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.

BILL Holdings, Inc.
2/6/2020
Good afternoon and welcome to Bill.com's fiscal second quarter 2020 earnings conference call. Joining us today for today's call are Bill.com CEO, Renee Lissert, and CFO, John Reddick. At this time, all participants are in a listen-only 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 1 on your telephone. With that, I would like to turn the call over to John Reddick for introductory remarks. John?
Thank you, Mike. Welcome to Bill.com's Fiscal Second Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. We issued our earnings press release a short time ago and furnished the related Form 8K to the SEC. The press release can be found on the Investor Relations section of our website. With me on the call today is Renee Lussert, Chairman, CEO, and Founder of Bill.com. Before we begin, please remember that during the course of this call, we may make forward-looking statements about the operations and future results of Bill.com, that involve many assumptions, risks, and uncertainties. If any of these risks or uncertainties develop, or if any of the assumptions prove incorrect, actual results could differ materially from those expressed or implied by our forward-looking statements. For discussion of the risk factors associated with our forward-looking statements, please refer to the text in the company's press release issued today and to our periodic reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. including our perspectives filed with the SEC on December 12th, 2019. We disclaim any obligation to update forward-looking statements. On today's call, we will refer to both GAAP and non-GAAP financial measures. The revenue and financial figures discussed today are non-GAAP, unless stated that the measure is a GAAP number. Please refer to today's press release for the reconciliation of gaps and on-gap financial performance and additional disclosures regarding these measures. Now, I'll turn the call over to Rene.
Thanks, John, and good afternoon, everyone. Thank you for joining us today for our first earnings call as a public company. We are excited to share our fiscal second quarter results as well as an overview of our business. I would like to start by thanking our customers, strategic partners, long-term and new shareholders for supporting our mission. And I want to extend a special thank you to all Bill.com employees who work hard delivering value for customers every day. Our success is dependent on their passion and dedication. Since this is our first quarter as a public company and many of you may be new to our story, I will spend a few minutes introducing Bill.com. Then I will provide an overview of our fiscal second quarter results, discuss a few highlights for the quarter, and finally I'll turn the call over to John to cover our financial results in greater detail. He'll also be providing you with our fiscal third quarter and full year outlook before opening the call for Q&A. As a fourth-generation entrepreneur, I have a deep appreciation for the challenges associated with running a small business. I vividly remember the pain of managing the back office at Paysycle, the first company I founded. I was drowning in paper, handling bills and invoices, digging through filing cabinets to locate contracts, and looking for answers by leaving sticky notes all over the place. I realized that I was managing the back office no differently than my grandfather had 60 years earlier. I hadn't started my own business to spend my time chasing people and paper. This was the early 2000s, and I saw that the web was going to change everything. I sensed that the web could solve the mess I and many other small and mid-sized businesses, SMBs, were experiencing. That's why I started Bill.com, to clean up the back office mess and give back valuable time to SMBs so they can focus on what matters most to them. Customers use our cloud platform to generate and process invoices, streamline approvals, send and receive payments, sync to their accounting system, and manage their cash. Bill.com weaves software and payments together, and the result is a more efficient and reliable financial operation. we have built sophisticated integrations with popular accounting software solutions, financial institutions, and payment processors, enabling our customers to connect these mission-critical services seamlessly. As a result, we've become central to an SMB's accounts payable and accounts receivable operation, as evidenced by our customers electronically exchanging more than 8,000 messages per day, approving more than 2.4 million bills per month, and storing almost 45 million documents per year as of June 30, 2019. Today, tens of thousands of customers trust our platform to manage their financial workflows and process their payments, which total billions of dollars annually. and our platform extends well beyond our customers. In fact, as of the end of our last fiscal year, we had over 1.8 million network members. Members consist of our customers as well as their suppliers and clients that collaborate on our platform and exchange electronic payments. Hence, our mission. We make it simple to connect and do business. Now that I've provided a short overview of who we are, I'd like to spend a few minutes talking about our opportunity. SMBs represent a significant and critical component of the U.S. economy. SMBs are businesses with fewer than 500 total employees as defined by the Small Business Administration. In 2018, there were approximately 30 million SMBs in the United States, which provided employment for over 47% of all U.S. workers. This group was responsible for a third of goods traded by value. While 24 million of these SMBs are sole proprietors, we focus on serving the over 6 million firms with employees. SMBs large enough to have employees tend to have a greater need for more advanced accounts payable and accounts receivable processes. Importantly, these SMBs remain largely underserved by current software solutions. According to IDC in 2019, small and mid-sized businesses are planning to spend approximately $65 billion on software in the U.S. alone. We believe that we are well positioned to capture some of that spend. We estimate the annual addressable market for the services we offer today to be $9 billion domestically and $30 billion globally. We derived these estimates by multiplying our average fiscal 2019 revenue per customer of $1,500 by each of the 6 million domestic employer firms and the 20 million small and medium-sized businesses worldwide. In addition to the software opportunity, our platform enables us to pursue a large and growing payments opportunity. According to a 2018 MasterCard report, North American companies make approximately $25 trillion of business-to-business payments annually. And according to Deloitte, the U.S. market for SMB payments is expected to exceed $9 trillion in 2020. Finally, over 90% of SMBs still rely on paper checks, according to a survey by the SMB Technology Adoption Index. As more SMBs move to digital payments, we believe Bill.com is well positioned to capitalize on this evolution. SMBs span all industries and geographies. We've developed a powerful go-to-market strategy that enables us to reach them wherever they are in a cost-effective manner. Our direct-to-SMB strategy leverages digital customer acquisition tools and is supported by an efficient inside sales team We build awareness through industry trade shows and word of mouth. In 2019 customer survey, half of new customer respondents indicated they first became aware of us because they used our platform at a prior company or heard about us through a colleague. In addition, new SMBs are continually being introduced to our platform's value proposition as they pay and get paid. We also reach prospective customers through partners that SMBs trust the most. accounting firms, financial institutions, and accounting software companies. Let's start with accounting firms. Since our inception, we have focused on helping accounting firms better manage and support their clients. Our accountant-specific tools help firms generate revenue within their consulting practice, establish a competitive advantage, and better retain their SMB clients. With our platform, the same accounting firm staff can serve more clients more strategically and serve them more profitably. We partner with more than 70 of the top 100 accounting firms in the U.S. and enable an additional 4,000 firms across the country to deliver more value to their customers every day. Second, we partner with financial institutions. We are integrated with several of the largest financial institutions in the U.S., including Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase, and American Express. By working with Bill.com, our financial institution partners can provide their customers with many of the benefits utilized by our directly acquired customers. These partners embed our platform typically on a white-label basis into their online banking solutions. Finally, SMBs trust their accounting software providers. Bill.com partners with the leading accounting software providers for SMBs, including QuickBooks and QuickBooks Online from Intuit, Oracle NetSuite, Sage Intact, and Xero. Our partnership with Intuit is unique because it includes not only our two-way sync functionality, but also a fully embedded experience inside of QuickBooks Online, which was recently enhanced to include cross-border payments. In summary, we are pleased with the breadth and diversity of our distribution channel strategy. no partner is overrepresented within our business, and in fact, in FY19, no single partner constituted over 2.5% of total revenue. With that background on the business, I would like to briefly cover our fiscal second quarter financial results. We delivered another quarter of solid performance, ending with approximately 86,000 customers. Core revenue, which we define as subscription plus transaction revenue, grew by 61% in the quarter versus the same period in the prior year. The total revenue in the quarter grew by 50% year over year to $39.1 million. We also delivered non-GAAP gross margins of 78% in the quarter. We generated a non-GAAP operating loss of $4.5 million, reflecting the investments we are making to build out our platform and in our go-to-market distribution channels. John will discuss our financial results for the quarter in greater detail in a few minutes. But first, I'd like to give you a sense of the types of customers we serve. One of my favorite examples is Niche, a modern lighting company founded by Jeremy Piles. When I talked to Jeremy about why he uses Bill.com, he summarized by saying, and I quote, ìI like to pay people on time. I like to treat my vendors fairly.î This requires knowing answers to questions like what bills are due, are they approved, who ordered this stuff, did I know about this, did we even receive it, end quote. You may have heard what Bill.com did for Jeremy from our previous presentations. Our platform added a level of process and control that was missing. He was able to offload routine tasks while still being confident that no one could make payments without him giving final approval. Bill.com gave him the ability to delegate with confidence, solving the biggest challenge a small business owner has, relinquishing control over the back office details so that he could focus on the reason he started his business, to design and make unique and beautiful glass light fixtures. Jeremy's experience was exactly the same as mine at PaceCycle. Everything was great in the front office, but the back office needed reinvention. Niche is just one example of how our platform changes the way an SMB operates. We are committed to continually improving our customers' experience on our platform. As an example, during the quarter, we extended the reach of our cross-border offering. We now support payments to over 130 countries and over 100 currencies. With Bill.com, customers benefit from using the same workflow and system of record for both domestic and international payments, including syncing with leading accounting software. Here is what one of our customers, Jerry Victor, Director of Finance and Accounting at Spikeball, said about the impact of our new cross-border service on his organization. In 2018, we paid 1,800 bills through Bill.com, a 63% increase over the previous year. Without Bill.com, we would have had to hire at least one more full-time accounts payable person to print out all of those invoices and manually cut checks. Bill.com also enables us to pay international suppliers. Given the number of bills we pay as well as the currency amount, it took a lot of administrative time for the complex tax required when paying through banks. With Bill.com, it's a one-click solution. It's a lifesaver, end quote. A second example of the expansion of our platform that I'd like to showcase is how we continue to leverage our AI capabilities to improve the customer experience. In addition to automatically reading incoming bills to pull out critical invoice information and eliminate manual data entry, we are now able to detect international bank account details and currency denominations automatically. We use this information within the AP workflow to speed the processing of the bill and make an electronic payment in the vendor's preferred local currency. This enables us to make the processing and payment of an international invoice as easy as a domestic one. I'd now like to focus on recapping our growth strategy. We see five major opportunities to drive continued growth. First, we will focus on acquiring new customers. We believe there is an opportunity to further invest in sales and marketing activities to drive awareness and adoption of our platform by new customers. Our expanding ecosystem of strategic partners and accounting firms also provides us with a strong pipeline of SMB sign-ups. Second, we will seek to increase adoption by existing customers. As we become more integral to SMB's back office, we increase the number of our customers' employees who become regular users. Over time, we also typically increase the number of payments processed per customer as well as adoption of new products. Third, we will continue to focus on growing the number of network members. As customers connect with their suppliers and clients through our platform, our network member expands. As companies are added to our network, we leverage our data algorithms to present more targeted network recommendations to our customers. With a single click, our customers can then accept these recommendations and instantly do business with these network members. This creates an organic flywheel effect that improves the reach and visibility of our platform and powers our customer acquisition efforts. Fourth, We will expand our platform capabilities. We continue to invest in R&D to enhance the breadth and depth of our platform. As an example, to better serve larger SMBs, those with policies that require a more formal procurement process prior to a purchase, we have enabled purchase order support that seamlessly syncs with the customer's accounting software. In addition, we continue to improve our AI engine which enables us to help our customers manage end-to-end financial workflows, better predict cash flow needs, and deliver better network recommendations. Fifth, we plan to expand internationally. I've already mentioned our cross-border payment service expansion. Looking ahead over the longer term, we will seek to further extend our network and engage with customers worldwide. According to MasterCard's Business Payments 2022 white paper, global business-to-business non-cash payments are expected to increase at a compound average growth rate of 6.5% through 2020, reaching 122.4 billion transactions. This is a significant opportunity that we believe Build.com's platform is well-suited to serve. This is the beginning of our life as a public company, and we believe the opportunity ahead grows every day. We are still in the early stages of enabling SMBs to automate their financial operations, and we look forward to continuing our mission to make it simple to connect and do business. Now, I'll turn the call over to John to discuss our financials in more detail. John?
Thanks, Rene. Today, I will provide a brief overview of our fiscal second quarter 2020 financial results and discuss guidance for our fiscal third quarter and full year fiscal 2020. As a quick reminder, today's discussion includes non-GAAP financial measures. Please refer to the tables in our earnings release for a reconciliation from non-GAAP to the most directly comparable GAAP financial measure. Before I discuss our quarterly financials, let me remind you of our financial model and drivers. We derive revenue from three areas, subscription fees, transaction fees, and float. Subscription and transaction fees are what we call core revenue. The majority of our core revenue is derived from subscriptions, which are based on a fixed monthly or annual rate per user, with pricing based primarily on the features and functionality a user needs access to. Transaction revenue is comprised of transaction fees that are charged on a fixed or variable rate per transaction basis. Most of our transaction revenue comes from repeat payments where customers are paying or being paid by the same suppliers or clients as in the preceding three months. This really illustrates the stickiness of our platform. Both subscriptions and transactions are highly recurring providing us with strong visibility into revenue. And we believe core revenue is the best indicator of our revenue performance as a company. Our third revenue stream is float, which appears in our income statement as interest on funds held for customers. Float is an attractive, high margin revenue stream derived from the payment volume on our platform. When we process payment transactions, the funds flow through our bank accounts. Float is earned from interest bearing deposit accounts, certificates of deposit, money market funds, commercial paper, and U.S. Treasury securities. We earn interest from the time customers initiate transactions on our platform until they clear our bank accounts and are received by the payee. We are authorized to process payments through our bank accounts because we are a licensed money transmitter in all U.S. states that require licenses. By leveraging our bank accounts, we can utilize Treasury management services such as PositivePay to protect our customers from fraud. Our sophisticated payment capabilities and well-established regulatory compliance programs are a major part of our differentiation from other software companies. Float revenue fluctuates depending upon the amount and duration of customer funds held, as well as our yield on customer funds invested, which is in turn influenced by market interest rates and our investment strategies. With that backdrop, let me turn to our second quarter key metrics. We ended the quarter with 85,900 customers, representing year-over-year growth of 20%. Our customers leverage our platform to connect with our 1.8 million network members. As Renee mentioned earlier, we view this network as a valuable asset to target prospects for paid services in the future. During the quarter, we processed $24.8 billion in total payment volume on our platform, an increase of 41% over Q2 of the prior year, and over 6.2 million payment transactions, representing an increase of 29% year-over-year. In terms of additional metrics that we disclose in our S-1, such as net dollar-based retention rate and customer churn, we plan on updating you with these metrics on an annual cadence at the end of each fiscal year. We delivered strong financial results in Q2, with solid year-over-year growth in total and core revenue, as well as strong non-GAAP gross margins. Total revenue for Q2 was 39.1 million, representing growth of 50% from Q2 19. Our total revenue growth was driven mainly by the strength of our core revenue, which accelerated in Q2 to 33 million, or 61% year-over-year growth. The strength in core revenue was driven by increases in the number of customers we serve and growth in revenue per customer. To break down our core revenue, subscription revenue increased to 19.9 million, up from 14.4 million in Q2 of last year, representing an increase of 39% year-over-year. This growth was driven by the increase in customers and the average subscription revenue per customer. Transaction revenue increased to $13.1 million, up from $6 million in Q2 of last year, an increase of 114% year-over-year, driven by increased adoption of new product offerings, an increase in the number of transactions processed from our growing customer base, and a mix of transactions shifting to variable price products. The acceleration in transaction revenue growth in Q1 and Q2 of this fiscal year was bolstered by the launch of our new variable price transaction offerings, namely cross-border and virtual card payments, which we rolled out in the prior year. As we pass the anniversary of the early launch days of these new solutions, we expect more challenging comparisons ahead and lower growth rates going forward. Moving on to float revenue, we delivered $6.1 million in float revenue in Q2 compared to $5.6 million in the second quarter of last year, growth of 10% year over year. Float revenue growth was a result of the increase in customer funds in transit while payment transactions were clearing, but was partially offset by the cumulative 75 basis points reduction in the Fed funds rate since June 2019 that lowered our yield from the year-ago quarter. Our non-GAAP gross margin for the quarter was 78%, an increase of 220 basis points over Q219's non-GAAP gross margin of 75.8%. The increase was driven primarily by the adoption of new product offerings and growth and float revenue on a year-over-year basis. Over the long term, we expect non-GAAP gross margins to be in the 75% to 78% range, subject to the prevailing interest rate environment. In the near term, we anticipate gross margins towards the upper end of our range. Turning to operating expenses, R&D expense was $12 million for the quarter, or 31% of revenue, up from 25% in Q2 of last year. The increase was due primarily to the hiring of additional engineering and product management talent. R&D is an important investment area as we extend the capabilities of our platform to leverage the growth opportunities that Renee covered, and we believe these investments will create a longer runway of growth and competitive differentiation. Sales and marketing expenses were $11.7 million, or 30% of revenue in Q2, an increase from 28% of revenue in the prior year's quarter. Given our large TAM and efficient customer acquisition economics, you can expect us to continue to invest in sales and marketing initiatives to support fiscal 2020 and beyond to drive continued market momentum. G&A expenses were $11.3 million, or 29% of revenue, up from 23% in Q2 of fiscal 2019. Our G&A as a percentage revenue is higher than some of our SAF software peers because we incur expenses related to risk management, and the regulatory requirements associated with our proprietary payments capabilities, including cost to maintain money transmitter licenses. As I mentioned earlier, we believe that these investments differentiate Bill.com and create a competitive advantage for us. During Q2, we also incurred additional expenses related to our preparation to operate as a public company, and some of these expenses will be ongoing. We expect to achieve operating leverage in the G&A area as we scale the company over the long term. Our Q2 non-GAAP operating loss was $4.5 million as we continue to make investments in our platform and go-to-market capabilities. Our non-GAAP net loss was $3.6 million, or a loss of $0.06 per share based on 62.8 million basic weighted shares outstanding. Because we had a net loss on a GAAP basis, our diluted share count was the same as the basic share count for both GAAP and non-GAAP EPS calculations. Moving on to the balance sheet, Ending cash, cash equivalents, and short-term investments were $383 million, up from $157.6 million at the end of September 2019, reflecting the capital raised on our initial public offering in December, which netted $225.5 million. As of December 31, 2019, we had approximately $1.5 billion in client funds on our balance sheet, which was up slightly from the end of Q1, due in part to total payment volume of $24.8 billion in the quarter. We ended the quarter with 568 employees, up from 544 on September 30th, 2019. Now let's move to our fiscal third quarter and full fiscal year 2020 outlook. For the third quarter of 2020, total revenues expected to be in the range of 38 to 38.7 million, comprised of core revenue in the range of 33.2 to 33.7 million, and float revenue in the range of 4.8 to 5 million. We plan to increase our spending on go-to-market initiatives and R&D investments, including expanding the capabilities of our AI engine, developing new payment products, and building out the platform to support larger customers. In addition, we expect our G&A spending to reflect the ongoing overhead associated with being a public company. On the bottom line, we expect to report a non-GAAP net loss in the range of $7.4 to $6.7 million and a non-GAAP EPS loss of $0.10 to $0.09 on a per-share basis. based on a share count of approximately 72.1 million basic weighted average shares for Q3. For the full fiscal year 2020, total revenue is expected to be in the range of 150.3 to 151.7 million. Core revenue is expected to be in the range of 129 to 130 million, and float revenue is expected to be in the range of 21.3 to 21.7 million. based in part on an assumption that the average Fed funds rate will decline by 25 basis points in March 2020. We expect a non-GAAP net loss for fiscal 2020 in the range of 21.7 to 20.3 million, or on a per share basis, a loss of 32 to 30 cents, assuming basic weighted average shares outstanding of 66.9 million for the full fiscal year. We expect stock-based compensation expense of approximately $5 million and $5.5 million in Q3 and Q4 fiscal 2020 respectively. Moving on to our capital expenditure plans, we filed an 8K in early January after entering into an 11-year lease agreement at the end of December for a new headquarters in the Bay Area. This brand-new building will give us much-needed expansion space to accommodate our new hires. Our preliminary estimate is that the net spend will be approximately $20 million for the facility build-out over the next four quarters. We also expect to spend an additional $2 million per quarter on other capital needs primarily related to our technology infrastructure to support our continued business expansion. This equates to a total capex spend of $28 million over the next four quarters. As it relates to timing, we expect to spend roughly $7 million in Q3, $13 million in Q4, and the balance in the first half of fiscal 2021. To close out on the guidance topic, I'd like to reiterate our financial management philosophy. We are committed to building a profitable business over the long term, but for the foreseeable future, we will continue to prioritize revenue growth, acquiring customers, and platform enhancements over improving operating margins because we believe this gives us the most sustainable growth and competitive advantages as a business. We will obviously monitor our performance closely and adjust our priorities as necessary if circumstances change. Now, Renee and I will open the call for your questions. Operator?
As a reminder, to ask a question, you will need to press star 1 on your telephone. To withdraw your question, press the pound or hash key. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from Chris Merwin from Goldman Sachs.
All right. Well, thanks so much for taking my question. And congrats to birth on a phenomenal first quarter out of the gate. Thank you. So in terms of my question, I just wanted to ask about the acceleration that you saw in core revenue in the quarter. You know, you've got subscription revenue contributing to that as well as transaction revenue. And I guess in particular on the transaction piece, just wondering if you could comment about any uptake and adoption for some of those newer higher monetizing payment types like virtual card and cross-border and how much of a driver those were in the acceleration we saw. Thanks.
So thank you, Chris, for the question, and congratulations. I appreciate that. You know, I think the success in the quarter really goes back to the overall platform that we've built. The platform is meant to serve, you know, obviously SMBs of all sizes as well as to provide new services for them. So we did see good adoption with international payments, the addition of of having more countries and currencies available helped us continue to drive adoption within our customer base. We did see good adoption with the virtual card program that we're doing. And we're just in the early days. I mean, the virtual card program has not even hit its first anniversary. The international payment program is about 15, 16 months old. So we're really in the early days of understanding how to drive the adoption within our customer base, but it really goes back to the stickiness of our platform, the quality of the service that we provide being that one-stop shop for our customers to manage all of their financial operations, and that's what drives everything home for us.
That's great. And maybe just a follow-up on that. On TPV growth, it looks like that was also really strong in the quarter in the low 40s, and that was consistent with the growth we saw in the prior quarter. It looks like the growth of customer funds held on balance sheet accelerated a little bit relative to that very strong TPV growth. So can you just talk about the dynamic there? Are you seeing any, say, mix shift away from check, again, to those higher monetizing markets? Is that a dynamic that we should expect to persist going forward just in terms of the divergence and growth of those metrics?
Yeah, this is John. Good question, Chris. We continue to see progress growing TPV in part because of our success in enabling customers to seamlessly transition from paper to electronic payments. And we see that the more electronic payments that a customer does on our platform versus the legacy check payments, the higher share of wallet we get from those customers and the more TPV growth that we see. So we're continuing to make progress there. In terms of the number of transactions on our platform, we're up to about 59%. electronic payments from 55% a year ago, so that's continued progress. We see pretty steady growth there. In terms of the customer funds balance on our balance sheet, we increased only slightly from the prior quarter, and we believe that's mainly due to seasonality. When we look at our internal numbers, our average daily balances, we actually had double-digit growth, but when you look at the ending balances that appear on our balance sheet, it's really subject to the business days, year-end activity with customers, trying to get payments completed and cleared and not really a reflection of any other underlying trend in the business.
Great. Okay. Thanks very much and congrats again.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Brad Sills from BFA Securities.
Great. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question and congratulations on a nice quarter. I wanted to ask about the extension of the platform. You mentioned getting into more procurement-type functionality. Can you remind us kind of where the payables functionality leaves off and where you're beginning now with some of this new functionality extending the AI platform into procurement?
Great. Thank you, Brad, for the question. Always good to hear your voice. So, you know, the platform from the beginning when I first came up with the kind of the vision of what I wanted to do was to be able to help businesses manage that back office. And so that back office includes a lot of paper, includes document management, includes workflow, includes collaboration internally and externally. And building that platform enabled us to reach lots of SMBs across the country. That's the 86,000 approximately that we have. what we found you know in the last couple of years is that a lot of those smbs happen to be good sized companies mid-market companies and we define mid-market as 10 to 100 million in revenue and so what we've started doing is just just because we like to listen to our customers and they're really important for us we've been listening to their requests for how to actually improve their experience and so one of the things they've asked for is support on the purchase order opportunity so They have all the workflow to manage the payable side, but, you know, when you're a larger company, you're going to have a purchase order process. And so we're just enabling them to be able to track those POs inside of bill.com, just like they track the payable and all the collaboration and the workflow they do across their team. So for us, the extension is an important one, but it's really not that much of a shift of what we've been doing. We listen to what our customers need every day, and we add that functionality as we can.
That's great. Thanks. And then, obviously, a nice quarter, it sounds like, in some of the variable-priced offerings. You mentioned cross-border. Any commentary on virtual card? And then my follow-up question is on the investments you're talking about in payments. What does the roadmap look like, I guess, to the extent you can share on some of the things you're investing in for your payments offering? Thank you so much.
You're welcome. So the platform enables us to, because we do the software component, we kind of take the entire process that a business has. We become this one-stop shop, kind of like Jury talked about in his quote about, hey, we make it one-click capability to manage those payments. And so on the international payments, there's opportunities for us to continue to make customers aware of our functionality now and to help them do that even easier, like we did with the recent AI capabilities of reading the currency and international bank information off the invoice. So on the virtual card, our focus has been to first help that transition, like John said earlier, help that transition from paper to electronic. We know that when customers have the ability to make electronic payments, they happen faster, they get recognized by their suppliers faster. And so our focus in the initial launch, in the initial year, has been to focus on the check payments and converting those. And so we are in early days. We feel good about the progress we've made there, and we think there's lots of opportunity to continue to increase that conversion from paper to electronic, and virtual card will be a significant part of that for us.
That's great. Thanks so much, Rene. Thank you.
Your next question comes from Samad Samana from Jefferies.
Yeah, congrats on a great start to your track record as a public company, and thanks for taking my questions. John, maybe first for you, you know, subscription revenue accelerated very nicely, and it looked like both customer growth was strong. I'm curious if maybe on the customer side of how the composition looked between the traditional audience you have and maybe larger and smaller customers and just how the quality of the customer ads this quarter looked and then add the follow up.
Yeah, thanks Samad. We see really progress in customer growth and activity on our platform from customers. across all segments. As we talked about previously, we see a lot of demand from larger customers. Renee mentioned that a minute ago. We've started to enhance our platform to serve some of the larger customers and their unique needs, as well as we have a great track record with small customers and making it really simple for them to make the transition from paper to digital. So we didn't see any new trends there. Historically, the way our model works is that a customer starts with us and then over time they add more users as we further penetrate their organization and we get a larger share of their transactions and share of wallet. That expansion within the organization happens organically. It's something that customers do on a self-service basis. It's not driven by incremental sales and marketing expense that we have. And what that leads to is increased subscription revenue growth from existing customers, obviously in addition to new customers who are bringing new users on the platform.
Maybe just as a follow-up, Rene, when I think about the financial institution partners, I know that's a key part of the strategy. Any updates on maybe progress with some of the newer relationships and some of the expansions that you've had there recently? And, again, thanks for taking my questions.
Thank you, Samad. Yeah, I think going back to our multifaceted distribution approach of serving customers where we find them and that's important and integral for the massive market that's in front of us so so the financial institution partners that we have jp morgan chase bank of america american express these are all critical these are white label solutions these are you know financial institutions that spend billions of dollars on r d and they've chosen our platform to help their business customers move from the paper world to the digital world So the progress we see is that we continue to have lots of great conversations with our existing partners about doing more together, and we continue to get, you know, plenty of opportunities to partner with more institutions. So our focus is really on how do we extend the reach of our platform? How do we make sure we do that so that customers get the benefit? And having partners that are aligned strategically is something that's important for us. And that's how we focus on building out the network that we have of financial institution partners.
Your next question comes from Josh Beck from KeyBank.
Thanks, Renee and John, for giving me a call. Really appreciate it. You know, I wanted just to ask high level, were there some other areas of positive surprise versus your plan? Certainly you had some really good momentum it sounds like with the quality of customers that you're bringing on and certainly some of your transactional products. Anything else just to call out high level that was the area of positive surprise versus your plan?
Well, Josh, good to hear your voice. You know, entrepreneurs are optimists, so there's lots of positive things. So, you know, what I would say is that across the business, I mean, you see the results. It really goes back to, you know, building a platform that's making it simple to connect and do business. And so, you know, areas of non-qualitative surprise, if you will, we started – managing our customers off of our old platform to a new integrated user experience over the last year. We continue to get good feedback on that. We continue to make progress in getting that base migrated over. What that enables is more future progress and success in the future. The example here is that the ability for us to, and I did talk about this during the fall, that we have now separated out the engineering effort on the front end from the back end. So what that means is we can iterate the user experience much faster as we get our customers on this platform. So when we think about the cross-border payments, when we think about virtual cards, when we think about other products that we'll launch in the future, having that ability to kind of have a UX that's independent of the back end is really critical. And so the answer I would give you is the positive surprise that I'm happy with is that that's going well and I'm happy with where we're at.
Okay. Very helpful. And I know it's early. I know it's only been a couple of months since you've gone public. But are you feeling, you know, any change or noticing any change in branding awareness when you think about some of your channels? I know you also did a rebranding campaign in tandem with that. So I know it's early, but any early signals that you're getting there on the awareness and marketing efficiency, where that could go?
One of the reasons that we wanted to take the step to being public was to increase the overall awareness of the pain that we're solving for customers and, of course, Bill.com's solution. as part of that and so like you said it is it is early days and helping that awareness increase but we did see an uptick in you know visits to the the website during december yeah and we've seen you know increased interest not just from existing partners saying hey how can we do more together but potentially from new partners that now understand the financial strength of our business and the strength of the balance sheet, the strength of the P&L, that they can get more comfortable thinking about how they can invest behind us and our platform to do more with their customers when it comes to the paper to digital transition. So we are seeing early signs of that. It's hard to quantify, but we feel good about it and are glad, obviously, that we took that step to be public.
Great to hear. Thanks, Rene.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Bhavan Suri from William Blair.
Hey, gentlemen. Thanks. Can you hear me okay? We can.
Thank you, Bhavan.
Great. Congratulations. I want to touch a little bit, and I have one question. I think Bob Napoli may be behind me with another question. But I just want to touch briefly on this move to sort of slightly larger customers. I'd love to understand sort of where you define that line because there's a couple of interesting things that happen. One is obviously a different set of competitors, a more complex set of requirements. But then more importantly, how much do the partners – I guess it's a two-part question. So how is that progressing and where do you define that line? And then how are the partners playing a role? Because obviously as you've come – larger customers, the accounting firms become so much more critical to those guys as sort of a strategic asset. And I'd love to understand how you are thinking about leveraging that to drive growth and sort of a larger customer base, larger size of customers larger.
Yeah, so I think the – My background and DNA carried a good number of years working at Intuit where I got a chance to just focus on building the simplest solution you could that would be a horizontal approach to solving the customer pain point. So at Bill.com, we've done that. We've built a solution, a platform that was horizontal that could serve all segments of the economy, if you will, without focusing on, for example, the enterprise. And that's really the only focus we don't have because Everybody else kind of gets into many of the same processes. They have documents they need managed to. They have workflow they need to do. They have all sorts of payments they need to manage. And so that line that you're asking about is not something that is easy for us to be able to define because our customers are of all sizes and have been. Even if you look at our partnerships, our partnerships have some partners that are focused on the smallest of businesses and some partners that are focused on the largest of businesses. So if you think about our accounting software synchronization, we have partnerships with NetSuite and Intacct that are larger companies, public companies often, and then we have partnerships with Intuit and Xero, which tend to be a little bit smaller. And so we don't really define that line. We focus it on the pain points that they have, and if we think that we can automate those pain points, then we think they're a good customer target for us. You know, 90% of businesses still use paper as a primary form of their payment processing, and that's true even in the larger companies. And so when we go to market, we really just focus on solving the pain points that those customers have and don't define the line. We say this is what we have and let them come to us, and so far that's working really well for us.
Got it. Got it. That was very helpful. Thank you.
Thank you. Your next question comes from Scott Burke from Needham.
Hi, Renee and John. Congrats on a good quarter. Great start after the IPO. I guess two for me. First of all, Renee, I wanted to chat about some of your customer acquisitions. Obviously, very strong trends there, but you have a nice viral nature to the model as you add on different partners in that ecosystem. But as you look at your customer acquisitions, or the net new customers in the quarter, is there a discernible change in how many customers come from your traditional kind of more digital selling methods versus ones that might come through, you know, just being part of the network and another function?
So, you know, one of the powerful things about the platform, it's kind of a – a steady growth business that has lots of opportunity to keep adding. So we had no discernible change. We continued to get stronger in each of the channels that we have. So that's our focus. And one of the things that I think is important when you think about the power, if you will, of our distribution strategy is that We are helping customers understand that there is a better way with paper, and the more partners we have talking about there being a better way than writing a check, whether it's a bank or an accounting software partner or somebody else in the future, the more we have of that, that also helps our direct model. It helps everything because everybody is now more aware that there is a better solution. So I would say, you know, that's also probably some of the stuff that we're, you know, that we feel makes our viral strategy, you know, a stronger one than others.
Great. And then a follow-up for you, John. Your gross margins in the quarter were very strong at 78% non-GAAP gross margins. But that's in the face of, obviously, a weaker Fed funds interest rate for customer revenues. What's kind of pulling the margins up as those revenues from float comes down? Is it purely, you know, the gross margin on subscription, or is there a disproportionate pull maybe from, you know, some of the transactions, whether it's card payments or cross-borders, et cetera, that's giving you the nice uplift?
Yeah, thanks, Scott. So as you saw with the results, we had strong subscription revenue growth, which is sort of the anchor or the foundation to our to our revenue model, and like other SaaS companies, we have very high margins on subscription revenues. And the other thing that happened in the quarter is, notwithstanding the decline on a year-over-year basis in our yield on float, it actually came in ahead of our expectations. That helped margins. And then finally, with transaction revenue growth that we delivered, 114% year-over-year, driven really by the activity of our customers, the number of transactions increasing 29% year over year, and then the revenue per transaction growing significantly really from the adoption of some of our new products. Renee mentioned it's still early in the rollout. We're not fully penetrated in our base yet, but we're seeing early signs of that. And generally speaking, just directionally, The newer products that are priced on a variable basis tend to have a higher margin than the fixed price products that we sort of built the business with over the last 10 years or so around checking ACH. So it's really just the progress that we're making at Driving Adoption and in particular with electronic payments that's been the short-term boost to gross margins.
Got it. Super helpful. Thanks for taking my questions.
Your next question comes from Bob Napoli from William Blair.
Thank you, and good afternoon, and congratulations again, Rene and John. Rene, following along with you all these years, it's great to see the success you guys are having. Thank you, Bob. As far as just a question, a follow-up on an earlier question, if you would. You talked, Renee, about it being early days on cross-border and virtual cards. What is the penetration rate on virtual cards or cross-border, and what do you believe it can be? questions on the road show frequently was that small businesses don't do that much cross-border, which I think is not correct. And so if you could just talk about the penetration rate and the size of the opportunity and what you think those penetration rates could be.
Okay, great. Thanks, Bob. And thanks for all the support over the years and all the conversations. So when we look at cross-border payments and virtual card payments, the way we decided to get into the market was to kind of look at the potential. And what we saw was that for both, we thought there was billions of dollars of TPV within our existing base. And so our focus is on how do we get that TPV onto those programs, whether it's virtual card or cross-border. And so we are in the early days, but nothing has changed our assumption to tell us that it's not the billions of dollars that we felt was out there.
Okay. All right. We'll let that go there. Then your R&D obviously is up quite a bit over the prior year, almost 100%. And you've talked about new products, international. And so can you maybe give a little more color on where those R&D dollars are going? I know you've mentioned international, besides cross-border, I think, you know, actually moving international to sign up international customers. I'm wondering if that's on the docket. And then it seems like you have a very large opportunity in providing a working capital product, probably with your partners like American Express or J.P. Morgan. So just some thoughts on the R&D spend, the move to international, and then potentially a working capital product.
Yeah, so the R&D spend is increasing because the opportunity that we see to reach more customers gets stronger every day, right? So how we reach those customers, and as you think about the cross and the chasm methodology, as you get into the early majority and late majority, your solution has to be simpler. simplicity at its core. And while I think our solution two years ago was simple, there was an opportunity for us to invest in that user experience to really simplify how they experienced everything that we do for them. And so this transition that I referenced of taking customers onto our new platform, that's a significant part of the R&D investment. And what that means, some examples of things that we've added into that new platform is we've added the ability to read the invoices, right? So we have an AI team now. that is helping us understand how to digest all this paper, the 45 million documents a year that we referenced in the S-1 for FY19. How do you take that data that's unstructured and then apply it to a business so they can manage their payables and receivables more efficiently? And so we launched Iva about a year ago. We continue to make enhancements on that platform so that customers don't have to do that data entry. In addition to the AI component of customer experience, there's also the AI component on a risk perspective, right? On a run rate basis, we manage $100 billion a year now. So having a platform that that scale requires us to invest behind that scale and to get in front of where we're going. And so these are things that aren't necessarily facing to the customer, but they're really, really critical for us to invest in ahead of time. So the international and virtual card programs are ones where we're able to monetize that investment that we're doing on the platform. But all these others, our customers are getting the benefit of that, and that gives us the ability to make the platform more valuable for our customers. So we feel really good about the investment, and I'll continue to invest behind that strategy when I see the opportunity in front of us.
Great. Thank you. Appreciate it.
We have time for one more question. Your last question comes from Richard Davis from Canaccord.
Hey, guys. This is Luke on for Richard. Thanks for taking the question. You're welcome. So in the private markets today, we have interesting up-and-comers such as Brex, Zoho, Scale Factor, and then you have more tenured guys like Sage Intact, who is, of course, a partner of yours. Just taking a broader perspective on this landscape, could you remind us how you think about and view the partner and competitor ecosystem evolving over the next few years? Thanks.
Sure. Thank you, Luke, for the question. And, you know, when we look at the market and you think about the complexity of what it is that we've built over the last 13 years, it's significant, right? So we have the ability to manage all of the documents, the ability to manage all of the workloads, the ability to manage all of the payments, whether they're international payments or check payments or ACH payments or virtual card payments. We have the ability to integrate all of that with multiple different accounting systems, and then we do that on a white-label basis for customers that need it, and then we do that for accountants on a basis where they're able to have their brand exposed as well. That depth of the platform is just something that we don't see other people building and designing from the beginning around. So when we see other competitors, they tend to be taking components of what we do and focus on that. And so, you know, we have a belief in our strategy of this broad platform is the only way that we're going to be able to fulfill or anyone can fulfill the mission of making it simple to connect and do business. And so that remains our focus, and that won't change. And so, you know, that's probably all I can have to say on that particular question.
That's great.
Thank you very much. Thank you. And that was our last question. I will turn the call back over to the presenters.
Thanks again, everyone, for joining the call today. We believe in our mission and are very excited about the opportunity ahead of us, and thank you for your participation.
Ladies and gentlemen, this concludes today's conference call. Thank you for participating. You may now disconnect.