MongoDB, Inc.

Q3 2023 Earnings Conference Call

12/6/2022

spk23: The conference will begin shortly. To raise your hand during Q&A, you can dial star 1 1.
spk24: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to MongoDB third quarter fiscal year 23 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listening mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press star, then 1-1 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised. Please, the advice at today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker, Brian Deneau from ICR. Please go ahead.
spk28: Thank you, Carmen. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today to review MongoDB's third quarter fiscal 2023 financial results, which we announced in our press release issued after the close of market today. During the call today are Dave Itacheria, President and CEO of MongoDB, and Michael Gordon, MongoDB's COO and CFO. During this call, we will make forward-looking statements, including statements related to our market and future growth opportunities, the benefits of our product platform, our competitive landscape, customer behaviors, our financial guidance, and our planned investments. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, including those related to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the adverse macroeconomic environment and their impacts on our business, results of operations, and clients that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. For discussion on the two risks and uncertainties that could affect our actual results, please refer to the Risk Describes and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended July 31st, 2022, followed with the SEC on September 2nd, 2022. Any forward-looking statements made on this call reflect our views only as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update them except as required by law. Additionally, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures on this conference call. Please refer to the tables on earnings release on the investor relations portion of our website for a reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Dave.
spk11: Thanks, Brian, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. I will start by reviewing our third quarter results before giving you a broader company update. We generated revenue of $334 million, a 47% year-over-year increase and above the high end of our guidance. Atlas revenue grew 61% year-over-year, representing 63% of revenue, and we had another strong quarter of customer growth, ending the quarter with over 39,100 customers. Overall, we are pleased with our performance and execution in Q3, despite the challenging macro environment. Let me give you a bit more context in what we saw in Q3. We had another strong quarter of new business. We added over 500 direct sales customers, and we keep winning new workloads in existing accounts, from startups to Fortune 500 companies. Our new business from Enterprise Advanced also significantly exceeded our expectations, which is particularly notable in this environment, given that EA requires an upfront commitment. Turning to Atlas consumption trends, we have seen an improvement in Q3 versus Q2, albeit still below historical levels. Michael will cover this in more detail. Finally, retention rates remained very strong in Q3, demonstrating the mission criticality of our platform. Indeed, our Q3 results are an indication that our value proposition resonates with customers even in a difficult macro environment. Let me remind you of the key pillars of our developer data platform. First, MongoDB enables the customers to unleash developer productivity. The more productive developers are, the faster their organizations can innovate. The document model, which underpins MongoDB, has proven to be the best way for developers to work with data because it aligns well with how developers think and code. Second, MongoDB supports the performance and scale requirements of the most demanding modern applications. MongoDB is built from the ground up as a distributed platform and allows organizations to easily and cost-effectively scale their applications to address the most exacting performance requirements. Third, MongoDB allows enterprises to remove enormous complexity and costs out of their technology stack. MongoDB is a general purpose platform capable of serving a broad array of use cases including transactional, time series, mobile, search, and application driven analytics. MongoDB continues to be the most popular modern data platform with developers. In the last 12 months alone, our open source community server has been downloaded more than 115 million times from our website, which is more than in our entire company history through the beginning of 2020. And in Q3 alone, we had over 300,000 sign-offs for Atlas Free Tier, which is up 15x over the last five years. We also see growing evidence for how our value proposition resonates with IT decision makers, who are known for their focus on ROI, especially in economic environments such as the one we're in today. Customers who are moving to the cloud at scale, such as companies in the financial services industry, are increasingly choosing MongoDB as their underlying data platform to modernize their application portfolio. IT decision makers value not being locked into any one environment, and by building apps on MongoDB, customers preserve their ability to run these apps on premise, on any cloud, and to easily switch between cloud providers. IT decision makers are also increasingly interested in consolidating vendors. By virtue of MongoDB's broad support for a wide variety of use cases as a general purpose platform, customers can run most workloads on MongoDB rather than a disjointed set of narrow point solutions that increase the cost and complexity of their data architecture. Finally, we continue to gain mindshare with our partners and we see them leaning into co-selling with MongoDB as they also want to leverage the popularity and value of our offerings. Starting with the cloud providers, all three hyperscalers now showcase MongoDB Atlas on their consoles to make it easier for the customers to sign up for Atlas, given the increasing popularity of using MongoDB in the cloud. A number of large systems integrators are in the process of setting up business units focused on MongoDB, given the size of the growing MongoDB practice. A growing number of ISVs continue to build their products in MongoDB. We currently have close to 200 ISVs co-selling relationships, which is up more than 2x compared to two years ago. Our growing popularity has tangible benefits for our business, especially in periods of economic uncertainty. In times like these, customers typically default to vendors they know and trust and with whom they can consolidate spend while reducing overall costs. We see the current environment as an opportunity to establish ourselves as an enterprise standard with more of our customers. Now I'd like to spend a few minutes reviewing the adoption trends of MongoDB across our customer base. The following customers are running mission-critical apps on MongoDB Atlas, leveraging the full power of our developer data platform, incorporating services such as search, in-app analytics, and mobile services. These include Toyota Financial Services, Ulta Beauty, MediaStream, and Vodafone. Vodafone is the world-leading telecoms company with over 625 million global customers in 65 countries. Vodafone is creating hundreds of new cloud-native apps. Underpinning these apps is MongoDB Atlas, which provides a scalable, resilient, and flexible data platform. Atlas also supports Vodafone's IoT ecosystem of 140 million plus devices. MongoDB is a part of a suite of fully vetted tools that Vodafone allows developers to use to build any application. Several MongoDB customers are embarking on their digital transformation journey by choosing MongoDB Atlas and migrating from on-premise to the cloud, including American Tire Distributors, Schwartz IT, and Volvo Group. Schwartz IT, part of the Schwartz Group, uses MongoDB's enterprise advanced on-prem to drive innovation and fuel their own cloud service. With more than 13,000 locations across 32 countries and brands like Lidl and Kauffman, Schwartz Group is Europe's largest retail company. Their internal IT arm, Schwartz IT, works with both internal teams and external customers to ensure smooth operations of their tech stack. Schwartz IT also runs Stack IT, a cloud provider that offers its customers all the benefits of cloud deployment while ensuring that data is stored in Germany under EU regulations. In 2022, Stack IT launched a MongoDB service to help their customers modernize apps and services and improve performance. Hugging Face, Okta, Washington Post, Cisco, and L&T Sufin, a B2B e-commerce platform, are currently developing a number of applications across different parts of their business, and significantly expanded the use of MongoDB Atlas throughout their tech stack. Hugging Face, a fast-growing AI company, migrated from MongoDB Community to MongoDB Atlas to scale their open source platform and online community for machine learning. The company's shift to Atlas allowed them to rely on our developer data platform for software and security compliance, take advantage of change streams to speed decision making, simplify the infrastructure through a single control plane for managing data, and reduce time spent on maintenance through Atlas's integrated services. In summary, I am pleased with our execution third quarter. We had another strong quarter of new business, demonstrating that our value proposition continues to resonate in the marketplace and with developers, IT decision makers, and partners alike. We are pleased to see a rebound in Atlas consumption in Q3 and continue to closely monitor usage trends. We remain focused on winning new workloads with new and existing customers and are committed to profitable growth as we pursue our enormous market opportunity.
spk13: With that, here's Michael. Thanks, Dave. As mentioned, we delivered a strong performance in the third quarter, both financially and operationally. I'll begin with a detailed review of our third quarter results and then finish with our outlook for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2023. First, I'll start with our third quarter results. Total revenue in the quarter was $333.6 million, up 47% year over year. As Dave mentioned, we continue to see a healthy environment for new business. Thus, this is confirmation that we remain a top priority for our customers and our value proposition continues to stand out even in this market. Shifting to our product mix, let's start with Atlas. Atlas grew 61% in the quarter compared to the previous year and now represents 63% of total revenue compared to 58% in the third quarter of fiscal 2022 and 64% last quarter. As a reminder, we recognize Atlas revenue based on customer consumption of our platform, and that consumption is closely related to end-user activity of the application, which can be impacted by macroeconomic factors. Let me provide some context on Atlas consumption in the quarter. Overall, consumption trends improved compared to what we saw in Q2, though they are not back to historical levels. Specifically, there are a couple of trends worth noting. First, we saw a bounce back in areas that were below our expectation in Q2, namely the mid-market channel globally, and our enterprise business in Europe. Second, we saw stronger sequential growth in underlying application usage in Q3 versus Q2, a trend observed across most industries and geographies. We observed a similar pattern last year, and we believe that this may be an emerging seasonal effect. Turning to enterprise advanced, EA significantly exceeded our expectations in the quarter, and we've continued having success selling incremental workloads into our existing EA customer base. As a reminder, under ASC 606, The term license component of the entire deal value is recognized as revenue up front. This leads to the increased variability and reduced comparability of our EA results, and is particularly impacted by multi-year EA deals. This quarter, we benefited from more multi-year EA deals than anticipated. Turning to customer growth, during the third quarter, we grew our customer base by over 2,100 customers sequentially, bringing our total customer count to over 39,100, which is up from over 31,000 in the year-ago period. Of our total customer count, over 5,900 are direct sales customers, which compares to over 3,900 in the year-ago period. Q3 was another very strong quarter of direct customer net additions. As a reminder, our direct customer count growth is driven by customers who are net new to our platform, as well as self-serve customers with whom we've now established a direct sales relationship. The growth in our total customer count is being driven primarily by Atlas, which had over 37,600 customers at the end of the quarter, compared to over 29,500 in the year-ago period. It's important to keep in mind that the growth rate in our Atlas customer count reflects new customers to MongoDB, in addition to existing EA customers adding incremental Atlas workloads. We had another quarter with our net ARR expansion rate above 120%. We ended the quarter with 1,545 customers with at least $100,000 in ARR and annualized MRR, which is up from 1,201 in the year-ago period. Moving down the income statement, I'll be discussing our results on a non-GAAP basis unless otherwise noted. Gross profit in the third quarter was $247.8 million, representing a gross margin of 74%, which is up from 73% in the year-ago period. Our year-over-year margin improvement is primarily driven by improved efficiencies that we are realizing in Atlas. Our income from operations was $19.8 million, or a 6% operating margin for the third quarter, compared to a 3% margin in the year-ago period. The primary reason for our strong operating profit results versus guidance is our revenue outperformance. In addition, our operating profit benefited from the steps we've taken to moderate the growth rate of expenses as we prudently manage our investments in the current environment. Net income in the third quarter was $18.7 million or 23 cents per share, based on 80.4 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding. This compares to a net income of $2.6 million or 3 cents per share, on 78.5 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding in the year-ago period. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, we ended the third quarter with $1.8 billion in cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments, and restricted cash. Operating cash flow in the third quarter was negative $5.7 million. After taking into consideration approximately $2.7 million in capital expenditures and principal repayments of finance lease liabilities, Free cash flow was negative $8.4 million in the quarter. This compares to free cash flow of negative $9.2 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2022. I'd now like to turn to our outlook for the fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2023. For the fourth quarter, we expect revenue to be in the range of $334 million to $337 million. We expect non-GAAP income from operations to be in the range of $6 million to $8 million. and non-GAAP net income per share to be in the range of six cents to eight cents based on 83.3 estimated diluted weighted average shares outstanding. For the full year fiscal 2023, we expect revenue to be in the range of $1.257 billion to $1.26 billion. For the full fiscal year 2023, we expect non-GAAP income from operations to be in the range of $30.8 million to $32.8 million, and non-GAAP net income per share to be in the range of 29 cents to 31 cents based on 80.2 million estimated diluted weighted average shares outstanding. I'll now provide some more context around our guidance. First, in Q4, we expect slower sequential Atlas consumption growth than we experienced in Q3, but better than what we saw in Q2. We are encouraged by the improvement in consumption trends we saw during Q3, but as noted earlier, we believe some of that was driven by seasonality from which we will not benefit in Q4. Second, given the significant outperformance of EA in Q3, we do not expect a sequential uptick in EA revenue between Q3 and Q4. Finally, on a full year basis, we expect a non-GAAP operating margin of 2.5% at the midpoint of our guidance, about a one percentage point improvement compared to last year, We have consistently demonstrated operating leverage each year since going public, improving margins by over 35 percentage points over that time period. We will look to continue improving our margin profile over time, and we are pleased with our rate of progress this year. To summarize, MongoDB delivered strong third quarter results. Our new business performance and strong direct net customer additions indicate the robust underlying demand for our developer data platform. We are pleased to see an improvement in the Atlas consumption trends in Q3, We'll continue monitoring the environment and investing responsibly in pursuit of our long-term opportunity. With that, we'd like to open up to questions. Operator?
spk24: Thank you. And as a reminder, that is star 11 on your telephone to get in the queue. And as a courtesy to other analysts, we ask that you please keep your question to one and one follow-up. One moment for our first question, please. is from the line of Cash Rangan with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed.
spk14: Hi, what a spectacular comeback. Very nice to see this. So, Dave and Michael, just wondering what you've seen in the month of November with respect to consumption trends, and what do you make of the new atlas winds in the quarter? I would assume that given that there was a lot of belt tightening in the quarter from a macro standpoint, rates went up. These new customers are probably even more discerning customers. Their plans with MongoDB are probably even more certain than the customers that might have been part of other cohorts. And as you look into calendar 23, what is your outlook for how you think about consumption patterns as your Atlas customer base becomes bigger and easier to predict? Not easy, but easier to predict. Thank you so much.
spk11: Do you want to start with the elephants? Yeah, so one is, Kash, first, thanks for your question. I'm going to first start with the Atlas wins, and then I'll have Michael talk about consumption trends in November. First, the key thing that I think people understand is that software is central to every company's value proposition. And in recent discussions with customers at our own customer advisory board in the field, and more recently last week at reInvent, our customers are very focused on modernizing to drive more differentiation. operational efficiency, and agility. And so the platform message that we are out there with really resonates because, one, it enables high developer productivity so people can do more with less. The platform enables customers to consolidate on one solution versus connecting and stitching together a point of disjointed tools. So it reduces cost and complexity of the data architecture. And all this provides a very compelling ROI, which really drives those new customer additions.
spk13: And just on the consumption questions, a few thoughts, Cash. First of all, Q4 generally does not see anything that we would describe as a seasonal benefit. When we look at the November patterns, they were consistent with Q3. That effectively implies that the latter part of the quarter will be slower growth because, in general, we haven't historically seen anything that looks like seasonal growth in Q4. So that'll give you a sense for the balance of this year. And as it relates to fiscal 24, we're obviously not providing guidance right now. We'll update that in the March call. It's obviously good to see the continued success in new business as well as the recovery in those growth rates, but it's certainly a very fluid macro environment, and we're monitoring the situation closely.
spk14: Thank you so much.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. is from the line of Brad Brayback with CFO. Please proceed.
spk18: Great. Thanks very much. So last quarter, you guys talked about the digital native customers being a big problem from a consumption basis. Have those businesses now sort of stabilized at a consistent level?
spk13: Yeah, so a couple things. Thanks for the question, Brad. I wouldn't have described it as a problem, but we did kind of slice and dice the consumption behavior to see what we were, you know, to expose to folks what we were seeing, including what areas where we were seeing slower growth, of which, you know, that part of the mid-market, you know, demonstrated that behavior. As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we saw a rebound in consumption across the board, but including the mid-market everywhere across geographies and across industries and also in Europe. So not all the way back to historical levels, but improved versus Q2.
spk18: That's great. And then on the OPEC side, I know you guys aren't guiding for next year, but Dave and Michael, you both talked about the leverage you guys have generated since IPO and the results this quarter were astounding. Is there any reason to believe that OPEX won't meaningfully grow slower than revenue next year?
spk13: Yeah, so as I said, we're not going to guide as it relates to fiscal 24. You can see the implied guide for fiscal 23 is 100 basis points of improvement in terms of the year-to-year margin on the up income side. We're very pleased with that and we'll obviously, as we work through our plans over next year, monitor the environment and everything else. I would just add that we have always had a fairly granular view of things in terms of our returns framework and evaluating and assessing the returns that we're getting out of different investments. We continue to apply that framework, although obviously the market environment has changed, which sort of implicitly means that the returns threshold has gone up. And we've applied that scrutiny, you know, and we'll likely do that as we get through the fiscal, you know, 24 guide.
spk18: Fantastic. Thanks very much.
spk13: Thanks, Brad.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from the line of Brent Braslin with Piper Sander. Please go ahead.
spk21: Good afternoon. Dave, the big surprise for us here is the momentum you're seeing in that EA business. We're seeing some of the peers obviously see moderation just as the overall tech market starts to do more belt tightening. What drove the strength in EA this quarter specifically? And if you could provide any color by industry, that's really the question here. What type of industry is driving the momentum and driving the upside here in EA specifically. Thanks.
spk11: Yeah, thanks, Brent. I think what we saw in EA is just evidence that customers are really viewing MongoDB to be an important part, if not a standard, in their tech stack. And once you are viewed as a critical element of the tech stack, people are more comfortable investing more aggressively. especially in this environment where people do need to modernize their legacy platforms to drive more efficiency and lower cost as well as drive more agility. So I think that's why we're seeing the upside on EA. And so we feel good about that. And obviously, this shows you that customers also like optionality. By building apps on MongoDB, they can truly run their apps anywhere. not only on-premise but on any hyperscaler and obviously switch between on-premise or any hyperscaler. So that is also a very compelling benefit to customers in this environment.
spk21: Helpful color. Then a quick follow-up for Michael here. Short-term deferred growth did slow. Didn't know if there was an impact on payment timing or if you saw a similar slowdown in RPO. So could you just kind of walk through short-term deferred and why it slowed and if we should expect a similar slowdown in RPO?
spk13: Yeah, so what I would just point you to, Brent, is that we've talked about that deferred in general and sort of calculated billings more broadly is not a particularly relevant metric for us, as we've talked about for a few years now. As we continue to make it as easy as possible for customers to adopt usage of our platform, which then allows them to subsequently expand, we have de-emphasized upfront commitments and trying to streamline that sort of upfront part of the negotiation. And so that has a natural consequence from a Malachi perspective is sort of flowing through there. And that's where you see it. And that's why we tend to talk about that as being less relevant for our business.
spk20: Got it. Helpful, Carl. Thank you.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And this comes from Raymond Lanshaw with Barclays. Please proceed.
spk27: And congrats for me as well. And two quick questions, Michael, on staying on that EA one, was there anything like in terms of Q4 deals that kind of got pulled into Q3, et cetera, that made like the Q3 performance, you know, like that there were one of items in there, or was it just like a general performance being better? And then one for Dave, like in this sort of environment, there tends to be, well, there is a tendency to go back to the established platforms. What do you see in terms of new customer projects starting and going to Mongo, but also in terms of clean up of like legacy, Oracle legacy, IBM and stuff like that, and people consolidating on those platforms of those movements? Are those initiatives happening as we speak? Thank you.
spk13: Hey, Raimo, thanks for the question. On the pull-forwards, no, we did not see any particular pull-forward activity. The only thing I'd call out, which I mentioned in the script on the EA, is we saw a little more multi-year in EA, which under 606 drives a little more revenue, but no pull-forwards.
spk11: Yeah, and in regards to the question about – I lost my train of thought. Yeah, platform – So we are definitely seeing customers continue to choose us and standardize us in terms of using Atlas. And the breadth of the platform is really attracting customers to use MongoDB in a wide variety of ways. And so we feel really good about the win rates. We feel really good about our engagement with customers. And obviously, you saw that in the new customer wins. The new customer wins were quite strong.
spk27: Okay. Thank you. Congrats.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from Sanjit Singh with Morgan Stanley. Your question, please.
spk31: Thank you for taking the question and very impressive set of Q3 results. Dave, if I go back to the pandemic, some of the initiatives that you guys put in place that really served you well coming out of the pandemic, you saw the new customer ads really accelerate in 2020 as you sort of focus on onboarding customers. at lower overall spend levels. In terms of the playbooks that could unfold in 2023, what sort of your playbook that you're going to be using to be focusing the team more on sort of the app modernization use case? Is it going to be about further accelerating the customer ads? How are you sort of thinking about the sales playbook as we go into calendar 2023?
spk11: Right. Thanks, Sanjit. I just want to make the point that it was actually pre-pandemic that we decided to make it much more easy for customers to engage with us by both changing sales compensation incentives, as well as making it easier for customers to commercially engage with us. And obviously that paid, to your point, paid huge dividends for us during the pandemic. What I will tell you is that it's really more of the same. We're really hyper-focused on acquiring new customers and adding more workloads from existing customers. And that's across the board, across every channel, every industry, and every customer segment. So that is something that we care a lot about. And we're seeing that now expand in terms of getting customers now to adopt some of the new capabilities we've rolled out to the marketplace. So as I talked about in my prepared remarks, we're seeing a lot of customers embrace the full suite of the platform. So that drives incremental workloads that we would not have gotten in the past. And so we feel really good about that. And that's our real focus is all about acquiring new workloads and getting more and more people to build apps on MongoDB.
spk31: Makes a lot of sense. And just one quick follow-up for Michael. You referred to the sort of ROI framework and what, you know, sort of alluding to like a higher bar given the current environment. Could you give a sense of like what the team is prioritizing more and what may be following kind of below the line or being deprioritized as you think about driving both sustaining growth, but also, you know, extracting more efficiencies in the business.
spk13: Yeah, I'll do my best to try and kind of walk you through it. I mean, I think you kind of have to run sort of type of investment versus type of investment. And obviously, ultimately, we look across the entirety of the portfolio, whether it's go to market or R&D or things like that. But It's probably easiest to think about them within the different buckets and flavors as it relates today as sort of those teams effectively compete for capital. And so within the go-to-market, we obviously are looking at the returns that we're generating. We are continuing to invest. We are continuing to hire and grow within the teams, but we're backing the areas that are having the most success and delivering us the highest returns. Go-to-market's a little bit easier to measure quantitatively and on a shorter-term basis. On the R&D side, things take a little bit longer, you know, to play out. And, you know, you've got a little bit of a lag between when you make the investment and when you see the payback. But, you know, we certainly have conversations at a fairly detailed and granular level even within the R&D side about where do we think we're seeing the most success and the most traction and which areas do we want to incrementally lean into. versus which areas do you maybe, you know, want to deprioritize relative to the areas generating the highest returns?
spk11: Yeah, if I can just add, it's like, you know, for example, like in the marketing side of those digital programs, we were, you know, we do a lot of experimentation of what's working. So, you know, we have a certain, you know, return thresholds. And so if we don't see those programs working, we'll shut them down. Similarly, in the sales organization, there's a certain teams that are outperforming, we'll invest more in other teams that are not, then we'll potentially slow down. So we're just really doing more of the same and just being very rigorous about that.
spk02: That's helpful detail. Thank you for that. Appreciate it.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from the line of Phil Winslow with Credit Suisse. Please proceed.
spk29: Hey, thanks for taking my question. Congrats on a great quarter. Question for you, Michael, and a follow-up for Dave. When you think about just new workloads, new application, you know, go-lives and the trends that you're seeing there, what do you think you can contrast that with what you've maybe seen in previous quarters or maybe even last year? Obviously, you're talking about just overall consumption, but I'm curious about the new apps, you know, the go-lives and the ramp of those. In terms of what you can control and go to market, Dave, how do you feel about sales productivity relative to those sort of those new apps, you know, those go-lives, new customers, et cetera? Thanks.
spk11: Yeah, I mean, I think what we're really seeing in terms of these new workloads and sales productivity is that our customer base is very diversified, both in terms of the types of customers as well as the types of use cases. That's the benefit of having a general purpose platform. So clearly, we have startups who are building potentially new industries or disrupting existing ones. And then we have large companies moving quickly to transform different parts of their business. So it really varies. You know, clearly with the platform play now, we're seeing a lot more interest in search and search workloads and consolidating search workloads on top of MongoDB. We're seeing a lot of interest in time series, being able to, again, have one unified developer experience. Time series leads to things that what I talked about is application-driven analytics, where people want to be able to get, you know, meaningful insights of their business, automate human decision-making into applications. So those use cases are getting more and more popular with customers. But then we have still a lot of the classic bread and butter use cases that customers are using us for. And in terms of sales productivity, what I would say is it's really a function of the quality of their pipeline and how quickly they can add new workloads to our platform and how quickly we can acquire new customers. We're really focused, and the sales leadership team is very, very focused on both things, acquiring new customers and acquiring new workloads. It's less about, you know, is one workload provide a better ROI than another? It's really a function of the customer's requirements and what they're most interested in and focused on.
spk13: And, Phil, just to the cohort part of your question, it's probably easiest to think about in the context of when you bring a new customer on and you think about the changes that we made a few years ago. and how that drove incremental velocity. We've continued to see, you know, good and consistent behavior with those cohorts. I would just remind you and call out that those changes and where sort of the bulk of the customer ads come from is more in the mid-market, right? And so those tend to be spending less than the average direct sales customer. And so just important to keep that in mind as people are, you know, building their models and thinking about the long-term impact of that.
spk29: Awesome. Thanks for the details and congrats again. Really awesome. Thank you.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from the line of Jason Ader with William Blair. Please proceed.
spk19: Thank you. Hey, guys. So how do you interpret the bounce back, especially mid-market European enterprise, when seemingly macro is getting worse? I have a follow-up.
spk13: Yeah, so the first thing I'd start off with, Jason, is it really relates to the underlying usage of the application, right? If you think about sort of what drives consumption within Atlas, I think that's the critical thing. And so when you think about the usage, we're seeing stronger underlying usage. We were always in a growth environment, but we saw in Q2 was slower growth in the mid-market and in Europe. Those rebounded, again, not all the way back to historic levels, but improved levels relative to Q2. Part of our thought process, which we shared in the prepared remarks, is that we believe it's a bit of an emerging seasonal trend, which is particularly relates to sort of people coming back from summer vacations and things like that, because you'll recall in our September call, We talked about August being, you know, in line with what we'd seen in Q2. And so that sort of suggests the improvement that we saw in September and October. We saw that same dynamic in the year-ago period. And while we only have a couple of years, you know, that aren't COVID-affected where we've got Atlas at scale, that's kind of our best current working theory. But we can see it in terms of the underlying usage of the applications. The other thing I'd say more broadly from a macro standpoint that I think is impressive is on the new business side, we continue to win there. We continue to have our value prop resonate. We haven't seen sort of those increasing deal cycles and other things like that that others have seen. We obviously are monitoring the situation closely, but we've been really pleased from that standpoint.
spk19: Great. And one quick follow-up for you, Dave, just on cloud marketplaces. Is that something that you guys are going to be able to talk about in terms of I don't know, any metrics, growth rates, percentage of business going through cloud marketplaces, because it does seem like, broadly speaking, more third-party software is going through these marketplaces, and it seems like that's a really good thing at a lot of levels.
spk11: Yeah, I'm not sure that we're going to be sharing, like, quarterly stats on how things are going, but we definitely provide color. I think the fact that across all three customers can go to their consoles and be able to sign up for Atlas is a meaningful thing. It gives us an access to a whole new customer base that we may not have direct relationship with. And also speaks to the popularity of customers wanting to use MongoDB in the cloud. And so I think those two things have really driven that. There's not many companies who can say that they are on the consoles of all three hyperscalers.
spk19: Thank you, guys.
spk11: Thanks, Jason.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. That comes from the line of Tyler Radke with Citi. Please proceed.
spk10: Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask you first about the EA performance. Obviously, a really strong number on pretty tough comps. As we think about Q4, it looks like you're guiding Q4 to be flat sequentially from Q3, which in the last two years, you've kind of guided it up 7% last year and 4%. Is there something you're seeing in terms of timing on the EA business that would drive a sub-seasonal guide for Q4, or maybe you're just layering in more macro conservatism given the environment out there? But if you could just kind of unpack your view on the EA business and overall outlook into Q4. Thanks.
spk13: Sure. Thanks, Tyler. We obviously don't guide by product, but maybe a couple things I can say about Q4. First of all, As I mentioned, it was obviously an incredibly strong EA quarter with EA growing 26% year over year. And so as we look out at Q4, it doesn't make a ton of sense to, as we look at the business, to think that we're going to meaningfully improve sequentially from an EA perspective, given how incredibly strong Q3 was. And then we talked a little bit on the Atlas side. around Q4 doesn't benefit from the seasonal tailwinds that Q3 does. And so I think on a sequential basis, those are the key factors to keep in mind.
spk10: Great. And it sounded like you talked about certainly some improvements in consumption on Atlas. But if I look at the sequential dollar growth in Atlas in Q3 versus Q2, it was it was down a bit. Could you just kind of square, you know, with improving, you know, expansion rates, why would the sequential dollar ads be down? Is it kind of a reflection of new business or just help us understand the moving pieces there?
spk13: Yeah, I think it's mostly a reflection of the starting ARR. So you're basically starting with, you know, the compounding slower growth. And so when you think about the entry point, whether it's Q3 in terms of for the second half of the year or Q4 for the final quarter of the year, you've seen several months of slower growth. And so that means that the beginning ARR is lower on an absolute basis. And even if the growth rates were to revert, the number would be lower just by virtue of the fact that the starting ARR is lower. Great. Thank you.
spk24: Thank you. And as a reminder, to ask a question, simply press star, then 11 on your telephone to get in the queue. One moment for our next question, please. And it comes from the line of Fred Havemeyer with Macquarie. Please proceed.
spk15: Hey, thank you very much. I was interested also in cloud marketplaces and just kind of a follow-up around that. With the announcement of cloud marketplaces, even today, you're showing more integration with, for example, today, like Microsoft's entire data platform. What is it that is drawing these, or what are you doing correctly here that's drawing these hyperscalers that have their own competitive database offerings to not just sell your product, but potentially partner with MongoDB and provide it through the platform? And then have a follow-up as well.
spk11: Yeah, yeah. Fred, I think what that really speaks to is just the power of the MongoDB platform and the product market fit that's evidenced by how popular we are. I mean, we are truly the most popular modern data platform in the world. And a majority of those users tend to run MongoDB in the cloud. So each of the hyperscalers see a lot of MongoDB usage on each of the clouds. Yes, you're right. In the early days, they tried more to compete than to partner. And frankly, a lot of people, when we first went public, were skeptical about how we could actually build a cloud business when trying to compete with the hyperscalers. Obviously, we've proven the ability to do that. And I think that's also evidence of the fact that customers are also more discerning. And they're not just going to take the a la carte menu choice. They're going to be very judicious in their evaluation process. And given the value we provide, I think you're seeing the hyperscalers recognize that. And by the way, the hyperscalers also benefit from our growth. They benefit both from the underlying consumption of storage and compute of Atlas, as well as that those customers that they win who are running Atlas workloads in their clouds then buy other ancillary services themselves. So it ends up truly being a win-win relationship, and I think that's why you're seeing the hyperscalers essentially engage with us more deeply.
spk15: Thank you. And then the follow-ups, it's multi-cloud again related, but I wanted to ask about multi-cloud clusters, as I think it's one of the more unique offerings that you have in Atlas out of the box. So generally, could you help us or just describe where you're seeing customer adoption trends with your multi-cloud cluster capability and replica set capabilities?
spk11: Yeah, I mean, the trend is, I mean, what we're seeing is there's a lot of customer interest in this capability. One, depending on the customer's needs, they may have a preferred hyperscaler, but they're expanding into a geographic region where that hyperscaler may only have one region or no regions, and they want some diversity across hyperscalers in case that region goes down. And so they want the benefit of being able to quickly switch over to another hyperscaler. The other thing that we see is obviously as these hyperscalers compete with each other and offer a different set of services, Customers want to be able to leverage some services offered in one hyperscaler versus another, even though maybe their preferred hyperscaler does not offer such a service. And then third, there's always the benefit of avoiding lock-in and being able to diversify their workloads across different hyperscalers. And again, just to be clear, the multi-cloud cluster essentially enables customers to run one app or one workload across multiple clouds. So that is profoundly different than what most people can offer today.
spk15: Thank you for that, and congratulations on a strong quarter. Thanks, Fred.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. It's from Mike Sickles with Needham and Company. Please go ahead.
spk09: Hey, thanks for taking the question, guys. I had a two-quarter to start, and I just wanted to come back to the Atlas consumption trends, improving quarter over quarter in Q3. It sounds like things really began to improve in September. I just wanted to see, was it stable from there on out, or did you see continuing strength even from September when we think about how October and November played out? And then on a relative basis, are there certain pockets of the market which have maybe a larger delta versus those historical consumption trends you're talking to? And then I do have a follow-up.
spk13: Yeah, so generally, I would say it was broad-based, as we described. The rebound was most perceptible in the sense of the mid-market globally and Europe, but only because those are the areas where we had seen slower growth that we called out in Q2. And we had talked about, like I said, August being in line with Q2, and so September and were stronger, and then just to continue, you know, I don't want to get into like a day-by-day, you know, reading here, but we did see that behavior, and so, you know, and that shows up in the results, and that's also consistent with what we saw sort of in the year-ago period, hence the commentary about this emerging seasonal trend.
spk09: Thank you for that, and the follow-up I had, I just kind of wanted to paint out a scenario for you guys and just soundboard an idea, if you will, I'm looking at where we have the 4Q guide today. Call of this year-to-year growth rate, you guys are targeting for about 26% at the midpoint. And the reason I'm bringing this up, if I think about how this year has played out, you guys are going to have a tough comp in the first half of next year with 50% plus growth that you guys delivered in the first half of this year, as well as strength from EA. And so the reason I'm bringing this up is if I look at next year, the consensus is currently at call it mid to high 20% growth rate versus the exit velocity of this year where we're looking at 26%. And at least from a qualitative perspective, can you provide us any directional comments as far as whether or not that appears to be the right ballpark? Is that aggressive? How should we be thinking about next year's growth?
spk13: Yeah, I think the key thing is we'll obviously update that in the March call. We've tried to give you the best lay of the land as we can for the current fiscal year and what we see for Q4. It certainly is a fluid and uncertain macro environment. We're monitoring that closely, and we'll obviously update everyone in the March call around our outlook.
spk05: Great. Thank you very much, guys. Thank you, Mike.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. That it comes from Steve Koenig with SMBC. Nicole, please go ahead.
spk17: Hi, gentlemen. Thanks for taking my question. I'll just ask one here. Congrats on the quarter and the rebound here. I'm wondering when it comes to new customers and or new workloads, You know, given kind of the macro environment, the pressures on business, you know, both SMB and enterprise, what are you guys seeing in terms of customer behavior with respect to how they size the deals or the versions they choose? You know, how does kind of that economic sensitivity manifesting itself in terms of those new deals, you know, kind of pricing-wise or, you know, kind of the scale of the deal? Thanks very much.
spk11: Yeah, so Steve, thanks for your question. We haven't seen any discernible change in deal dynamics in Q3. And clearly our EA results, in our opinion, demonstrate the power of our platform and the ability for customers and the interest of customers running workloads anywhere. What I will say is I personally have been through, in the public company context, 2008 and also lived through 2000 as well. In these kinds of situations, we definitely recognize that there's more scrutiny by customers on deals and probably approval levels go up the food chain. And so what we are obviously working closely with our sales teams on is to making sure that they rigorously qualify their forecasts and to make sure that they really understand the decision process that customers have to go through to get deals done. But that is something that we have lived through in previous cycles, and that's something that we'll be very focused on.
spk16: Got it. Great. Thanks a lot, Dave. Congrats again. Thanks, Steve. Thanks, Steve.
spk24: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Turrett with KeyBank. Please proceed.
spk03: Hey, guys. Congrats on the quarter. I want to come back to seasonality. So, you know, there's all different seasonality in different parts of your underlying business. You say your customers are B2B customers. I guess I get, well, you know, coming back from vacation would make sense to get projects going again. But I would also think that in B2C, as we go into the holiday season, that you would get a boost out of that also. So why wouldn't we see some continuing, very typical fourth quarter positive seasonality at this point, given how much of your business is focused on consumption?
spk13: Yeah, thanks, Michael. Just to clarify. I wouldn't say it's coming back and starting new projects. What we're talking about here, again, is the underlying usage of the database. And so whether it's internal applications or B2B applications or consumer-facing applications or whatever, what we see is an increase in the underlying database activity. So this is a different dynamic than people kicking off new projects, right? It's reflecting the underlying activity in the workload or in the application. And given that we've seen this now for two years in a row, you know, we're highlighting it, you know, given the behaviors, you know, that we're seeing. I want to call that out for folks as what appears to be an emerging seasonal trend.
spk03: And then, Mike, can you quantify the impact of on RevRec, upfront RevRec, of the shift to a larger percentage of or a large percent of multi-year EA deals, because obviously, as you said, that pulls things forward a bit in terms of Rev Rec. So how much just from that shift could we have seen in terms of benefits in the quarter?
spk13: Yeah, we're not going to quantify an exact number. Part of this is also based off of, we assume some level of multi-year deals in our forecasts, in our guidance, obviously. We saw a little bit more than that. It was material enough to bother to call out just so people don't extrapolate inaccurately. And so that's why we wanted to make sure people understood the dynamic.
spk03: Thanks, Mike. Thanks, Dave.
spk08: Thanks, Michael. Thank you, Michael.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. Comes from the line of Will Power with RWBurr.
spk22: Please go ahead. Oh, great. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe just bigger picture, I know you touched on this a bit, but as customers increasingly focus on TCO in this environment, I'm just kind of curious how much more aggressive customers are getting at moving legacy databases and workloads over to Mongo versus maybe what you've seen six, nine months ago. Any real change in pace of that type of activity?
spk11: Yes. So, Will, thanks for your question. We recently had a customer advisory board where we had some of our larger customers with us for a number of days in Europe. And I would tell you the feedback there was that there's even more interest in moving off legacy platforms to more modern platforms in this environment because the the cost structure and the brittleness of those architectures really are inhibitor for those companies to be able to move quickly and to seize new opportunities or to respond to new threats. And so in this environment, there's actually even more interest. We're actually seeing that also in an industry like financial services where they're starting to move to the cloud at scale. And that's a catalyst for them to be more aggressive in modernizing their tech portfolio. And that's You know, that's more of a recent phenomenon, and we're obviously pleased about the engagements we're having with that vertical as well.
spk07: That's great. Thank you. Thanks, Will.
spk24: Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions in the queue. I would like to turn the call back to Dev Etichiria for his final comments.
spk11: Thank you. So we're really happy with our new business performance and see it as evidence that our value proposition resonates with developers, IT decision makers, and our partners. We're obviously pleased to see the rebound in Atlas consumption during the quarter and expect a continued macro impact, and so we're closely monitoring consumption trends. And we will deliver another year of operating margin expansion despite the macro headwinds, and we are committed to profitable growth. With that, thank you for your time today.
spk24: Everyone, thank you for participating in today's conference. You may now disconnect. Good day.
spk23: The conference will begin shortly. To raise your hand during Q&A, you can dial star 11. you Bye. Thank you. you you
spk24: Good day and thank you for standing by. Welcome to MongoDB third quarter fiscal year 23 earnings call. At this time, all participants are in a listening mode. After the speaker's presentation, there will be a question and answer session. To ask a question during the session, you will need to press start then 1-1 on your telephone. You will then hear an automated message advising that your hand is raised. Please, the advice at today's conference is being recorded. I would now like to hand the conference over to your speaker, Brian Deneau from ICR. Please go ahead.
spk28: Thank you, Carmen. Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us today to review MongoDB's third quarter fiscal 2023 financial results, which we announced in our press release issued after the close of market today. During the call today are Dave Itacheria, President and CEO of MongoDB, and Michael Gordon, MongoDB's COO and CFO. During this call, we will make forward-looking statements, including statements related to our market and future growth opportunities, the benefits of our product platform, our competitive landscape, customer behaviors, our financial guidance, and our planned investments. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties, including those related to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the adverse macroeconomic environment and their impacts on our business, results of operations, and clients that could cause actual results to differ materially from our expectations. For discussion on the two risks and uncertainties that could affect our actual results, please refer to the Risk Describes and Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended July 31, 2022, followed with the SEC on September 2, 2022. Any forward-looking statements made on this call reflect our views only as of today, and we undertake no obligation to update them except as required by law. Additionally, we will discuss non-GAAP financial measures on this conference call. Please refer to the tables on earnings release on the investor relations portion of our website for a reconciliation of these measures to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure. With that, I'd like to turn the call over to Dave.
spk11: Thanks, Brian, and thank you to everyone for joining us today. I will start by reviewing our third quarter results before giving you a broader company update. We generated revenue of $334 million, a 47% year-over-year increase and above the high end of our guidance. Atlas revenue grew 61% year-over-year, representing 63% of revenue, and we had another strong quarter of customer growth, ending the quarter with over 39,100 customers. Overall, we are pleased with our performance and execution in Q3, despite the challenging macro environment. Let me give you a bit more context in what we saw in Q3. We had another strong quarter of new business. We added over 500 direct sales customers, and we keep winning new workloads in existing accounts, from startups to Fortune 500 companies. Our new business from Enterprise Advanced also significantly exceeded our expectations, which is particularly notable in this environment, given that EA requires an upfront commitment. Turning to Atlas consumption trends, we have seen an improvement in Q3 versus Q2, albeit still below historical levels. Michael will cover this in more detail. Finally, retention rates remained very strong in Q3, demonstrating the mission criticality of our platform. Indeed, our Q3 results are an indication that our value proposition resonates with customers even in a difficult macro environment. Let me remind you of the key pillars of our developer data platform. First, MongoDB enables the customers to unleash developer productivity. The more productive developers are, the faster their organizations can innovate. The document model, which underpins MongoDB, has proven to be the best way for developers to work with data because it aligns well with how developers think and code. Second, MongoDB supports the performance and scale requirements of the most demanding modern applications. MongoDB is built from the ground up as a distributed platform and allows organizations to easily and cost-effectively scale their applications to address the most exacting performance requirements. Third, MongoDB allows enterprises to remove enormous complexity and costs out of their technology stack. MongoDB is a general purpose platform capable of serving a broad array of use cases including transactional, time series, mobile, search, and application driven analytics. MongoDB continues to be the most popular modern data platform with developers. In the last 12 months alone, our open source community server has been downloaded more than 115 million times from our website, which is more than in our entire company history through the beginning of 2020. And in Q3 alone, we had over 300,000 sign-offs for Atlas Free Tier, which is up 15x over the last five years. We also see growing evidence for how our value proposition resonates with IT decision makers, who are known for their focus on ROI, especially in economic environments such as the one we're in today. Customers who are moving to the cloud at scale, such as companies in the financial services industry, are increasingly choosing MongoDB as their underlying data platform to modernize their application portfolio. IT decision makers value not being locked into any one environment, and by building apps on MongoDB, customers preserve their ability to run these apps on premise, on any cloud, and to easily switch between cloud providers. IT decision makers are also increasingly interested in consolidating vendors. By virtue of MongoDB's broad support for a wide variety of use cases as a general purpose platform, customers can run most workloads on MongoDB rather than a disjointed set of narrow point solutions that increase the cost and complexity of their data architecture. Finally, we continue to gain mind share with our partners and we see them leaning into co-selling with MongoDB as they also want to leverage the popularity and value of our offerings. Starting with the cloud providers, all three hyperscales now showcase MongoDB Atlas on their consoles to make it easier for the customers to sign up for Atlas, given the increasing popularity of using MongoDB in the cloud. A number of large systems integrators are in the process of setting up business units focused on MongoDB, given the size of the growing MongoDB practice. A growing number of ISVs continue to build their products in MongoDB. We currently have close to 200 ISVs co-selling relationships, which is up more than 2x compared to two years ago. Our growing popularity has tangible benefits for our business, especially in periods of economic uncertainty. In times like these, customers typically default to vendors they know and trust and with whom they can consolidate spend while reducing overall costs. We see the current environment as an opportunity to establish ourselves as an enterprise standard with more of our customers. Now I'd like to spend a few minutes reviewing the adoption trends of MongoDB across our customer base. The following customers are running mission-critical apps on MongoDB Atlas, leveraging the full power of our developer data platform, incorporating services such as search, in-app analytics, and mobile services. These include Toyota Financial Services, Ulta Beauty, MediaStream, and Vodafone. Vodafone is the world-leading telecoms company with over 625 million global customers in 65 countries. Vodafone is creating hundreds of new cloud-native apps. Underpinning these apps is MongoDB Atlas, which provides a scalable, resilient, and flexible data platform. Atlas also supports Vodafone's IoT ecosystem of 140 million-plus devices. MongoDB is a part of a suite of fully vetted tools that Vodafone allows developers to use to build any application. Several MongoDB customers are embarking on their digital transformation journey by choosing MongoDB Atlas and migrating from on-premise to the cloud, including American Tire Distributors, Schwartz IT, and Volvo Group. Schwartz IT, part of the Schwartz Group, uses MongoDB's enterprise advanced on-prem to drive innovation and fuel their own cloud service. With more than 13,000 locations across 32 countries and brands like Lidl and Kauffman, Schwartz Group is Europe's largest retail company. Their internal IT arm, Schwartz IT, works with both internal teams and external customers to ensure smooth operations of their tech stack. Schwartz IT also runs Stack IT, a cloud provider that offers its customers all the benefits of cloud deployment while ensuring that data is stored in Germany under EU regulations. In 2022, Stack IT launched a MongoDB service to help their customers modernize apps and services and improve performance. Hugging Face, Okta, Washington Post, Cisco, and L&T Sufin, a B2B e-commerce platform, are currently developing a number of applications across different parts of their business, and significantly expanded the use of MongoDB Atlas throughout their tech stack. Hugging Face, a fast-growing AI company, migrated from MongoDB Community to MongoDB Atlas to scale their open source platform and online community for machine learning. The company's shift to Atlas allowed them to rely on our developer data platform for software and security compliance, take advantage of change streams to speed decision making, simplify the infrastructure through a single control plane for managing data, and reduce time spent on maintenance through Atlas's integrated services. In summary, I am pleased with our execution third quarter. We had another strong quarter of new business, demonstrating that our value proposition continues to resonate in the marketplace and with developers, IT decision makers, and partners alike. We are pleased to see a rebound in Atlas consumption in Q3 and continue to closely monitor usage trends. We remain focused on winning new workloads with new and existing customers and are committed to profitable growth as we pursue our enormous market opportunity.
spk13: With that, here's Michael. Thanks, Dave. As mentioned, we delivered a strong performance in the third quarter, both financially and operationally. I'll begin with a detailed review of our third quarter results and then finish with our outlook for the fourth quarter and full fiscal year 2023. First, I'll start with our third quarter results. Total revenue in the quarter was $333.6 million, up 47% year over year. As Dave mentioned, we continue to see a healthy environment for new business. Thus, this is confirmation that we remain a top priority for our customers and our value proposition continues to stand out even in this market. Shifting to our product mix, let's start with Atlas. Atlas grew 61% in the quarter compared to the previous year and now represents 63% of total revenue compared to 58% in the third quarter of fiscal 2022 and 64% last quarter. As a reminder, we recognize Atlas revenue based on customer consumption of our platform, and that consumption is closely related to end-user activity of the application, which can be impacted by macroeconomic factors. Let me provide some context on Atlas consumption in the quarter. Overall, consumption trends improved compared to what we saw in Q2, though they are not back to historical levels. Specifically, there are a couple of trends worth noting. First, we saw a bounce back in areas that were below our expectation in Q2, namely the mid-market channel globally and our enterprise business in Europe. Second, we saw stronger sequential growth in underlying application usage in Q3 versus Q2, a trend observed across most industries and geographies. We observed a similar pattern last year, and we believe that this may be an emerging seasonal effect. Turning to enterprise advance, EA significantly exceeded our expectations in the quarter, and we've continued having success selling incremental workloads into our existing EA customer base. As a reminder, under ASC 606, The term license component of the entire deal value is recognized as revenue up front. This leads to the increased variability and reduced comparability of our EA results and is particularly impacted by multi-year EA deals. This quarter, we benefited from more multi-year EA deals than anticipated. Turning to customer growth, during the third quarter, we grew our customer base by over 2,100 customers sequentially, bringing our total customer count to over 39,100, which is up from over 31,000 in the year-ago period. Of our total customer count, over 5,900 are direct sales customers, which compares to over 3,900 in the year-ago period. Q3 was another very strong quarter of direct customer net additions. As a reminder, our direct customer count growth is driven by customers who are net new to our platform, as well as self-serve customers with whom we've now established a direct sales relationship. The growth in our total customer count is being driven primarily by Atlas, which had over 37,600 customers at the end of the quarter, compared to over 29,500 in the year-ago period. It's important to keep in mind that the growth rate in our Atlas customer count reflects new customers to MongoDB, in addition to existing EA customers adding incremental Atlas workloads. We had another quarter with our net ARR expansion rate above 120%. We ended the quarter with 1,545 customers with at least $100,000 in ARR and annualized MRR, which is up from 1,201 in the year-ago period. Moving down the income statement, I'll be discussing our results on a non-GAAP basis unless otherwise noted. Gross profit in the third quarter was $247.8 million, representing a gross margin of 74%, which is up from 73% in the year-ago period. Our year-over-year margin improvement is primarily driven by improved efficiencies that we are realizing in Atlas. Our income from operations was $19.8 million, or a 6% operating margin for the third quarter, compared to a 3% margin in the year-ago period. The primary reason for our strong operating profit results versus guidance is our revenue outperformance. In addition, our operating profit benefited from the steps we've taken to moderate the growth rate of expenses as we prudently manage our investments in the current environment. Net income in the third quarter was $18.7 million or 23 cents per share, based on 80.4 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding. This compares to a net income of $2.6 million or 3 cents per share, on 78.5 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding in the year-ago period. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, we ended the third quarter with $1.8 billion in cash, cash equivalents, short-term investments, and restricted cash. Operating cash flow in the third quarter was negative $5.7 million. After taking into consideration approximately $2.7 million in capital expenditures and principal repayments of finance lease liabilities, free cash flow was negative $8.4 million in the quarter. This compares to free cash flow of negative $9.2 million in the third quarter of fiscal 2022. I'd now like to turn to our outlook for the fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2023. For the fourth quarter, we expect revenue to be in the range of $334 million to $337 million. We expect non-GAAP income from operations to be in the range of $6 million to $8 million, and non-GAAP net income per share to be in the range of six cents to eight cents based on 83.3 estimated diluted weighted average shares outstanding. For the full year fiscal 2023, we expect revenue to be in the range of $1.257 billion to $1.26 billion. For the full fiscal year 2023, we expect non-GAAP income from operations to be in the range of $30.8 million to $32.8 million, and non-GAAP net income per share to be in the range of 29 cents to 31 cents based on 80.2 million estimated diluted weighted average shares outstanding. I'll now provide some more context around our guidance. First, in Q4, we expect slower sequential Atlas consumption growth than we experienced in Q3, but better than what we saw in Q2. We are encouraged by the improvement in consumption trends we saw during Q3, but as noted earlier, we believe some of that was driven by seasonality from which we will not benefit in Q4. Second, given the significant outperformance of EA in Q3, we do not expect a sequential uptick in EA revenue between Q3 and Q4. Finally, on a full year basis, we expect a non-GAAP operating margin of 2.5% at the midpoint of our guidance, about a one percentage point improvement compared to last year, We have consistently demonstrated operating leverage each year since going public, improving margins by over 35 percentage points over that time period. We will look to continue improving our margin profile over time, and we are pleased with our rate of progress this year. To summarize, MongoDB delivered strong third quarter results. Our new business performance and strong direct net customer additions indicate the robust underlying demand for our developer data platform. We are pleased to see an improvement in the Atlas consumption trends in Q3, We'll continue monitoring the environment and investing responsibly in pursuit of our long-term opportunity. With that, we'd like to open up to questions. Operator?
spk24: Thank you. And as a reminder, that is star 11 on your telephone to get in the queue. And as a courtesy to other analysts, we ask that you please keep your question to one and one follow-up. One moment for our first question, please. is from the line of Cash Rangan with Goldman Sachs. Please proceed.
spk14: Hi, what a spectacular comeback. Very nice to see this. So, Dave and Michael, just wondering what you've seen in the month of November with respect to consumption trends, and what do you make of the new Atlas wins in the quarter? I would assume that given that there was a lot of belt tightening in the quarter from a macro standpoint, rates went up, These new customers are probably even more discerning customers. Their plans with MongoDB are probably even more certain than the customers that might have been part of other cohorts. And as you look into Calendar 23, what is your outlook for how you think about consumption patterns as your Atlas customer base becomes bigger and easier to predict? Not easy, but easier to predict. Thank you so much.
spk11: Do you want to start with the Atlas friends? Yeah, so I wanted, Prakash, first, thanks for your question. I'm going to first start with the Atlas wins, and then I'll have Michael talk about consumption trends in November. First, the key thing that I think people understand is that software is central to every company's value proposition. And in recent discussions with customers at our own customer advisory board in the field, and more recently last week at reInvent, our customers are very focused on modernizing to drive more differentiation. operational efficiency and agility. And so the platform message that we are out there with really resonates because, one, it enables high developer productivity so people can do more with less. The platform enables customers to consolidate on one solution versus connecting and stitching together a point of disjointed tools. So it reduces cost and complexity of the data architecture. And all this provides a very compelling ROI, which really drives those new customer additions.
spk13: And just on the consumption questions, a few thoughts, Cash. First of all, Q4 generally does not see anything that we would describe as a seasonal benefit. When we look at the November patterns, they were consistent with Q3. That effectively implies that the latter part of the quarter will be slower growth because, in general, we haven't historically seen anything that looks like seasonal growth in Q4. So that'll give you a sense for the balance of this year. And as it relates to fiscal 24, we're obviously not providing guidance right now. We'll update that in the March call. It's obviously good to see the continued success in new business as well as the recovery in those growth rates, but it's certainly a very fluid macro environment, and we're monitoring the situation closely.
spk14: Thank you so much.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. is from the line of Brad Rayback with CFO. Please proceed.
spk18: Great. Thanks very much. So last quarter, you guys talked about the digital native customers being a big problem from a consumption basis. Have those businesses now sort of stabilized at a consistent level?
spk13: Yeah, so a couple things. Thanks for the question, Brad. I wouldn't have described it as a problem, but we did kind of slice and dice the consumption behavior to see what we were, you know, to expose to folks what we were seeing, including what areas where we were seeing slower growth, of which, you know, that part of the mid-market, you know, demonstrated that behavior. As I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we saw a rebound in consumption across the board, but including the mid-market everywhere across geographies and across industries and also in Europe. So not all the way back to historical levels, but improved versus Q2.
spk18: That's great. And then on the OPEC side, I know you guys aren't guiding for next year, but Dave and Michael, you both talked about the leverage you guys have generated since IPO and the results this quarter were astounding. Is there any reason to believe that OPEX won't meaningfully grow slower than revenue next year?
spk13: Yeah, so as I said, we're not going to guide as it relates to fiscal 24. You can see the implied guide for fiscal 23 is 100 basis points of improvement in terms of the year-to-year margin. on the up income side. We're very pleased with that and we'll obviously, as we work through our plans over next year, monitor the environment and everything else. I would just add that we have always had a fairly granular view of things in terms of our returns framework and evaluating and assessing the returns that we're getting out of different investments we continue to apply that framework, although obviously the market environment has changed, which sort of implicitly means that the returns threshold has gone up, and we've applied that scrutiny, you know, and we'll likely do that as we get through the fiscal, you know, 24 guide.
spk18: Fantastic. Thanks very much. Thanks, Brad.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from the line of Brent Braslin with Piper Sandler. Please go ahead.
spk21: Good afternoon. Dave, the big surprise for us here is the momentum you're seeing in that EA business. We're seeing some of the peers obviously see moderation just as the overall tech market starts to do more belt tightening. What drove the strength in EA this quarter specifically? And if you could provide any color by industry, that's really the question here. What type of industry is driving the momentum and driving the upside here in EA specifically. Thanks.
spk11: Yeah, thanks, Brent. I think what we saw in EA is just evidence that customers are really viewing MongoDB to be an important part, if not a standard, in their tech stack. And once you are viewed as a critical element of the tech stack, people are more comfortable investing more aggressively and especially in this environment where people do need to modernize their legacy platforms to drive more efficiency and lower cost as well as drive more agility. So I think that's why we're seeing the upside on EA. And so we feel good about that. And obviously, this shows you that customers also like optionality. By building apps on MongoDB, they can truly run their apps anywhere. not only on-premise but on any hyperscaler and obviously switch between on-premise or any hyperscaler. So that is also a very compelling benefit to customers in this environment.
spk21: Helpful color. Then a quick follow-up for Michael here. Short-term deferred growth did slow. Didn't know if there was an impact on payment timing or if you saw a similar slowdown in RPO. So could you just kind of walk through short-term deferred and why it slowed and if we should expect a similar slowdown in RPO?
spk13: Yeah, so what I would just point you to, Brent, is that we've talked about that deferred in general and sort of calculated billings more broadly is not a particularly relevant metric for us, as we've talked about for a few years now. As we continue to make it as easy as possible for customers to adopt usage of our platform, which then allows them to subsequently expand, we have de-emphasized upfront commitments and try to streamline that sort of upfront part of the negotiation. And so that has a natural consequence from a Malachi perspective sort of flowing through there. And that's where you see it. And that's why we tend to talk about that as being less relevant for our business.
spk20: Got it. Helpful, Carl. Thank you.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And this comes from Raymond Lanshaw with Barclays. Please proceed.
spk27: Congrats from me as well. And two quick questions. Michael, on staying on that EA one, was there anything like in terms of Q4 deals that kind of got pulled into Q3, et cetera, that made like the Q3 performance, you know, like that there were one of items in there or was it just like a general performance being better? And then one for Dave, like in this sort of environment, there tends to be, well, there is a tendency to go back to the established platforms What do you see in terms of new customer projects starting and going to Mongo, but also in terms of clean up of like legacy, Oracle legacy, IBM and stuff like that, and people consolidating on those platforms of those movements? Are those initiatives happening as we speak? Thank you.
spk13: Hey, Raimo, thanks for the question. On the pull-forwards, no, we did not see any particular pull-forward activity. The only thing I'd call out, which I mentioned in the script on the EA, is we saw a little more multi-year in EA, which under 606 drives a little more revenue, but no pull-forwards.
spk11: Yeah, and in regards to the question about – I lost my train of thought. Yeah, platform. So we are definitely seeing customers continue to choose us and standardize us in terms of using Atlas. And the breadth of the platform is really attracting customers to use MongoDB in a wide variety of ways. And so we feel really good about the win rates. We feel really good about our engagement with customers. And obviously, you saw that in the new customer wins. The new customer wins were quite strong.
spk27: Thank you, Congressman.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from Sanjit Singh with Morgan Stanley. Your question, please.
spk31: Thank you for taking the question and very impressive set of Q3 results. Dave, if I go back to the pandemic, some of the initiatives that you guys put in place that really served you well coming out of the pandemic, you saw the new customer ads really accelerate in 2020 as you sort of focus on onboarding customers. at lower overall spend levels. In terms of the playbooks that could unfold in 2023, what sort of your playbook that you're going to be using to be focusing the team more on sort of the app modernization use case? Is it going to be about further accelerating the customer ads? How are you sort of thinking about the sales playbook as we go into calendar 2023?
spk11: Right. Thanks, Sanjit. I just want to make the point that it was actually pre-pandemic that we decided to make it much more easy for customers to engage with us by both changing sales compensation incentives, as well as make it easier for customers to commercially engage with us. And obviously that paid, to your point, paid huge dividends for us during the pandemic. What I will tell you is that it's really more of the same. We're really hyper-focused on acquiring new customers and adding more workloads from existing customers. And that's across the board, across every channel, every industry, and every customer segment. So that is something that we care a lot about. And we're seeing that now expand in terms of getting customers now to adopt some of the new capabilities we've rolled out to the marketplace. So as I talked about in my prepared remarks, we're seeing a lot of customers embrace the full suite of the platform. So that drives incremental workloads that we would not have gotten in the past. And so we feel really good about that. And that's our real focus is all about acquiring new workloads and getting more and more people to build apps on MongoDB.
spk31: Makes a lot of sense. And just one quick follow-up for Michael. You referred to the sort of ROI framework and what, you know, sort of alluding to like a higher bar given the current environment. Could you give a sense of like what the team is prioritizing more and what may be falling kind of below the line or being deprioritized as you think about driving both sustaining growth, but also, you know, extracting more efficiencies in the business.
spk13: Yeah, I'll do my best to try and kind of walk you through it. I mean, I think you kind of have to run sort of type of investment versus type of investment. And obviously, ultimately, we look across the entirety of the portfolio, whether it's go to market or R&D or things like that. But It's probably easiest to think about them within the different buckets and flavors as it relates today as sort of those teams effectively compete for capital. And so within the go-to-market, we obviously are looking at the returns that we're generating. We are continuing to invest. We are continuing to hire and grow within the teams, but we're backing the areas that are having the most success and delivering us the highest returns. Go-to-market's a little bit easier to measure quantitatively and on a shorter-term basis. On the R&D side, things take a little bit longer, you know, to play out. And, you know, you've got a little bit of a lag between when you make the investment and when you see the payback. But, you know, we certainly have conversations at a fairly detailed and granular level even within the R&D side about where do we think we're seeing the most success and the most traction and which areas do we want to incrementally lean into. versus which areas do you maybe, you know, want to deprioritize relative to the areas generating the highest returns?
spk11: Yeah, if I can just add, it's like, you know, for example, like in the marketing side of those digital programs, we were, you know, we do a lot of experimentation of what's working. So, you know, we have a certain, you know, return thresholds. And so if we don't see those programs working, we'll shut them down. Similarly, in the sales organization, there's certain teams that are outperforming, we'll invest more in other teams that are not, and we'll potentially slow down. So we're just really doing more of the same and just being very rigorous about that.
spk02: That's helpful detail. Thank you for that. Appreciate it.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from the line of Phil Winslow with Credit Suisse. Please proceed.
spk29: Hey, thanks, guys, for taking my question. Congrats on a great quarter. Question for you, Michael, and a follow-up for Dave. When you think about just new workloads, new application, you know, go-lives and the trends that you're seeing there, what do you think you can contrast that with what you've maybe seen in previous quarters or maybe even last year? Obviously, you're talking about just overall consumption, but I'm curious about the new apps, you know, the go-lives and the ramp of those. In terms of what you can control and go to market, Dave, how do you feel about sales productivity relative to those sort of those new apps, you know, those go-lives, new customers, et cetera? Thanks.
spk11: Yeah, I mean, I think what we're really seeing in terms of these new workloads and sales productivity is that our customer base is very diversified, both in terms of the types of customers as well as the types of use cases. That's the benefit of having a general purpose platform. So clearly, we have startups who are building potentially new industries or disrupting existing ones. And then we have large companies moving quickly to transform different parts of their business. So it really varies. You know, clearly with the platform play now, we're seeing a lot more interest in search and search workloads and consolidating search workloads on top of MongoDB. We're seeing a lot of interest in time series, being able to, again, have one unified developer experience. Time series leads to things that what I talked about is application-driven analytics, where people want to be able to get, you know, meaningful insights of their business, automate human decision-making into applications. So those use cases are getting more and more popular with customers. But then we have still a lot of the classic bread and butter use cases that customers are using us for. And in terms of sales productivity, what I would say is it's really a function of the quality of their pipeline and how quickly they can add new workloads to our platform and how quickly we can acquire new customers. We're really focused, and the sales leadership team is very, very focused on both things, acquiring new customers and acquiring new workloads. It's less about, you know, is one workload provide a better ROI than another? It's really a function of the customer's requirements and what they're most interested in and focused on.
spk13: And, Phil, just to the cohort part of your question, it's probably easiest to think about in the context of when you bring a new customer on and you think about the changes that we made a few years ago. and how that drove incremental velocity. We've continued to see, you know, good and consistent behavior with those cohorts. I would just remind you and call out that those changes and where sort of the bulk of the customer ads come from is more in the mid-market, right? And so those tend to be spending less than the average direct sales customer. And so just important to keep that in mind as people are, you know, building their models and thinking about the long-term impacts of that.
spk29: Awesome. Thanks for the details and congrats again. Really awesome. Thank you.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. And it comes from the line of Jason Ader with William Blair. Please proceed.
spk19: Thank you. Hey, guys. So how do you interpret the bounce back, especially mid-market European enterprise, when seemingly macro is getting worse? And I have a follow-up.
spk13: Yeah, so the first thing I'd start off with, Jason, is it really relates to the underlying usage of the application, right? If you think about sort of what drives consumption within Atlas, I think that's the critical thing. And so when you think about the usage, we're seeing stronger underlying usage. We were always in a growth environment, but we saw in Q2 was slower growth in the mid-market and in Europe. Those rebounded, again, not all the way back to historic levels, but improved levels relative to Q2. Part of our thought process, which we shared in the prepared remarks, is that we believe it's a bit of an emerging seasonal trend, which is particularly relates to sort of people coming back from summer vacations and things like that, because you'll recall in our September call, We talked about August being, you know, in line with what we'd seen in Q2. And so that sort of suggests the improvement that we saw in September and October. We saw that same dynamic in the year-ago period. And while we only have a couple of years, you know, that aren't COVID-affected where we've got Atlas at scale, that's kind of our best current working theory. But we can see it in terms of the underlying usage of the applications. The other thing I'd say more broadly from a macro standpoint that I think is impressive is on the new business side, we continue to win there. We continue to have our value prop resonate. We haven't seen sort of those increasing deal cycles and other things like that that others have seen. We obviously are monitoring the situation closely, but we've been really pleased from that standpoint.
spk19: Great. And one quick follow-up for you, Dave, just on cloud marketplaces. Is that something that you guys are going to be able to talk about in terms of I don't know, any metrics, growth rates, percentage of business going through cloud marketplaces, because it does seem like, broadly speaking, more third-party software is going through these marketplaces, and it seems like that's a really good thing at a lot of levels.
spk11: Yeah, I'm not sure that we're going to be sharing, like, quarterly stats on how things are going, but we definitely provide color. I think what the fact that across all three customers can go to their consoles and be able to sign up for Atlas is a meaningful thing. It gives us an access to a whole new customer base that we may not have direct relationship with. And also speaks to the popularity of customers wanting to use MongoDB in the cloud. And so I think those two things have really driven that. There's not many companies who can say that they are on the consoles of all three hyperscalers.
spk19: Thank you, guys.
spk05: Thanks, Jason.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. That comes from the line of Tyler Radke with Citi. Please proceed.
spk10: Thanks for taking the question. I wanted to ask you first about the EA performance. Obviously, a really strong number on pretty tough comps. As we think about Q4, it looks like you're guiding Q4 to be flat sequentially from Q3, which in the last two years, you've kind of guided it up 7% last year and 4%. Is there something you're seeing in terms of timing on the EA business that would drive a sub-seasonal guide for Q4, or maybe you're just layering in more macro conservatism given the environment out there? But if you could just kind of unpack your view on the EA business and overall outlook into Q4. Thanks.
spk13: Sure. Thanks, Tyler. We obviously don't guide by product, but maybe a couple things I can say about Q4. First of all, As I mentioned, it was obviously an incredibly strong EA quarter with EA growing 26% year over year. And so as we look out at Q4, it doesn't make a ton of sense to, as we look at the business, to think that we're going to meaningfully improve sequentially from an EA perspective, given how incredibly strong Q3 was. And then we talked a little bit on the Atlas side. around Q4 doesn't benefit from the seasonal tailwinds that Q3 does. And so I think on a sequential basis, those are the key factors to keep in mind.
spk10: Great. And it sounded like you talked about certainly some improvements in consumption on Atlas. But if I look at the sequential dollar growth in Atlas in Q3 versus Q2, it was it was down a bit. Could you just kind of square, you know, with improving, you know, expansion rates, why would the sequential dollar ads be down? Is it kind of a reflection of new business or just help us understand the moving pieces there?
spk13: Yeah, I think it's mostly a reflection of the starting ARR. So you're basically starting with, you know, the compounding slower growth. And so when you think about the entry point, whether it's Q3 in terms of for the second half of the year or Q4 for the final quarter of the year, you've seen several months of slower growth. And so that means that the beginning ARR is lower on an absolute basis. And even if the growth rates were to revert, the number would be lower just by virtue of the fact that the starting ARR is lower. Thank you.
spk24: Thank you. And as a reminder, to ask a question, simply press star, then 11 on your telephone to get in the queue. One moment for our next question, please. And it comes from the line of Fred Havemeyer with Macquarie. Please proceed.
spk15: Hey, thank you very much. I was interested also in cloud marketplaces and just kind of a follow-up around that. With the announcement of cloud marketplaces, even today, you're showing more integration with, for example, today, like Microsoft's entire data platform. What is it that is drawing these, or what are you doing correctly here that's drawing these hyperscalers that have their own competitive database offerings to not just sell your product, but potentially partner with MongoDB and provide it through the platform? And then have a follow-up as well.
spk11: Yeah, yeah. Fred, I think what that really speaks to is just the power of the MongoDB platform and the product market fit that's evidenced by how popular we are. I mean, we are truly the most popular modern data platform in the world. And a majority of those users tend to run MongoDB in the cloud. So each of the hyperscalers see a lot of MongoDB usage on each of the clouds. Yes, you're right. In the early days, they tried more to compete than to partner. And frankly, a lot of people, when we first went public, were skeptical about how we could actually build a cloud business when trying to compete with the hyperscalers. Obviously, we've proven the ability to do that. And I think that's also evidence of the fact that customers are also more discerning. And they're not just going to take the a la carte menu choice. They're going to be very judicious in their evaluation process. And given the value we provide, I think you're seeing the hyperscalers recognize that. And by the way, the hyperscalers also benefit from our growth. They benefit both from the underlying consumption of storage and compute of Atlas, as well as that those customers that they win who are running Atlas workloads in their clouds then buy other ancillary services themselves. So it ends up truly being a win-win relationship. And I think that's why you're seeing the hyperscalers essentially engage with us more deeply.
spk15: Thank you. And then the follow-ups, it's multi-cloud again related, but I wanted to ask about multi-cloud clusters, as I think it's one of the more unique offerings that you have in Atlas out of the box. So generally, could you help us or just describe where you're seeing customer adoption trends with your multi-cloud cluster capability and replica set capabilities?
spk11: Yeah, I mean, the trend is, I mean, what we're seeing is there's a lot of customer interest in this capability. One, depending on the customer's needs, they may have a preferred hyperscaler, but they're expanding into a geographic region where that hyperscaler may only have one region or no regions, and they want some diversity across hyperscalers in case that region goes down. And so they want the benefit of being able to quickly switch over to another hyperscaler. The other thing that we see is obviously as these hyperscalers compete with each other and offer a different set of services, customers want to be able to leverage some services offered in one hyperscaler versus another, even though maybe their preferred hyperscaler does not offer such a service. And then third, there's always the benefit of avoiding lock-in and being able to diversify their workloads across different hyperscalers. And again, just to be clear, the multi-cloud cluster essentially enables customers to run one app or one workload across multiple clouds. So that is profoundly different than what most people can offer today.
spk15: Thank you for that, and congratulations on a strong quarter. Thanks, Fred.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. It's from Mike Sikos with Needham & Company. Please go ahead.
spk09: Hey, thanks for taking the question, guys. I had a two-quarter to start, and I just wanted to come back to the Atlas consumption trends, improving quarter over quarter in Q3. It sounds like things really began to improve in September. I just wanted to see, was it stable from there on out, or did you see continuing strength even from September when we think about how October and November played out? And then on a relative basis, are there certain pockets of the market which have maybe a larger delta versus those historical consumption trends you're talking to? And then I do have a follow-up.
spk13: Yeah, so generally, I would say it was broad-based, as we described. The rebound was most perceptible in the sense of the mid-market globally and Europe, but only because those are the areas where we had seen slower growth that we called out in Q2. And we had talked about, like I said, August being in line with Q2, and so September and October were stronger. And then just to continue, you know, I don't want to get into like a day-by-day, you know, reading here, but we did see that behavior. And so, you know, and that shows up in the results. And that's also consistent with what we saw sort of in the year-ago period, hence the commentary about this emerging seasonal trend.
spk09: Thank you for that. And the follow-up I had, I just kind of wanted to paint out a scenario for you guys and just soundboard an idea, if you will. I'm looking at where we have the 4Q guide today. Call of this year-to-year growth rate, you guys are targeting for about 26% at the midpoint. And the reason I'm bringing this up, if I think about how this year has played out, you guys are going to have a tough comp in the first half of next year with 50% plus growth that you guys delivered in the first half of this year, as well as strength from EA. And so the reason I'm bringing this up is if I look at next year, the consensus is currently at call it mid to high 20% growth rate versus the exit velocity of this year where we're looking at 26%. And at least from a qualitative perspective, can you provide us any directional comments as far as whether or not that appears to be the right ballpark? Is that aggressive? How should we be thinking about next year's growth?
spk13: Yeah, I think the key thing is, you know, we'll obviously update that in the March call. We've tried to give you the best lay of the land as we can for the current fiscal year and what we see for Q4. It certainly is, you know, a fluid and uncertain macro environment. We're monitoring that closely, and we'll obviously update everyone, you know, in the March call around our outlook.
spk05: Great. Thank you very much, guys. Thank you, Mike.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question. That it comes from Steve Koenig with SMBC. Nicole, please go ahead.
spk17: Hi, gentlemen. Thanks for taking my question. I'll just ask one here. Congrats on the quarter and the rebound here. I'm wondering, when it comes to new customers and or new workloads, You know, given kind of the macro environment, the pressures on business, you know, both SMB and enterprise, what are you guys seeing in terms of customer behavior with respect to how they size the deals or the versions they choose? You know, how does kind of that economic sensitivity manifesting itself in terms of those new deals, you know, kind of pricing-wise or, you know, kind of the scale of the deal? Thanks very much.
spk11: Yeah, so Steve, thanks for your question. We haven't seen any discernible change in deal dynamics in Q3. And clearly our EA results, in our opinion, demonstrate the power of our platform and the ability for customers and the interest of customers running workloads anywhere. What I will say is I personally have been through, in the public company context, 2008 and also lived through 2000 as well. You know, in these kinds of situations, we definitely recognize that there's more scrutiny by customers on deals and probably approval levels go up the food chain. And so what we are obviously working closely with our sales teams on is to making sure that they rigorously qualify their forecasts and to make sure that they really understand the decision process that customers have to go through to get deals done. But that is something that we have lived through in previous cycles, and that's something that we'll be very focused on.
spk16: Got it. Great. Thanks a lot, Dave. Congrats again. Thanks, Steve. Thanks, Steve.
spk24: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Michael Turrett with KeyBank. Please proceed.
spk03: Hey, guys. Congrats on the quarter. I want to come back to seasonality. So, you know, there's all different seasonality in different parts of your underlying business. You say your customers are B2B customers. I guess I get, well, you know, coming back from vacation would make sense, get projects going again. But I would also think that in B2C, as we go into the holiday season, that you would get a boost out of that also. So why wouldn't we see some continuing, very typical fourth quarter positive seasonality at this point, given how much of your business is focused on consumption?
spk13: Yeah, thanks, Michael. Just to clarify. I wouldn't say it's coming back and starting new projects. What we're talking about here, again, is the underlying usage of the database. And so whether it's internal applications or B2B applications or consumer-facing applications or whatever, what we see is an increase in the underlying database activity. So this is a different dynamic than people kicking off new projects, right? It's reflecting the underlying activity in the workload or in the application. And given that we've seen this now for two years in a row, you know, we're highlighting it, you know, given the behaviors, you know, that we're seeing. I want to call that out for folks as what appears to be an emerging seasonal trend.
spk03: Okay. And then, Mike, can you quantify the impact on RevRec, upfront RevRec, of the shift to a larger percentage of or a large percent of multi-year EA deals, because obviously, as you said, that pulls things forward a bit in terms of Rev Rec. So how much just from that shift could we have seen in terms of benefits in the quarter?
spk13: Yeah, we're not going to quantify an exact number. You know, part of this is also based off of, you know, we assume some level of multi-year deals, you know, in our forecasts, you know, in our guidance, obviously. We saw a little bit more than that. It was material enough to bother to call out just so people don't extrapolate inaccurately. And so that's why we wanted to make sure people understood the dynamic.
spk03: Thanks, Mike. Thanks, Dave.
spk08: Thanks, Michael. Thank you, Michael.
spk24: Thank you. One moment for our next question, please. Comes from the line of Will Power with RWBIRD. Please go ahead.
spk22: Oh, great. Thanks for taking the question. Maybe just a bigger picture. I know you touched on this a bit, but as customers increasingly focus on TCO in this environment, I'm just kind of curious how much more aggressive customers are getting at moving legacy databases and workloads over to Mongo versus maybe what you've seen six, nine months ago. Any real change in pace of that type of activity?
spk11: Yes, so Will, thanks for your question. We recently had a customer advisory board where we had some of our larger customers with us for a number of days in Europe. And I would tell you the feedback there was that there's even more interest in moving off legacy platforms to more modern platforms in this environment. Because the cost structure and the brittleness of those architectures really are inhibitor for those companies to be able to move quickly. and to seize new opportunities or to respond to new threats. And so in this environment, there's actually even more interest. We're actually seeing that also in, say, an industry like financial services where they're starting to move to the cloud at scale, and that's a catalyst for them to be more aggressive in modernizing their tech portfolio, and that's more of a recent phenomenon, and we're obviously pleased about the engagements we're having with that vertical as well.
spk07: That's great. Thank you. Thanks, Will.
spk24: Thank you. I'm not showing any further questions in the queue. I would like to turn the call back to Dev Etichiria for his final comments.
spk11: Thank you. So we're really happy with our new business performance and see it as evidence that our value proposition resonates with developers, IT decision makers, and our partners. We're obviously pleased to see the rebound in Atlas consumption during the quarter of and expect to continue macro impacts, and so we're closely monitoring consumption trends. And we will deliver another year of operating margin expansion despite the macro headwinds, and we are committed to profitable growth. With that, thank you for your time today.
spk24: Everyone, thank you for participating in today's conference. You may now disconnect.
Disclaimer

This conference call transcript was computer generated and almost certianly contains errors. This transcript is provided for information purposes only.EarningsCall, LLC makes no representation about the accuracy of the aforementioned transcript, and you are cautioned not to place undue reliance on the information provided by the transcript.

-

-