terms of areas Keith, I think there's efficiencies to be found across the board, whether you're talking about gross margins or process efficiencies or even resource allocation, right? Looking at where we have our resources allocated, make sure that we're constantly prioritizing investments and moving those resources to the highest ROI and most impactful things. As Scott mentioned, this is all with an eye towards strengthening our position in the large, high growth markets we're targeting and enabling us to emerge in a stronger position out of the downturn as we were going in.
Hopefully that gives you a sense, but I would say it's very broad and based on those two primary principles.
Got it, t hat's super helpful guys. Thank you so much.
Your next question comes from Michael Turrin from Wells Fargo Securities. Please go ahead.
Hey there, t hanks for taking the question. Appreciate it, I'm sure it's gonna be somewhat of a similar construct to the first one, but I'll ask a little bit differently. A couple of parts. The first one is just in clarifying some of Cameron's comments from the first question. It sounds like it's fair to assume that it's less the cloud migration trajectory, like the pace of migrations that you're seeing changing here that's influencing the change in revenue target for cloud for the year than it is the expansion rate. First part is just, is that a fair assumption that 130%-140% for large customers that we're seeing is what's causing the moderation impact?
The second part for Joe is just I know you're relatively new to the call, but your views just around potentially giving more margin, what would inform that discussion versus just continuing to stay the course with the investment cycle? I know the company tends to think long term. Just your thinking, given the macro is changing a bit, I think is useful here in the context of what you're seeing? Thank you.
Happy to speak to the. Just to be very, very clear, yes, we have seen no change in our migrations rates. Our migrations progress continues to be on track as it's been the last few quarters. With the server end of life coming up to February twenty twenty-four, as well as our loyalty discount program, which will basically take another step down in June. We have a series of compelling events that we've been working with our customers over the last couple of years. We get better in those conversations every day, and the migrations efforts continue to be right along with plan. No impact due to migrations. It is largely, purely focused on people adding users, that user expansion within their existing use of our products that we've seen slow down a bit over the last quarter.
Great Michael, t his is Joe t hanks for the question. On the NRR question or the expansion rate question, as you know, we don't provide updates on expansion rates on a quarterly basis. Directionally, it remains very healthy and above the 130% we discussed at the Investor Day. I think that's indicative of the fundamental health of our business, particularly around upgrades to premium and enterprise editions, customers adding new products and churn rates. While we talked about the macro impact on paid seat growth within existing customers relative to expectations, the absolute growth rates there are still very good on an absolute basis. That's also a big driver behind those healthy expansion rates. I'll turn it over to Scott to talk a little bit about the margin trade-off discussion.
In terms of stepping back in terms of thinking about us long term, like we've been through multiple downturns as a business. Like, we started in 2001, 2002 in sort of the dotcom crash. We, you know, went through 2008, 2009, and yes, we're now in the third downturn for us. What we've learned is that during those periods of time, like if you can invest wisely, you can come out the other side with the leaderboard shaken up a little bit, and you can come out, you know, higher up on that leaderboard than you went going in. That informs a lot of how we think about, you know, the investments through these periods. There's a couple of areas.
One is, you know, we think that we can pick up staff where other companies are shedding staff. There's a lot of incredible people on the market who may only come on the market once a decade, and we have an opportunity to pick those staff up, now. We're gonna be really thoughtful around, you know, kind of how many we hire and where we hire. You know, our experience is that we can come out really strong on the other side by, you know, selectively picking up staff that other people are letting go.
We also, you know, in terms of thinking about what the opportunities and, you know, we said in our Investor Day kind of feels like a long time ago now, but only, you know, earlier this year, we said we'd have, you know, three really good opportunities that we were gonna invest behind. That was migrating our customers to the cloud at the fastest rate we can. Building new products for that Point A program and investing more in ITSM with our JSM, you know, platform there. Again, we think those are long-term investments that pay off, you know, short, medium, and long-term. We want to continue to invest in those areas. We're gonna continue to do that.
We're gonna be thoughtful around that, l ike, we need to make sure that does fit within a certain cost envelope. You know, with the macroeconomic environment, like we wanna be conscious about what that cost envelope is. Again, our philosophy about investing for the long term, about having lower priced products that are very, you know, particularly attractive in this market, picking up staff, that hasn't changed through this cycle.
Appreciate all the detail there, t hank you.
Your next question comes from Fatima Boolani from Citigroup. Please go ahead.
Good afternoon, t hank you for taking my question. Cameron, this question is for you. It's a little bit of a counterfactual. So I know you're staying committed to the proportion of your cloud growth coming from migration, but you know, conversely, why wouldn't we see a slowdown in migrations to the cloud if the sensitivity that you've seen most to date is on the user expansion area? So in other words, you know, why wouldn't an existing customer just sweat out the capacity that they have versus going to sort of a per user named seat model where, you know, potentially the TCO in the short term could be much higher? Just a couple of thoughts there on why that wouldn't actually impair the migration cadence to the cloud, t hank you.
Basically, let me just try and rephrase the why haven't we seen a slowdown in the cloud migration rates when it is a, you know, an effort for customers to make a change versus just sitting on their, you know, their renewals and waiting till the last minute. The primary reason for that is that over the last two years, ever since we announced the server end of life now almost exactly two years ago, we've had a very well-engineered set of programs that we have released between loyalty discounts, new migration tooling, more engagement with our enterprise customers, incentivizing our partners and incentivizing our customers, to ensure that cloud is the proper destination for them. Many of them over the last two years have been in various stages. Some moved very, very quickly. Some are building plans today.
Some are waiting, like you said, to the last minute. Across the board we have seen that entire approach being like largely on track. They haven't been seeing the "Hey, should we migrate to cloud?" as a capacity challenge. It's not like 100 users. You know, the fact that they need to add more users, they can add more users on premises if they want versus adding more users on cloud. It's more of a "Well, we've been looking to go to cloud, and we've made the strategic decision to go to cloud. There's a whole lot more value that we unlock in cloud and more productivity for the users we have.
Let's go through and continue to finish this project so that our teams operate more efficiently and have the best tools available to them, you know, even if we were going to have, you know, less people hired in the future." It wasn't really tied to how many people are in the room, it's more tied to them choosing the best solution for them long term, and of course, reacting to the programs that we put into market to compel them to move to cloud.
Thank you for that.
Welcome.
Your next question comes from Arjun Bhatia from William Blair. Please state your question.
Hello. Yes, thank you for taking my questions. I'm curious, just when you think about the macro impact that you're seeing, is there any way to just break it down any further between the behavior that you're seeing from larger customers that are maybe, you know, multi-product, that are more committed, that have a broader deployment versus smaller customers that are earlier in their journey? And then, Joe one for you just when you're thinking about the rest of the year and the guidance that you've provided, can you just help us understand what you're incorporating from a macro perspective in the forward numbers? Thank you.
Hey Arjun, I can take that one. Look, I wanna re-stress our philosophy of open company, no bullshit, right? We've told you every single quarter we've been public, we're gonna be open with you and clear with you about what's going on. We've tried to do that best we can in the letter, right? The two areas that we're seeing impact, again, is the free instances, the rate of converting to paid. Secondly is the rate of user expansion growth. The historical rate's been pretty consistent for us, slowing down a bit. The reason for that is we think both anecdotally and best guess is customers optimizing their spend, right? If you are gonna add that 11th user, you're more likely today to think I'll stay at 10.
The good part about that for us is, you know, we see no sort of decrease in usage or change in churn rates. These aren't customers leaving Atlassian at all. These are customers who are dealing with their own turbulence and optimizing their spend and, you know, tuning the number of users they have, right? We've also highlighted where we see as great opportunities in front of us and been quite clear about, where we're playing offense, and some of them go to the areas that you said. Cameron just addressed migrations, which continues to be strong. If you think about it from a customer perspective, therefore if you're looking at optimizing spend, cloud's an easier place to do that than on premise because you can pay monthly and you can pay per user, et c.. that gives you a slightly easier optimization.
Secondly, it's a much higher ROI in terms of running the software. We do all that for you t hat's why we see continued opportunities in migrations which are tracking strongly. Secondly, in enterprises, we certainly see that as a significant opportunity on the back of ten years of really great work. We're continuing to optimize for the enterprise t hat's a huge opportunity area for us. And lastly, as we've mentioned repeatedly in ITSM, we're seeing really strong growth. All those play into the enterprise that you talked about, but hopefully that gives you some background color about where we think we're, you know, well-positioned to gain market share in this environment and really excited about the future.
This is Cameron, I'll add a little on. Sorry. Just give you a little more view of how we do SMB growth over our enterprise customer base growth. Now, first and foremost, the constraints in the growth rate of users we do largely see across all cohorts. Like I said, all size customers, industries and geographies. It seems to be broad across the customer base. However, we continue to see strength in our enterprise business for a few reasons, primarily due to the fact that migrations, which are going as planned, have an outsized impact when it comes to our enterprise business compared to our small, medium-sized business simply due to pricing dynamics.
The second is also in our enterprise business that we continue to see customers continuing to standardize on our applications, choose the enterprise editions of our products when they move to the migrations, and which continues to grow their inputs. On top of that, you know, just over the last month, we've announced a partnership with Accenture, which gives us massive scale with one of the largest global system integrators in the industry to help our customers through their massive transitions, whether that's their agile transformation or their cloud transition. Just today, as Mike mentioned, that our growth in IT service management market we were named a leader in the Gartner Magic Quadrant, which shows that even more enterprise credibility as we look to expand into IT operations and service management use cases in the enterprise.
Arjun, this is Joe. You asked about the assumptions underpinning the guidance. We're assuming two fundamental things in our guidance. First, the current macroeconomic environment persists throughout the year and does not get materially better or worse. Secondarily, the macro impact on the business and the trends we saw in Q1 around free to paid conversion rates and paid seat expansion at existing customers also persists throughout the year and does not get materially better or worse. In other words, the guidance assumes status quo on those two factors. Like most, we continue to monitor things closely, both on the macro side and on the business side and we're adjusting and responding to it.
As you know, there's a lot of uncertainty right now, and we think this is an appropriate range given what we have seen to date, both in Q1 performance and our Q2 quarter to date performance on the underlying trends, we saw there.
Your next question comes from Alex Zukin from Wolfe Research. Please go ahead.
Yeah. Hey guys, t hanks for taking the question. I wanna dive into that last answer a little from both Cameron and maybe others. I guess if we think about the enterprise impact, like, can you maybe dissect the cloud revenue growth for the year, the takedown? Is it the seat adds, the headwinds from the seat adds, is that more in the mid-market, the SMB, the enterprise? Is there, you know, would you say it's being compensated by incremental module additions at the enterprise? Help us unpack that and give us a sense for when you started to see these issues. Is it in the last two weeks of the quarter, how that's trended in October?
From the financial perspective, is the cloud growth kinda exiting this year? Where does that trend? 'Cause if I remember correctly, at the Analyst Day, we talked about, you know, that 50% wasn't just for this year cloud growth, but for a couple of years. I'm assuming, you know, it's coming off for this year, but I just wanna clarify, is that also off for the next couple of years? Apologize for the multiple questions.
No problem at all. I'll address the first part then, hand off to Joe. As you know, our cloud growth, easy to think is that it's new customers coming in, those customers adding users to the products that they have purchased, in addition to upgrading additions to either the premium or enterprise version of their products. Also, migrations is another big piece of our cloud growth. Roughly 10% of our growth is due to migrations. Of course, cross-sell expanding out to our other products. To diagnose, you know, specifically what we saw in Q1, the specific areas we saw in Q1 was the net new customers starting to slow the rate. We still added over 6,000 net new customers, but we saw that somewhat slowing down as free customers slowed their, conversion to paid customers.
We saw that user growth, so someone who is an existing cloud customer, slowing down the rate on which they added more users. We did not see any impact to either migrations or addition upgrades or in our major cross-sell motions. It's primarily just user additions tied to largely hiring. You know, our customers adding more and more employees into their business and then slowing that down, which slows down our user growth. Those other FX efforts are right on track as we originally planned. Joe?
Thanks Cameron. Alex your question on how we're gonna exit Q4, we expect to exit Q4 with cloud revenue growth rates in the 40%-45% range.
Perfect, t hank you guys.
Your next question comes from Gregg Moskowitz from Mizuho Securities. Please go ahead.
Okay, t hank you for taking the question. So I think of Atlassian as an unusual software company in a good way. A couple of the reasons being that, one, your quarters are typically very linear and two, you have tremendous visibility into customer buying and usage patterns. I'd have to believe that you had a very early warning of the paid user growth slowdown that began midway through the quarter. With that said, what I'm wondering is, was there anything that you were able to do that has enabled you to mitigate the slowdown as it unfolded? Investors, you know, are pretty surprised to see results like this from Atlassian.
The question here, or the spirit of the question is whether you have the ability to make adjustments and navigate the difficult macro better than others. Thank you.
Hey, Gregg, this is Cameron again on—
Oh, sure. Sorry, Scott. Go ahead.
It's Scott here. Just sort of philosophically, Gregg, you know, one of the things we look at, we're a, you know, long-term company and there are, you know, many of our peers, you know, drive their quarters really hard from the sales team. They sort of say, "How many sales people I got and how many reps do I have?" That's how they run their business. If you look at our business, it really is a much more long-term self-serve model where our customers come, and we're also from a price perspective, you know, much more reasonably priced, you know, on a per seat basis than many of our competitors out there.
In terms of, you know, for good and bad, there aren't many things we can do within a quarter to affect the quarter's results, which is why you see the linearity that you've seen over, you know, the years from Atlassian. When I look about the, you know, the macro environment and what we're seeing, you know, we've cut this every which way, you know, by geo, by product, by market segment. It really comes down to that. Customers are not adding seats and heads the way they used to add them because the hiring environment has changed outside of Atlassian. You know, we see that. We trend it there, but in the long term, we're really. We've got, you know, we can sell more products to customers.
We have a great product pipeline in Point A products. We have great market opportunities in ITSM. The migrations are still going strongly. One of the reasons they're going strongly is that the ROI is just so compelling to them. You know, though they pay us more money, the overall cost to them of TCO goes down because they're gonna have less people managing things, you know, in an environment where they had to manage their own servers and data centers. That's a great opportunity. All those are great opportunities for us. They're not short term, you know, do something within a quarter. They really play out over the long term.
Again, when we look at sort of the opportunities for us now, they are to take market share, because we have great products that are cost competitive, you know, versus competitors out there. What we're seeing again is that we you know haven't seen any material change you know in churn, like it's mostly on adding seats. You know, so then also points to the stickiness of our products. That's the way I think about that.
Very helpful perspective. Thanks Scott.
I can also add on to just the timing of things that we saw. As we mentioned in August, what we were seeing in the August timeframe was the net new customers, the free customers converting to paid, going into August. We normally, through our summer season, the July and August, tend to see user growth slow down across our customer base, largely due to seasonality, vacations, and holidays. It just tends to be a normal seasonal trend where July and August are slower as people are not upgrading instances, adding more users. What we noticed is usually most years in, when you come back in September, everyone's coming back to work, the holidays wear off, and people start adding users and upgrading their instances again.
That's when we actually did not see that normal user growth uptick that we normally do in September. The great thing is that one of the advantages that we do have is that we have plenty other growth drivers we can continue to leverage in our business, whether it's upgrading editions, continuing to escalate our migrations efforts, or relying on expansion to other products, of which we've even released a few new ones over the last few quarters. Plenty other levers that we tend to pull when we see user expansion slow down.
Great, t hank you both.
Your next question comes from Brent Thill from Jefferies. Please go ahead.
Headcount accelerated to the fastest growth in 11 quarters, kind of into the face of this slowdown. Can you just talk to what you're gonna do through the next six-nine months and how you're thinking about that investment pace? Just a quick follow-up on the geography perspective. You know, EMEA looked like it had the biggest hit. Can you comment on what you're seeing in the EMEA versus the U.S.? Thanks.
I'll take the headcount, then Cam can talk about the geo side of things. On the headcount, you're right, Brent, it's, you know, it is our high water mark on headcount growth. We do have, from a seasonality perspective, a lot of graduates coming out in, the U.S. who started, this quarter. So that, you know, gives this quarter's numbers, a boost. We are, you know, thinking about sort of what does our headcount moderation look like going forward. We are still going to be growing our headcount, but of course, moderating that growth in light of the macroeconomic conditions and ensuring those people are, you know, going on the most productive projects. Cam?
Yeah, from a geographic perspective, as I mentioned prior, you know, the trends we tend to see across our customer base has been largely across all segments, industries and geographies. When we look to Europe specifically or APAC, we have seen no quantitative change other than what we've already spoken about, the user expansion slowing down. Migrations, our edition upgrades, our cross-sell programs continue to be on track from a quantitative perspective. Qualitatively, when we talk to customers, we do get plenty of discussions and concerns about largely uncertainty we see going into the next year. Plenty have financial concerns related to the variety of macroeconomic factors that are areas that we see impacting their businesses. That has not caused projects to slow or, you know, migrations to slow down at this point, but it's definitely a constant conversation we are having with those customers.
Thanks.
Your next question comes from Michael Turrin from Wells Fargo Securities . Please go ahead.
Hey, guys. On the subject of the slowdown in both expansions of customers and conversions that you were tying to slower headcount growth among customers themselves. Can you say perhaps if there is you see anything particular in the development world, in other words, among the, you know, the headcount growth or not in your customers for software developers, and how that may or may not be tied to what we've heard about in terms of the spend in cloud this quarter?
Michael, you know, I appreciate the direction of the question. This is, you know, we're seeing headcount growth, you know, slow in our customers. I think you're asking, you know, which departments of our customers are, you know, seeing their headcount slowly. Does that, you know, factor into other cloud spends and so forth? I think it's too early for us to have any sort of opinion, strong opinion on that. Like, we sell across the, you know, the entire customer base in our customers, so it's sort of hard for us to be specific about that. Of course, our history is selling more to developers. The thing to take away from Atlassian's results is we're really sticking with our customers.
We haven't seen, you know, people decide to slow their migrations. We haven't seen people try to, you know, reduce or sort of cancel contracts or anything like that. It really is just tied to headcount growth, but I couldn't give you any more detail into which departments that is.
If I can just ask one additional question, too. I mean, you say you're seeing across all segments, but, you know, another way of thinking about it is not segments per se, but customers with different sizes of spend. I think, you know, you obviously have some people spending a lot of money with you, whether they're small companies or big ones. There's also the ability to, you know, have a fairly small spend with Atlassian, and therefore maybe in some senses to fall underneath the radar in terms of big budgeting decisions. Do you see any difference there between where you're a big part of a company's budget versus small?
This is Cameron to answer that. Not really. If you look across the base, you actually on the small end, you see this coming in our free users. Like, we have plenty of free instances with eight users, nine users, 10 users, and then their willingness to put their credit card in and, you know, pay relatively minimal amount to get into one of our paid plans. We've seen that slow down. Even when we get to our largest customers, you know, most of our conversations with our largest customers are about expanding to new product use cases, whether that's Jira Service Management or Jira Align, or having these migrations conversations if they're large on-premises customers, so they're project based, and a big portion of our, you know, revenue discussions are tied to that.
What we have less discussions with them on is them adding 500 users or 1,000 more users because they've rapidly expanded their development teams or what have you. The answer is no, we have not seen user expansion tied directly to, you know, share of wallet or the current spend with Atlassian. It's definitely much more tied to how many people are hiring, and how much people are expanding their overall technology footprint in their businesses.
Okay, thanks very much.
Your next question comes from Steven Enders from SMBC Nikko. Please go ahead.
Hi, gentlemen. Thanks for taking my question. You know, given that, like, the higher velocity sales motions seem to be most effective here, I'm wondering if you look at your existing cloud customers and look at the monthly people versus the annuals, are you seeing any kind of like earlier slippage in the monthly? Are we gonna need to work through, you know, 12 months of the annual customers renewing with adding fewer seats? Like, how do you think about maybe the net expansion rates for those two different sets of cloud customers? Thanks very much.
Yeah, you know, one advantage of our business model is that we have plenty of customers on monthly plans. We have the option to go annual plans across the board, you know, and we largely let customers make the choice. The good news is it's not like we have all annual plans come up at one time every year, is we have annual plans renewing every single month, just like we have monthly plans. No, we see that user expansion challenge that we saw in over the previous quarter continue to be like largely even across both our monthly and annual plans. We don't see any major delta between the two.
The advantage with the monthly plans is that we will have much more, you know, accurate tie to the customer is paying for exactly the number of users they're using within the product. It allows us with the annual plans where we can continue to watch those customers. You know, with cloud, we have incredible telemetry about the health and usage of the products and allows us to proactively engage those customers if we tend to see, you know, usage or activities starting to go into unhealthy territories, giving us even more abilities to run customer success programs, training programs, and the like.
Got it, t hank you very much.
Your next question comes from Ari Terjanian from Cleveland Research. Please state your question.
Thank you for taking the question. Just asking a little bit differently on the user expansion. Appreciate all the color you've given thus far. You know, any way like you can estimate or break out, like, exposure to the tech vertical. I mean, it seems like kind of looking at the headlines, you know, you have Amazon kind of slowing hiring, Shopify, Stripe laying off people. Just kind of curious, like obviously those companies were hiring pretty aggressively during COVID. Just kind of curious if you've accounted or have seen any, like, a benefit from those cohorts during COVID and if you're kind of expecting, you know, baking in for user growth from kind of the tech cohort in the coming months here. Thank you.
Ari, I would understand your line of questioning as sort of what, you know, are there tailwinds that are coming off from COVID or like that we should be thinking about. We've looked at this and we think about, you know, almost every company these days is becoming a software company, whether you're a retailer or whether you are a car company or whether you are, you know, a transport company, just every aspect of the economy is becoming a tech company. That's why people have turned to our products. I don't think that sort of secular trend is changing anytime soon. Tech is a large industry, you know, it's a lot larger than it was 20 years ago when we started.
We sell to tech, to banking, to manufacturing, like all down every industry, vertical we sell to. I wouldn't say we're overly exposed to technology workers. We do sell, again, products that help teams be more effective. Our history was to start with, you know, technical teams. Those technical teams are in every single company out there. When I talk to our customers, those technical teams are also the types of people that most companies are doing their best to retain during the downturn. Like, they're the ones that have taken a long time to build up, have a lot of IT, and they're very hard to restart.
We think that they're not, you know, overly exposed to the tech industry, but you know, we do sell to technical teams across the board. We think those teams are sort of last on the line to be reduced in terms of macro headwinds.
Thank you.
Your next question comes from Mark Cash from Raymond James. Please go ahead.
Yeah, thanks for the question. This is Mark Cash, one for Adam Tindle. I wanted to ask about the loyalty discounting you're doing to migrate customers to cloud. Understanding this is still ongoing, but, you know, how would you size the overall potential uplift to revenue and margins as these discounts are rolling off? When would you really see, start to see that impact? Thank you.
Yep. This is Cameron here. The loyalty discounts and as those of you who've been following for a while, when we announced the server end of life, we basically had aggressive loyalty discounts that rolled down effectively every July first over a three-year period as we led to the server end of life. Effectively, the sooner that our customers would choose to move to the cloud, they would get a bigger discount. Over the three-year period, as the loyalty discounts rolled down, they eventually get to list price. That's still the truth for all of our customers. We still have a loyalty discount in place. It's the last year of loyalty discounts going up till June 30th.
As of July of next year, all customers are effectively paying list on new contracts, will be paying list. All existing customers who are on one-year up to three-year contracts, at the end of their three-year terms will be at list price as well. Joe, did you wanna add anything?
Yeah Cam, I was just gonna mention the question around when do we start to see those price changes and the impact of those in the model? The answer to that is it's not immediate. There's two reasons for that Mark. First and foremost is the ratable recognition on subscription, which is 80% of our revenue. Secondly, the timing of renewals that happen throughout the year post those changes. You won't see an immediate impact when we go through those types of pricing changes.
It will tend to run into the model over time.
Okay, t hank you.
Your next question comes from Peter Weed from Bernstein. Please go ahead.
Thank you. You know, earlier you touched on net revenue retention, and you know, referenced back to you know, an enterprise you talked about 130% and 140% previously, and that you were still seeing NRR over 130%. I wanted to clarify, because obviously, your cloud revenue comes from more than large and mid-sized businesses, whether or not when you said 130%, you were still exceeding that, was that just for kind of the medium and large sized businesses, or was that for that entire revenue base that you report on?
Yeah Peter, thanks for the question t his is Joe. That was for the entire customer base that we report on.
Okay. As you're taking a look at you know the smaller customers within there that you know you are you know trying to get into paid you know certainly that transition is frustrating. You know I think that you were alluding to it in the note here, but how are you seeing you know any competitive pressures there? I mean, certainly, you hear things like GitLab being thrown around as an alternative that people could use if they have a less sophisticated organization. Is it genuinely that people are just not upgrading to paid, or are you seeing situations where you are concerned with some of these customers that they may be using other solutions to try to get done what, you know, Atlassian may be able to do better?
Yeah. This is Cam—this is Cameron. Yeah, first and foremost, across the board, whether it's the new customer acquisition or existing customers, you know, we see no real change in our overall competitive position. We have incredibly strong products, incredibly happy customers, and we also have the sort of mission-critical applications where we're highly integrated into their environments. Specific to what you mentioned, the free users converting into paid, we definitely haven't seen any competitive dynamic there because we still see them as free users of our products. It's actually one of the advantages of our free program, in that people will be choosing us and using our free versions of our products compared to going to an alternative vendor.
Across the board also at a dollar level, if budgets are getting more constrained and customers are looking to save money, across our entire product base, one of our, you know, core parts that makes Atlassian products so, attractive is that we are relatively priced less expensive than most alternatives. No change in competitive dynamics, nor have we seen competitors being any direct impact to our free-to-paid conversion rates.
Thank you.
It's Mike, I just wanted to add in one thing there, to maybe add a little bit of a stronger message to what Cameron is saying. I think it's actually an opposite behavior, right? We've talked about playing offense in this environment, on a few shareholder letters now, and again, this quarter the same. We actually see the upcoming period as a good chance for us to pick up market share in a lot of our markets. We actually think we're very strongly positioned in all three of our major markets. Our investment in R&D are extremely affordable, high value products for customers is a great chance for us to pick up market share in an environment where customers are optimizing their spend t hat's an area we're very bullish and going after.
As a reminder, if you have a question, please press star followed by the one. Your next question comes from Fred Havemeyer from Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Hi, t hank you. I wanted to ask, with respect to the slowdown that you're seeing in free-to-paid conversion as well as just user expansion. Now, what we're seeing now in terms of layoffs, it's certainly ahead of what we saw at the COVID pandemic, but I wanted to ask, if you were to compare or consider what you're seeing now to, say, like, the start of 2020? When layoffs intensified, businesses began to freeze hiring and just capital froze? How have you seen or could you just generally compare and contrast what you're seeing now versus then?
This is Cameron. I will do my best at looking back to that area. Obviously, going back to 2020, the beginning of that year, we definitely saw this kind of right into COVID, we had two things that happened. If you remember, that is actually when we changed our business model from going trials based to free, which resulted in a huge uplift in sign-ups and new free activations of our products. But we also saw that in line with the impact of COVID, small businesses shutting down and so on. If you remember our Q4 of fiscal year 2020 is actually one of our slowest new customer growth quarters ever because of those two dynamics, our conversion to free as well as smaller customers largely going out of business or not renewing.
Two years later, now we're at the tail end of COVID, and we are looking to seeing the trends. Our net new customer number is still significantly higher than we had pre our free launch. Even if you took out all the, you know, uncontrolled, unknown pieces of the COVID dynamic over the last two years, our change of business models going to free has significantly altered our ability to acquire and attract net new customers, and we see that today. In addition to that, the fact is we still every single day continue to see more and more customers signing up, coming into our store, as I say, and clicking the try button year over year, which is the same dynamic we saw back then.
However, their ability to get to the eleventh user, enter their credit card, all that is significantly dependent on, you know, other environments that we don't always have control of. The most important piece that we look to is, are they using our products? Are they getting value out of it? We can be patient for the revenue. That is what we see is consistent between that kind of early COVID months and what we see now a few years later.
Thank you. Just I think one follow-up on that. Also, Cameron, that was I think a great job, not just to try at explaining it. In terms of just Atlassian Together, the bundled solution that you've launched and announced this quarter, I know it's very early days, but it seems like that's more of an enterprise-focused offering. Is there an opportunity outside of just driving sales into enterprise, potentially add this in or use the opportunity of a transition from some of these on-premises customers to either Data Center or Cloud to onboard them into Together?
Fred, it's Mike here. I'm super glad you've managed to ferret out a product strategy question. Thank you for doing that. Yes is the answer. A reminder, Atlassian Together is an enterprise-focused offering. We announced at Work Life, a conference targeting work management. Now we have more than 150,000 customers in the work management arena, so a very strong market for us. There's no doubt that we've continued, as you've seen in our platform, to make our products, as we say, work differently together.
We believe every team works in their own way, and we want our products to work incredibly well together, and we also wanna work with all of the other products that customers use, as the number of products per customer, I think, has topped 89 or 90 in the latest Okta survey, and is gonna continue to go up, we believe. Atlassian Together is an offering targeted at our largest customers to allow them to purchase all of our work management applications together that work with each other and/or the third-party applications generally used. Focused on customers who are increasing their spend significantly in terms of the number of users.
When you're rolling out Atlassian's work management applications from, you know, maybe 2,000 employees to 10,000 employees, it's an incredibly good way to do that because you don't have to manage individual applications and usage across your employee base, i t's very early days. Obviously, as you mentioned, if a customer is coming from Server or Data Center, they only really have access to Confluence on the Server Data Center realm. Atlassian Together includes Atlassian Access, Trello, Jira Work Management, Confluence, and Atlas, which is our new offering. Those five products come in the Atlassian Together package. If you're coming from on-premise and moving to the cloud, you only have Confluence. We do hope it is a compelling offering for customers who are migrating in that space.
It's far too early to see any actual results of that yet. Again, it was only announced a month ago. Initial customer feedback, I will say, is very positive. People understand the offering, especially for those larger customers that are moving significantly up in terms of their employee access to our work management applications and the ability for them all to collaborate with each other. We'll have more updates for you as that rolls out.
Thank you.
Thank you. That concludes our question and answer session. I will now turn the call over to Mike for closing remarks.
Just wanted to say thank you all for the detailed questions and for reading our shareholder letter and for attending today. Thank you to all the Atlassian employees for another kickass quarter. I hope you have a great weekend wherever you are in the world, and we'll talk to you next quarter.