IZEA Worldwide, Inc.

IZEA Worldwide, Inc.

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IZEA Worldwide, Inc. (IZEA) Q1 2018 Earnings Call Transcript

Published at 2018-05-23 20:15:03
Executives
Ryan Schram - COO LeAnn Hitchcock - CFO Ted Murphy - Founder, Chairman and CEO
Analysts
John Hickman - Ladenburg Thalmann Nic Brinker - Brose Group
Operator
Greetings and welcome to the IZEA’s First Quarter 2018 Earnings Call. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only mode. A question-and-answer session will follow the formal presentation. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference is being recorded. I would now like to turn the conference over to your host Ryan Schram.
Ryan Schram
Good afternoon and welcome to IZEA's Q1 2018 earnings call. I am Ryan Schram, Chief Operating Officer at IZEA. And joining me today is IZEA's Chief Financial Officer, LeAnn Hitchcock; and IZEA's Founder, Chairman and CEO, Ted Murphy. Thanks for being with us this afternoon. Yesterday, the Company issued a press release with details pertain to our first quarter 2018 performance. Its and all of IZEA’s investor information can be found on our Investor Relations website izea.com/investors. Before we begin pleased be advised that during the course of today's earnings call our management team will discuss IZEA's business outlook and make forward-looking statements regarding the Company that are pursuant to the Safe Harbor provided by Federal Securities laws. These statements are predictions based on our team's expectations as of today. Actual events or results or trends to differ martially from our forecast due to a number of risks and uncertainties, including those mentioned in our most recent filed periodic reports with the SEC. The Company and our management team assume no obligations to update any forward-looking statements made in today’s call. In addition, our update today will refer to certain non-GAAP financial measures, specifically gross billings and adjusted EBITDA. A discussion and reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP measure is presented in our most recent Form 10-Q available under SEC filings in the investor section of izea.com. With the appropriate disclosures out of the way, I am please to introduce Chief Financial Officer LeAnn Hitchcock, to provide a summary of the Company’s performance in the first quarter of 2018. LeAnn?
LeAnn Hitchcock
Thank you, Ryan, and good afternoon everyone. IZEA reported first quarter 2018 revenue of $3.9 million compared to $4.8 million in the first quarter of 2017. Revenue from managed services accounting for 97% of total revenue in the quarter decreased 19% to $3.8 million in 2018 compared to $4.7 million in 2017. Lower revenue was the result of lower initial annual commitments from larger customers along with less sales and a fewer number of smaller customers running short-term campaign, managed service revenue also decreased by approximately $200,000 due to the change in the timing of revenue under the new accounting standard ASC 606, which we adopted in January 2018. This revenue should be recognized later in 2018 as the marketing campaigns are completed. Under the old accounting standards, revenue was recognized at a point in time as services were delivered. Under ASC 606, revenue was recognized over time based on a cost-to-cost methodology to determine percentage of completion for the services. This change creates a timing difference in when our revenue is recognized. Content workflow accounting for 2% of total revenues in the quarter decreased 38% to $63,000 in Q1 2018 compared to a $102,000 in Q1 2017. Bookings for managed services in Q1 2018 were $5.7 million compared to $6.4 million in Q1 2017. Revenue backlog at the end of the quarter was $10.3 million, revenue backlog consists of $6.3 million in unbilled bookings for campaigns which have not yet started as well as unearned revenue of 4 million for campaigns that have been built but are not yet complete. Cost of revenue as a percentage of revenue increased from 48% in Q1 2017 to 56% in Q1 2018.Our cost of revenue consists primarily of direct costs paid to our third-party creators to provide services and our fixed internal personnel costs for those primarily responsible for fulfillment of our obligations under our managed services. As managed service revenue fell, our fixed internal fulfillment costs increased to 16% of revenues. Total costs and expenses were $5.8 million in Q1 2018 compared to $7.5 million in Q1 2017. Our total cost and expenses as a percentage of revenue improved from 156% in Q1 2017 to 249%/149% in Q1 2018, as we reduced marketing costs and public relations spending and incurred lower personnel costs and non-cash general and administrative expenses. Net loss in the first quarter of 2018 was $2 million or $0.35 per share as compared to a net loss of $2.7 million or $0.49 per share in the prior year quarter, an improvement of 25%. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was a negative $1.8 million compared to a negative $2 million in the same period last year. At the March 31st, we had $2.8 million in cash on hand and stockholders’ equity of $3.7 million. Receivables at the end of the quarter were $3.3 million and we had accessed approximately $731,000 of our $5 million credit facility with Bridge Bank. I will now pass it over to Ryan to provide some additional commentary.
Ryan Schram
Thanks, LeAnn. The start of 2018 certainly hasn't been without its challenges, some of that being frustratingly unexpected or out of our team's control. This includes a rash of recent budget reductions from existing commitments driving refunds or cancellations as well as a noticeable shift in investment strategy from our clients from annual to quarterly investment thresholds. In some cases, this is actually led to larger annual spend that spread across the year projected basis. Because of those factors as well as the fluctuating staff side and pipeline conversion and consistency, our client development team leaders are continuing down the path of diligently rebalancing our sales efforts to benefit from the wider spectrum of deal flow possible. Those efforts will be felt over the course of multiple quarters, not months, given the time required to properly prospect that and close different types of customers. However, Q1 present us with evidence that our approach is beginning to positively impact our business in a number of ways. To that end, I’m pleased to report that Q1 provided several new milestones for IZEA and our client development organization, most notably a new opportunity pipeline creation and average deal size. The businesses new opportunity pipeline for the total value of proposals placed in for the clients was $36 million in Q1, that’s the Company record, that was also a 26% increase in activity in the same period in 2017. As we reported on previous earnings calls, IZEA continues to see impressive growth of average deal size from contracts closed within a particular quarter. This effect was particularly notable during the first quarter as our average deal size climbed 50% to $57,000 over the first quarter of 2017. To be fair, this increase can be viewed in two ways. First, the terrific job by our sales team to demonstrate value to existing and prospective customers to warrant access to larger budgets or a potential risk by increasing the Company's dependence on larger deals as we mentioned during the Q4 earnings call last month, which then create lumpiness and performance month-to-month. During the quarter, we closed just over one 100 new opportunities from brand agency clients including a seven digit commitment from a travel and tourism company that represented a 29% year-over-year budgetary increase from the same period in 2017, excellent progress. We also welcomed new business from a leading packaged food manufacturer as well as supported us the execution at the 2018 Consumer Electronics Show for a global leader at e-commerce, both of which were six digit investments. Moreover, the team continues to drive new and existing business ratios, working hard to win new clients, we just as importantly retain them by locking down return commitments. On the expansion front, our strong and medium business or SMB, content subscription sales team and our software as a partnership sales team that we announced during the Q4 earnings call are right on plan from an initial performance perspective. The sales team based largely out of our Chicago regional office, commemorated the quarter with the handful of new partner client using our IZEAx platform, including a top 10 public relation agency coming to Board to utilize at IZEAx for all of their influence or marketing executions. We’re excited about the potential for these groups as 2018 progressive on. That said, the competitive environment around IZEA has there been more intense. From our own competitive research, they’re now close to 200 companies of variant size from bootstrap to venture-backed in the influencer and content marketing space whether in the form of managed services offering for a SaaS licensing model, as we look at Q2 and beyond for this year, the keys for our team remain simple, amongst our complex and increasingly fragmented industry. First, we continue to realize and benefit from the entirely of the investments we made in Q1 capital across all 3 of our sales teams managed services, SaaS partnerships and SMB. Second, for our managed services team members to be able to up sell and cross sell both influencer and content marketing to our clients, as well as amplification through our promoted post offering. And third, to recognize and leverage what makes IZEA both unique and powerful being technology first organization with world-class engineering talent, driving innovation and providing efficiency for both our team members when executing campaigns as well as the clients to use that same platform. Now, for some additional input in IZEA and for perspective on the road ahead to the Company, I’ll turn the call over to my colleague and IZEA’s Chairman and Chief Executive, Ted Murphy. Ted?
Ted Murphy
Thank you, Ryan. We’ve had to make a number of adjustments to our operations over the past few quarters. Q1 was rough as expected and Q2 will be a bit rough as well, but we believe, there are positive indicators that point to avoid at the end of the tunnel. From new clients and strategic initiatives to enhance software capabilities, there are a number of very exciting things happening at IZEA right now. I want to take a moment to speak about the broader picture for idea and our industry. 12 years ago, I launched paperpost.com. The first marketplace that paid bloggers to create content for brands. That company later the team IZEA and we pioneer the development of the modern influencer marketing industry. That industry has thrived, but in doing so it has become incredibly fragmented. There are hundreds of companies in the influencer marketing space alone and perhaps has even more in the custom content space. The vast majority of companies in the influencer marketing space are executing programs with little or no technology in a traditional agency model. This traditional agency model is still with waste often last editorial control and governmental compliance and is avoid of the integrated measurement and optimization tools required to maximize return on client investment. On the other hand, there are companies that those software platforms to help automate aspects of influencer marketing and content creation. These companies believe that technology is the long-term key to scalable programs and efficient marketing spend. The investment in technology is made with the conviction that both agencies and brands will eventually manage all their programs through an integrated technology platform rather than email and spread sheets, a phenomenon that is already taken place in online media buying. Technology companies are barring the costs of building software and marketing the software solution in an industry that is still relatively young. Online display has more than a decade of industry development over sponsored social content. While more and more buyers in the market for a technology solution every day, we have a long way to go as an industry. I believe that our industry must be consolidated. Most of the companies investing in platform development aren’t profitable and have been challenged to generate enough revenue to offset the costs of building a complete software set, or they have been force to build a niche solution, that doesn’t address the full market need. Based on our knowledge, we believe the overwhelming majority of influencer marketing platforms generate very little and annual revenue, but they are marketed as the biggest and the best. The amount of noise in our channel is deafening, as both marketers and creators having difficult time separating the wheat from the chaff. I see this as both tremendous challenge and an opportunity. We are all fighting for the same customers. We are all spending sales and marketing dollars to compete aggressively with each other. We are caring the same overhead and administrative costs and most importantly investing significant engineering resources to build platforms that are trying to solve the exact same customer problems. We are very aware of the software landscape and had the opportunity to review this software offered by many of our competitors. While every platform has strengths and weaknesses, it is very clear that teams are trying to build the same types of things in different ways. Utility of the end tool set will ultimately be similar in capabilities as well the challenges and costs associated with developing those capabilities. Building, maintaining and improving a software platform is expensive in general, but it gets more expensive when your platform is connected to other platforms that are constantly evolving. In the world of influencer and content marketing, the environment is relentless with ever changing APIs, data sets and formats that require a factoring of tools. On top of that you are maintaining a dynamic marketplace where the inventory refreshing daily, as due to the requirements of the buyers. The amount of wasted effort and money between the players and our space is significant, there is duplicative spending among competitors on things that don’t deliver any customer value and I believe this is the primary thing holding back the widespread adoption of platforms by marketers at agencies and brands alike. It is my believe that you will see meaningful shifts in our industry over the next 24 months and as the only public company in our space, we have a unique platform to build upon. Our management team is excited by where our industry is going and our place in it. We believe that a company with a more robust software platform and expensive network of creators, superior customer service and efficient operations has an opportunity to capture a meaningful portion of spend in both influencer and content marketing. Thank you for spending your time with us this afternoon. I would like to open up the call for Q&A.
Operator
At this time, we will be conducting a question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of John Hickman from Ladenburg Thalmann. Please proceed with your question.
John Hickman
Hi, Ted and Ryan. I don't know who wants to answer this, but could you elaborate a little bit on what's different in the demand side of your -- the industry from say, two to three quarters ago? It just seems like, I mean, you said something about competition. You said something about company is doing quarterly investments instead of annual. But is there a drop off in demand for these, for content marketing or influencer marketing people tried it and putting their dollars in other places. Could you answer that question?
Ted Murphy
Yes, I mean, we're certainly seeing that there are past models which have been consistent for years around conversion rates and timings of bookings and revenue. They're not holding true to what they were in the past. And there are certainly some contradicting indicators that we have out there right now. So, things have definitely changed. At the same time, we’ve had record pipeline in Q1of 2018, were up 46% year-to-date -- I'm sorry, quarter-to-date in our new opportunity pipeline here in Q2. But, we also believe that we're suffering a little bit from slowdowns last year. So we did see a dip in new opportunity pipeline last year. It's kind of hard to say how much of that is rippling through this year versus how much of that is a change in part of demand side and their purchasing patterns, but I think that the thing that we are excited about and bullish on is that, we are getting more and more add backs and those customers that are closing -- those deals are at all-time record too. So, the deal size continues to get larger, but it's definitely different composition right now and that's something that we're working through and trying to address with our team because we think that the environment is changing, and we've got to react to that a bit.
John Hickman
Okay. So one other question, I don't know who wants to take this one, but as you project out the risk this year, you like last quarter talked about $26 million to $28 million in revenues. Is that still -- are you backing away from that or are you reiterating that or neither of those?
Ted Murphy
Yes. I would say that right now, it's neither of those. I think that we need a little bit more time here in Q2 to understand how this quarter is going to shake out for us and if those increases in that we saw on our pipeline in Q1 and actually in Q4 as well are going to flow through or if the conversion rates are -- or time to conversion is going to push out. But certainly here and in Q1, we were off pace from what we had hoped, Q2 is slower than expected as of right now, but there is a lot of opportunity out there at the same time.
John Hickman
And then could you talk about cash needs?
Ted Murphy
Yes, we can talk a little bit about cash needs. What are your specific questions there?
John Hickman
Well, I mean you've got a couple million in the bank and a $5 million dollar line. Are you comfortable with that will take you to cash flow breakeven sometime down the road?
Ted Murphy
I think that that's again a little bit difficult to say because we've got some parameters that are not in line with our previous models. We've got to kind of keep all options open to make sure that we remain in a good cash position. So, it's something that we're continuing to monitor and we’ve got kind of adjust to how sales are falling?
John Hickman
Okay. Just so I understand, you said quarter-to-date, the pipeline of 47%, but it’s…
Ted Murphy
Quarter-to-date up 46%.
John Hickman
46%, but that still slower than you had anticipated like a month ago, when you did your Q4 call?
Ted Murphy
That is pipeline. That is new opportunities to pipeline.
John Hickman
So pipeline good, but…
Ted Murphy
The pipeline is growing, it was up in Q4, it was up here in Q1, so in Q2. But we’re not seeing that things are converting at the same speed and great that there were historically.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Mike Jeffrey. Please proceed with your question.
Unidentified Analyst
My question, I ask three questions and one suggestion, if you would like to take my suggestions at the end. My first question is that, when do you think that your company would be profitable?
Ted Murphy
I think that tailing off that last quarter from John. We’re seeing a bunch of things that are not in line with our historical models. We are certainly still pushing towards that, but we also want to be, we also want to make sure that we are investing in the right way and diversifying our revenue and the right way, so that profitability is sustainable.
Unidentified Analyst
Do you think it will be sometime this year or in 2019?
Ted Murphy
I really can’t say it at this moment. I think that we’ve got to see how these models normalize and be able to get to a place where things are a little bit more predictable for us.
Unidentified Analyst
My second question is that last July you had planned to maximize shareholder value and it seems that you did not go to. Now what kind of plan do you have to maximize the shareholder value, because the price of the stock, it has come down a lot from 785 last September to about $1.72 today; and if you want to go further back from over $100, 6 years ago to $1.72 today? That shows that really, the management is not doing the right things otherwise the price after start will be much higher. I would say management will be doing the right things, if I see the price of IZEA started over $10. What you say about that?
Ted Murphy
We can’t control the stock price. The stock is at a lot of fluctuations over the years both up and down. In terms of maximizing shareholder value, we’re focused on building the best business that we possibly we can. And we recognize that we are in a very fast moving, highly dynamic industry that is constantly changing around us. So we have to adjust to those changes as a business and it’s frankly very tough business. The team here I think is doing the best job to both operate the Company and away that is responsible and also trying to build long-term shareholder value.
Unidentified Analyst
Because last month you said that, your focus to the shareholder value and since last months the price of the stock has come down. I’m not saying that you control the price of the stock but if your company comes with the strong revenue and income profitability and so on. Believe me, you don’t have to control the price of the stock, the stock would go much, much higher. Look at the other companies and they come up with good quarterly report, as strong report, the price of the stock would go higher. And in your case for the last two quarters, I feel and as well as the other investors, they feel that it has been disaster.
Ted Murphy
Yes, I will certainly say that it has been challenging, but I’ll also note that last year was a record year for us. We had record revenue. We had our best EPS. We were able to deliver two quarters of EBITDA positive, being EBITDA positive which was a year ahead of schedule, but again the dynamics have changed around us and we are doing our best to adjust to those things. But some of those -- some of those changes are unavoidable frankly from our perspective. We are dealing with customers that have changes and challenges in their own business. And as those customers have become a more meaningful part of our business, when things happen to them they directly affect us. So, I am proud of what we have built, I am proud of the consistent growth that we have been able to deliver, we had been focused on creating a profitable sustainable company but we also have to deal with the dynamics of the market and our customers and make adjustments based on that.
Unidentified Analyst
And my other question is about the lawsuits that your company is having since last month. When I go to Yahoo and I look at, I see a loss of law firms or swing companies since last month. What do you think about that? Do you think the lawsuits are being useless, meaningless? Or do you think that you have to spend some money to defend yourself?
Ted Murphy
Yes, I mean there will definitely be money that we had to allocate to defend ourselves. Where we are going one lawsuit at this time, even though you will see multiple announcements by multiple firms that it is one lawsuit, and we really can’t comment any further on that.
Unidentified Analyst
And my last question is that, how do you see IZEA of your company that you found, let’s say five years from now as far as the revenue and let’s say profitability?
Ted Murphy
Again, we are looking at a very different model today than we have seen historically and I think first thing for us is we’ve got to get back to a place where we are seeing the type of revenue growth that we expect get to a place of profitable revenue growth. I can’t give you a five-year prediction right now. What I can say is that I admittedly believe that the influencer marketing space is robust. I believe that it is going to continue to grow. I believe that the content marketing space is going to continue to grow. I believe that we are uniquely positioned with both technology and our services to provide value to customers. I believe that we have best-in-class technology solution and I believe that ultimately the concept of utilizing creators in a crowd source fashion for content creation, for ideation, for sponsorship opportunities is going to be a big part of the future of marketing. And so, the opportunity is vast and we intend to continue to charge on strongly and be a dominant player in that space.
Unidentified Analyst
And the last thing that I like to discuss is that, I just wanted to see that if you take good suggestions?
Ted Murphy
Yes, sure we’ll take suggestion.
Unidentified Analyst
Okay. Mr. Murphy I really has been a lots of respect for you, and I feel that sometimes investors they do have good suggestions. If you go to Yahoo website for IZEA under IZEA Conversations, Bulletin Board, you see that some investors they have made very good ideas, very good suggestions that I think it would enhance the price of IZEA stock and it would maximize shareholder value. If you get the time I really appreciate it, because I believe those and I feel I agree with them 100% and I feel that you might like those suggestions. So if you go to Yahoo website, under Finance and then IZEA, type IZEA and then go to Conversations, you see at the last two, three weeks, let's say that they have very different kind of very good suggestions that I think it would be very helpful to your company. If you get the chance, I think you should really read those. And once in a while, it’s nice that since the investors they want the best for their -- for your company and I think it would be a good idea if you feel that some of them are good, you just listen to them.
Unidentified Analyst
Thank you. I appreciate that and we'll check that out.
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our next question comes from the line of Nic Brinker from Brose Group. Please proceed with your question.
Nic Brinker
Hi, Ted. So, the press release regarding the unity search tool, I found that extremely useful for your customers and I'm just curious. What kind of future enhancements you guys have in store for the software, especially in related to optimize search -- searching functionality because I think that will benefit your customers quite a bit?
Ted Murphy
Yes. We're very excited about unity search and the concept of discovery in general that's something that we continue to put resources behind. We believe that being able to connect the right creator with the right marketer is incredibly important, and as our network has continued to grow, finding the right person by being able to utilize all the data that we're collecting on them is getting better and better. I still think that there's a tremendous amount of room for improvement in our platform and different ways to utilize that the data that we're sitting on. And so, we're going to continue to -- we're going to continue to invest there. Another big part of the platform that we're focused on is workflow and splitting apart our workflow process to be able to allow for more dynamic types of content creation and collaboration between the marketers, the creators and ultimately AI and robots. We believe that AI is going to put -- play a big role in future content creation in editing and the general workflow. Ad so we're investing a lot and creating the infrastructure for that that can be extensible to allow multiple types of creators, marketers to participate in a single piece of content and then distribute that content out.
Nic Brinker
Okay, thank you for that response. Yes, I definitely think AI and machine learning are valuable, especially when you're targeting certain markets, so you can enhance who they're advertising to instead of just to a specific advertisement to a group of people, but maybe customizing the actual advertisements for each group.
Ted Murphy
Correct. Yes.
Operator
Our next question comes from the line of Mehul Sharma from CDI [ph]. Please proceed with your question.
Unidentified Analyst
Hey, good evening, Ted and good evening everyone. This is Mehul, I’m a retail investor.
Ted Murphy
Hi, there.
Unidentified Analyst
I have a question with respect to making this wonderful software available globally. So are there any plans to market it in different countries, not just being limited to America?
Ted Murphy
So, right now we are -- IZEA operates in the U.S. and we also have IZEA Canada. We have done some experiments in the past with making the platform available to marketers in different countries, but frankly I just haven't had the resources to go after those markets, the way that we would like to and rather than diverting a small amount of resources and doing something that isn't maximized. We decided that the market here in the U.S. at least near-term is more than big enough for us. We had built the platform so that it can be multilingual, and one of the interests that we had around different types of cryptocurrencies with the ability to adopt those types of things and create a unified payment systems. So we think that all those are opportunities in the future. But right now with the resources that we have, we’re focused on the U.S. and Canadian market, we think there is a lot of opportunity in North America.
Unidentified Analyst
Just one more question. I mean, I saw one of your tweets you posted machine. So how you are planning to use the blockchain and cryptocurrency to your advantage? Just if you can provide a brief on that.
Ted Murphy
Yes. I mean, I don’t know if you joined our last call or heard our last call, but since that initial announcement around cryptocurrency mining earlier this year that I mean almost immediately after that the legal and regulatory environment really got aggressive and it’s changed pretty rapidly. So right now, we’re not -- we put the mining, the software that we were developing on ice, and we really want to see kind of how the crypto market evolve and how the regulatory environment evolves and get some clarity there before we would consider introducing crypto into IZEAx or any of our other platforms. There is just, right now, there is just too much risk and we need a little bit more clarity in order to be able to do that.
Unidentified Analyst
One last question, are there any plans to partner with some other like vendors or providers? Like as you said, you're [indiscernible] U.S. market. Are there any other plans to partner of the software firms, which can introduce you to some other clients or something like managed services as you’re already doing, it’s just another way to partner and have other companies do the same thing for you?
Ted Murphy
For us, it’s not so much about software companies as it is about ad agencies, PR agencies, who essentially act as resellers of our software. So, they license the platform from us, and then they run their influential programs through our platform. And then, they’re charging their customers on the other side. So, they’re essentially acting as our network of resellers.
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, we have reached the end of the question-and-answer session. And I would like to turn the call back to Ryan Schram for closing remarks.
Ryan Schram
We'd like to thank everybody for joining us this afternoon and for all the great questions during the Q&A. And a further reminder, all of our Investor Relations information is available online on our website at www.izea.com/investors. Have a great rest of your Wednesday.
Operator
This concludes today’s conference. You may disconnect your lines at this time. Thank you for your participation.