JFrog Ltd. (FROG), a leading company in the field of DevOps, has reported a robust first quarter for 2024, with total revenues reaching $100.3 million, marking a 26% year-over-year (YoY) increase. The cloud segment of the business was particularly strong, with revenues of $36.9 million, up 47% YoY.
JFrog also noted an increase in customers contributing more than $100,000 in annual recurring revenue (ARR), which now stands at 911, up from 785 the previous year. The company has raised its full-year revenue forecast for 2024 to a range of $425.5 million to $429.5 million, reflecting confidence in continued momentum, especially in its cloud business.
Key Takeaways
- JFrog's Q1 2024 total revenue increased by 26% YoY to $100.3 million.
- Cloud revenue soared by 47% YoY to $36.9 million, with self-managed revenue growing 16% YoY.
- The company raised its full-year 2024 revenue forecast to between $425.5 million and $429.5 million.
- Gross profit stood at $85.3 million with a gross margin of 85.1%.
- Operating profit reached $14.1 million, resulting in a 14% operating margin.
- JFrog expanded its platform to include MLOps and MLSecOps solutions and highlighted key partnerships.
Company Outlook
- JFrog anticipates its cloud business to maintain its growth trajectory, guided for mid-40s growth for the full year.
- The company is confident in the pipeline growth for their security solutions, expecting it to become a material part of their business performance in 2024.
- The self-managed side of the business saw modest reacceleration, and the trend is expected to be similar to 2023.
Bearish Highlights
- Cloud business showed slower sequential growth in Q1 compared to previous quarters.
- The proof-of-concept process for security solutions is longer compared to DevOps, potentially slowing down the sales cycle.
- Net addition of customers in Q1 was slower, with no specific information on whether this affected large customers more than overall customer growth.
Bullish Highlights
- JFrog's integration with MLflow and Qwak platforms caters to the growing MLOps market.
- Strong gross margins and efficiency gains from standardizing on the Vdoo database.
- The company is expanding its enterprise portfolio, particularly in software security, with many promising enterprises considering JFrog's solutions.
Misses
- No specific trends or patterns observed in the digestion of the installed base during Q1.
Q&A highlights
- Cloud growth guidance for the mid-40s is considered to have seasonality and could vary slightly.
- The company is expanding relationships with partners and channels, aiming to have more resellers in the field.
- JFrog is not expecting the MLOps opportunity to significantly impact the company's 2024 guidance.
JFrog's earnings call showcased a company on the rise, with significant growth in its cloud business and a promising outlook for its expanded platform offerings. The company's executives were bullish on their ability to capture market share, especially in the MLOps and security sectors.
Despite some concerns about the slower growth in customer additions and longer sales cycles for security solutions, JFrog's raised revenue forecast and strong financial performance signal a positive trajectory for the year ahead. As JFrog continues to innovate and expand its partnerships, the market will be watching closely to see how these strategic moves translate into long-term growth and profitability.
InvestingPro Insights
JFrog Ltd. (FROG) has demonstrated a strong financial performance in the first quarter of 2024, and InvestingPro data and tips provide further insights into the company's position and future expectations.
InvestingPro Data highlights that JFrog has a market capitalization of $3.68 billion, reflecting its significant presence in the DevOps market. The company's revenue growth over the last twelve months as of Q4 2023 was 24.94%, showcasing a substantial year-over-year increase. This is aligned with the reported 26% YoY revenue increase in Q1 2024. Additionally, JFrog's gross profit margin stands impressively at 77.99%, which supports the strong gross margin of 85.1% reported for Q1 2024.
InvestingPro Tips for JFrog point out that the company holds more cash than debt on its balance sheet, indicating a solid financial foundation that could support further growth and innovation. Analysts predict that JFrog will be profitable this year, aligning with the company's optimistic revenue forecast and recent expansion into MLOps and MLSecOps solutions. It's worth noting that JFrog's impressive gross profit margins and expectations for net income growth this year could be a sign of strong operational efficiency and market competitiveness.
For more detailed insights and additional InvestingPro Tips on JFrog, including their high return over the last year and expectations around profitability, readers can explore InvestingPro at https://www.investing.com/pro/FROG. There are 10 more InvestingPro Tips available, providing a comprehensive analysis of JFrog's financial health and market position. To access these insights, use the coupon code PRONEWS24 to get an additional 10% off a yearly or biyearly Pro and Pro+ subscription.
Full transcript - Jfrog Ltd (FROG) Q1 2024:
Operator: Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for joining us, and welcome to JFrog’s First Quarter 2024 Financial Results Conference Call. I’ll now hand the conference over to Jeffrey Schreiner, VP, Investor Relations. Jeffrey, please go ahead.
Jeffrey Schreiner: Good afternoon, and thank you for joining us as we review JFrog’s first quarter 2024 financial results, which were announced following the market close today via a press release. Leading the call today will be JFrog’s CEO and Co-Founder, Shlomi Ben Haim; and Ed Grabscheid, JFrog’s CFO. During this call, we may make statements related to our business that are forward-looking under federal securities laws and are made pursuant to the Safe Harbor provisions of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995, including statements related to our future financial performance, and including our outlook for Q2 and the full year of 2024. The words anticipate, believe, continue, estimate, expect, intend, will, and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements or similar indications of future expectations. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on these forward-looking statements which reflect our views only as of today and not as of any subsequent date. Please keep in mind that we are not obligating ourselves to revise or publicly release the results of any revision to these forward-looking statements in light of new information or future events. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from expectations. For a discussion of material risks and other important factors that could affect our actual results, please refer to our Form 10-K for the year ended December 31st, 2023, which is available on the Investor Relations section of our website and the earnings press release issued earlier today. Additional information will be made available in our Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31st, 2024, and other filings and reports that we may file from time to time with the SEC. Additionally, non-GAAP financial measures will be discussed on this conference call. These non-GAAP financial measures which are used as a measure of JFrog’s performance, should be considered in addition to, not as a substitute for, or in isolation from GAAP measures. Please refer to the tables in our earnings release for a reconciliation of those measures to their most directly comparable GAAP financial measures. A replay of this call will be available on the JFrog’s Investor Relations website for a limited time. With that, I’d like to turn the call over to JFrog’s CEO, Shlomi Ben Haim. Shlomi?
Shlomi Ben Haim: Thank you, Jeff. Good afternoon to you all and thank you for joining our call. I’m pleased to report another strong quarter for JFrog, with all metrics exceeding the high end of our guidance range. Unification of DevOps, DevSecOps, MLOps and MLSecOps in a single platform continues to resonate in the market, resulting in continued expansion across the portfolio. In the first quarter of 2024, JFrog delivered total revenue of $100.3 million, up 26% year-over-year. Our cloud revenue continued to show positive momentum in Q1, equaling $36.9 million, a growth of 47% year-over-year. Cloud growth above our guidance range of mid-40s was supported by increases in customer consumption. In Q1, JFrog customers with ARR greater than $100,000 grew to 911 compared to 785 in the prior year, increasing 16% year-over-year. Customers with ARR greater than $1 million increased by three in the quarter, now equaling a total of 40. This is up from 21 in the year ago period, growing 90% year-over-year, reflecting the continued success of our sales teams top down efforts and adoption of the complete software supply chain platform by the enterprise. Our customers continue to tell us that having a single system of record that allows the seamless, secure flow of Binaries for DevOps and Security is mission critical to their business. In addition, we see the practices of DevOps being implemented by organizations that wish to enable the next generation of applications already incorporating gen AI and machine learning. In the past year, we extended the JFrog software supply chain platform to include MLOps and MLSecOps solutions as mandatory requirements to support our users alongside DevOps and DevSecOps comprehensive solutions. This unified approach led to some of the themes behind our first quarter of successes that will be discussed today. On our call today, we will cover the continued adoption of the JFrog platform, including embedded holistic security solutions. Next, I will look at the cloud usage and migration trends. We will also share updates about our partners and channel go to market activity and game changing technology integrations. Finally, I will share how JFrog’s AI and ML solutions support the emerging needs of our customers. Let me address the adoption of the JFrog platform by the world’s largest companies. As a unified software supply chain platform with Artifactory at its core, the JFrog platform continues to be chosen as mission critical partner by some of the world’s most demanding and highly regulated enterprises who are increasingly looking to standardize on holistic solutions. One of the most recognizable financial services companies in the world, Fidelity, recently expanded their relationship with JFrog to drive DevOps scale alongside security, while increasing SLA capabilities for the thousands of developers. Supporting over 42 million customers with a stated goal of over 90% of their applications in the cloud by 2026, Fidelity needed a partner with robust, hybrid and multi cloud capabilities to support their cloud first and enterprise scaled DevSecOps vision. Gerard McMahon, Head of ALM Tools and Platforms at Fidelity, noted in a webcast with JFrog, the whole development processes have become much more symbiotic, you have to shift left, shift middle and shift right. As we continue to use tools like JFrog Xray and JFrog Artifactory, security is much more ingrained into the full lifecycle of software delivery. Fidelity is not alone. We see companies increasingly integrating DevOps and security strategies through tool consolidation, scalability planning and embracing cloud hybrid and multi cloud environments. DevOps stakeholders have already taken ownership of software supply and security in most companies, but enterprises failing to streamline security tools by minimizing point solutions will face higher expenses, waste time, inability to automate security practices, also known as DevSecOps, and possibly place the entire organization at risk. One of the strongest differentiators is the company’s security research team that fuels tools with unique data, often before anyone else in the market, delivering crucial value into DevSecOps processes. Reflecting this reality, the JFrog Security Research team recently released a Software Supply Chain State of the Union report. The report revealed that many companies still have major security gaps, with only about half of companies actively scanning and securing both code and binaries. It also revealed that despite sometimes using ten or more security point solutions, companies are unable to detect that nearly 75% supposedly critical vulnerabilities are not even exploitable. Industry analyst, Paul Nashawaty from Futurum Group noted regarding the report and its consequences. JFrog’s analysis reveals an important finding. A sizable percentage of vulnerabilities that have been reported are not exploitable. This emphasizes how crucial it is for engineers to distinguish between theoretical vulnerabilities and those that pose real concerns. Our security research team’s reports are closely tracked by the market as they often uncover groundbreaking insights. These finding serves as the cornerstone for enhancing our tool capabilities, ensuring JFrog Xray, JFrog Advanced Security and JFrog Curation, deliver our users unmatched DevSecOps protection. I would now like to address our cloud business. Exiting the first quarter of 2024 we continue to see organizations looking for optimization for the cloud spent in tight budgetary environments. We are actively building the pipeline for cloud migration and anticipate enterprise efforts will accelerate throughout the year, similar to how they approached 2023. We are also seeing cloud customers looking to standardize on best of breed platforms to effectively manage the software delivery. For example, JFrog customer, Informatica, recently signed a new deal to grow the JFrog platform as the system of record for their software supply chain. Attracted to JFrog’s universality, breadth of solution and cloud first development approach, Informatica supercharged their platform experience. Their DevSecOps team noted, Informatica empowers their customers to realize the transformative capabilities of their data utilizing company’s AI-powered data management platform. By partnering with JFog and leveraging the solutions for our DevSecOps needs, we are able to take advantage of best practices across our software supply chain to improve efficiency. We expect JFrog’s cloud growth in 2024, much like the previous year, to continue to be driven by usage expansion. We anticipate that cloud migration projects will gradually emerge carefully managed within budget constraints. Our guidance aligns with evolving market trends and we remain committed to collaborating with our customers and partners to facilitate the adoption of our software supply chain platform. Now I want to address our partner and reseller network as part of our strategic channel goal. JFrog is constantly expanding our partner network across resellers, integrators and technology partners. As an investment in this area, we recently formalized a partnership with the leading governmental distributor Carahsoft to serve as a JFrog Public Sector Distributor. Natalie Gregory, Vice President of Open Source Solutions at Carahsoft said, “Supply chain attacks in recent years have highlighted the importance of integrating security into each phase of software development.” “Supply chain attacks in recent years have highlighted the importance of integrating security into each phase of software development. A single source of tools for companies’ binaries in a solution like JFrog Artifactory along with integrated security as part of a holistic platform, allows JFrog to provide agencies with unparalleled DevSecOps agility and peace of mind for the software supply chain. We anticipate further growth in JFrog’s indirect and reseller sales for the enterprise as we continue to expand our partner programs across sectors and geographies. Finally, allow me to discuss the expansion of our platform to support MLOps and GenAI initiatives. In today’s hype, every DevOps tool is talking about how their solutions support or utilize AI-based practices. But beyond the buzzwords, there is a critical question, can the solution deliver on its promises? Can the infrastructure you use effectively guide ML powered software securely from development to production? ML models are like all other binaries that require management, security and governance. JFrog with this model as a package approach, once again offers a top tier solution to the industry, enabling freedom of choice for ML engineers and responsible AI adoption by the organization. With our commitment to universality, we have always focused on making the JFrog Platform too integrated to fail, with Artifactory as the model registry of choice we recently introduced the industry’s first DevOps platform to seamlessly integrate with MLflow and Qwak platforms as we anticipate MLOps market needs. Driven by the organic growth of our platform and customers’ demand, we continue to actively integrate AI and machine learning into software supply chain practices. MLflow, a Databricks Open Source project which has over 14 million monthly downloads, gives users the ability to build, manage and deliver ML models in a streamlined workflow. Ali Ghodsi, CEO of Databricks, the data intelligence platform designed to help organizations harness the power of big data and artificial intelligence set. Originally developed by Databricks, MLflow streamlined the machine learning processes with a platform for experiment tracking, model packaging and model deployment. Through a JFrog Platform integration, users can now seamlessly utilize JFrog Artifactory as a model registry with JFrog Xray to secure the ML model artifacts. This integration accelerates both the development and deployment phases of ML powered applications, helping companies to drive responsible AI practices. As noted, we also announced the JFrog and Qwak integration. Qwak is an MLOps platform designed to facilitate the construction, deployment, management and monitoring of AI workflows, allowing users to deliver AI applications at speed and scale. This integration further expands the JFrog Platform catering to ML engineers by providing them with a single source of tools for their models. Alon Lev, CEO of Qwak noted, integrating with a proven artifact repository like JFrog Artifactory allows Qwak to provide the automation capabilities that makes data scientists and ML engineers more efficient, while allowing DevOps and DevSecOps team to manage ML models like any other software package in a holistic, secure software supply chain. As JFrog continues to bring together DevOps, DevSecOps, MLOps and MLSecOps into a single enterprise-grade platform, we look forward to supporting the emerging needs of our users and aim to further expand the platform to enable ongoing consolidation needs across the software supply chains. We are excited about the growth opportunity the world of MLOps and MLSecOps introduced as part of the GenAI revolution, and we will keep expanding our platform forward the direction as it’s natural leap forward for us and for our customers. With that, I will turn the call over to our CFO, Ed Grabscheid, who will provide in-depth recap of Q1 financial results and update you on our outlook for both Q2 and full fiscal year of 2024. Ed?
Ed Grabscheid: Thank you, Shlomi and good afternoon, everyone. During the first quarter of 2024, total revenues were $100.3 million, up 26% year-over-year. First quarter results exceeded the high end of our guidance range across all measures as a result of ongoing strength in our cloud revenues and growth in our Enterprise Plus subscriptions. We continue to see customers looking to consolidate their software supply chain tools towards a best-of-breed platform solution. Our results demonstrate strong execution during the first quarter. As noted by Shlomi, in the first quarter of 2024, we saw customers allocating efforts towards efficiency in their software development spend versus a focus on accelerating new projects. Cloud revenues in the quarter equaled $36.9 million, up 47% year-over-year, representing 37% of total revenues versus 31% in the prior year. The growth in the cloud revenues above our guidance in the mid-40s for 2024 was driven by customer usage levels above commitments. We reiterate fiscal 2024 baseline cloud growth around the mid-40s for the full year. Self-managed revenues are on-prem were $63.4 million, up 16% year-over-year during the first quarter. We anticipate self-hosted revenue growth trends in 2024 will be similar to 2023. Net dollar retention for the four trailing quarters was 118% in line with our guidance for high-teens during 2024. Our gross retention rate remained at 97%. Our first quarter results saw strong customer adoption of the complete JFrog platform, driven by customers consolidating point solutions and securing their full software supply chain. In Q1, 49% of total revenue came from Enterprise Plus subscriptions up from 44% in the prior year. Revenue contribution from Enterprise Plus subscriptions grew 39% year-over-year. Now, I’ll review the income statement in more detail. Gross profit in the quarter was $85.3 million, representing a gross margin of 85.1%, compared to 82.9% in the year ago period. The increase in gross margin relative to the year ago period is attributable to the elimination of outsource costs derived from the synergies related to the acquisition of Vdoo and ongoing cost discipline efforts. We reiterate expectation for annual targets remaining between 83% to 84% in the near future, then trend towards the low-80s aligned with our long-term model and cloud growth. Operating expenses for the first quarter were $71.3 million, up $5.2 million sequentially equaling 71% of revenues, up from $63.5 million or 80% of revenues in the year ago period. We continue to remain focused on expense discipline while investing in scaling our enterprise sales team, channel partner ecosystem and strategic R&D spending. Our operating profit in Q1 was $14.1 million or 14% operating margin compared to an operating profit of $2.7 million, or 3.4% operating margin in the year ago period, an improvement of 10.6 percentage points. Earnings per share equaled $0.16 based on approximately 114.6 million weighted average diluted shares compared to $0.06 per share in the prior year on 106.9 million weighted average diluted shares. Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, we ended the first quarter of 2024 with $579.6 million in cash and short-term investments, up from $545 million as of December 31, 2023. Cash flow from operations was $17.5 million in the quarter. After taking into consideration our CapEx requirements, free cash flow was $16.6 million, or 16.6% free cash flow margin. We remain committed to our free cash flow margin targets provided within our long-term model, implying an estimated mid-point of 28% over the coming years. As of March 31, 2024, our remaining performance obligation totaled $261.7 million. Now, I would like to speak about our guidance for the second quarter and full year 2024. Our outlook for 2024 implies continued momentum within our cloud business, driven by expectations for increasing customer usage, adoption of our Enterprise Plus platform and contribution from new security products. We anticipate seasonality in 2024 to be consistent with 2023 as customer activity likely accelerates through the year, weighted more towards the second half as budgets and resources are allocated to key initiatives after focus on expense rationalization by customers during the first quarter. Given the expectation of our self-hosted and cloud businesses, we reiterate our guidance suggesting a net dollar retention rate in the high-teens exiting the fiscal year 2024, implying stability through the remainder of the year. We will continue to expand operating expenses on a dollar basis during 2024, but see room for operating leverage as ongoing cost discipline and strategic investment remain balanced. For Q2, we expect revenue to be between $103 million and $104 million, equaling 23% year-over-year growth at the mid-point. With non-GAAP operating profit between $13 million and $14 million and non-GAAP earnings per diluted share of $0.13 to $0.15 assuming a share count of approximately 116 million shares. For the full year of 2024, we raised our revenue range between $425.5 million and $429.5 million. Non-GAAP operating income is expected to be between $56 million and $58 million, and non-GAAP earnings per diluted share of $0.59 to $0.61 assuming a share count of approximately 116 million shares. Now, I’ll turn the call back to Shlomi for some closing remarks before we take your questions.
Shlomi Ben Haim: Thank you, Ed. In one week, Israel will observe its 76th Independence Day. This year, Israel can truly celebrate, but only mark the day. The 132 civilian hostages still held by Hamas in Gaza since October 7 reminds us that until they are safely reunited with their families, an important milestone like Independence Day cannot be celebrated in full. Despite the ongoing challenges of the war in Israel and global macroeconomic uncertainties, the JFrog team remains dedicated to our goals and culture. Team JFrog, your unwavering commitment and consistent delivery are truly admirable. I’m saluting your resilient spirit and thank you for your hard work. Q1 was a solid start for the year. We continue to believe that JFrog, as a system of records for the entire software supply chain is uniquely positioned for success in the expanding world of DevOps and security, as well as seeing potential growth in the emerging market of GenAI. We also recently announced our annual user conference swampUP, to be held in September in Austin, Texas. This year’s keynotes will change the DevOps, DevSecOps and MLOps landscape as we again prepare together with our partners and community to set the industry standards moving forward. With that, thanks for attending our call, and may the Frog be with you. Operator, we are now open to take questions.
Operator: Thank you. We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator Instructions] Your first question comes from the line of Sanjit Singh with Morgan Stanley. Please go ahead.
Sanjit Singh: Yes, thank you for taking the question. Shlomi, I just wanted to get your latest read on the spending environment and the macro environment. This time last year in the market and including JFrog customers were still in sort of cost optimization mode, watching their cloud spend. At the same time, they’re also hesitant to invest in data center. And so as 2024 has started, what trends sort of remain similar to back then, and to what extent are you seeing any sort of improvement in terms of your customers willing to invest?
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes, Sanjit, thank you for the question. So what we see actually in the cloud environment is that our cloud keeps growing faster than the on-prem, mainly because of user consumption and cloud migration projects are being included in our pipeline as we see the market coming back very slowly towards that direction. On the self hosted, we see a bit of a growth on the adoption and the expansion, but it remains the same as it was in 2023. Overall, cloud and on-prem remind us a lot as we reported 2023 Q1 started with 47% year-over-year growth in the cloud and more and more cloud customers are looking forward multiyear subscription when they speak about migration and betting more on migration from [indiscernible]
Sanjit Singh: Understood. And just to follow-up, maybe for Ed on the cloud business. Ed, if I back out the true up from last quarter I think, which was around $1.5 million, when I look at the sequential growth in cloud, it was lower than it has been in prior Q1s for the past couple of years. Any reason for the lower sequential growth this quarter once I did that normalization?
Ed Grabscheid: Hi, Sanjit. This is Ed and thank you for the question. What we saw in Q4 was a quarter of significant consumption. We see Q1 as more of a digestion quarter. Now, when you look at on a year-over-year basis we grew 47%. On a dollar basis, we grew much more in Q1 than we did in the prior quarter. So what we’re seeing is that customers expanded in terms of usage in Q4. In Q1, they took that opportunity to digest a little bit more and think about project spend and software development projects more towards later quarters.
Sanjit Singh: I appreciate the color. Thank you very much.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Pinjalim Bora with JPMorgan. Please go ahead.
Pinjalim Bora: Great. Hey, thanks for taking the questions. Shlomi, I’ll ask you on MLOps, MLflow is interesting, but maybe talk about how your conversations with customers are trending at this point. Are you seeing customers considering JFrog as JFrog Artifactory as a proxy for kind of hugging face or any kind of model repositories? And since a lot of the MLOps works kind of, we use a lot of open source library, is it kind of even underscoring the security aspect of the JFrog Platform that you have. So anything around MLOps, what are you hearing from customers would help?
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes. Pinjalim, hi. MLOps obviously is natural expansion of what we call the natural leap forward for JFrog as we treat all models as a package, yet another binary. What we hear from our customers, what we hear from the market, by the way, what we hear from the community as well, is that they are looking to have a single source of record for models, just as they have for the other packages. Artifactory obviously serves that – Xray serves as the scanner for models and malicious models, and this is what we announced back in Q4 of the previous year. Now, with the universality philosophy in mind, we are providing all data scientists and ML engineers with freedom of choice. Choose whatever platform works for you, whether it’s Maslow, which is super popular, as we mentioned, with millions of dollars a month or other like Qwak and others coming from AWS SageMaker. So the universality of Artifactory will make Artifactory the registry of choice for models as well as it is today for all the other binaries.
Pinjalim Bora: Yep, understood. One question for you, Ed on the cloud business, correct me if I heard this wrong, but seems like you’re seeing incremental efficiency efforts by customers – optimization efforts by customers in Q1. Just wanted to make sure I heard that correctly. And maybe how are those customers kind of optimizing at this point? Because that’s something different than what others are saying that optimization has already done mostly? And maybe help us understand the consumption trend going into April or so far in May.
Ed Grabscheid: Thank you for the question, Pinjalim. What we’re seeing first off is that again, this being a quarter of digestion after a very strong Q4, we guided to the mid-40s and we exceeded our guidance in terms of 47% on a year-over-year basis. What we’re seeing in terms of the trends is that the customer today, the behavior is more towards and aligned with what we’re seeing in 2023. That purchasing decisions as well as large projects will most likely come towards the second half of 2024. But what we are reiterating our guidance around mid-40s for the full year.
Pinjalim Bora: Understood. Thank you very much.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Koji Ikeda with Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Koji Ikeda: Yes. Hey guys, thanks so much for taking the questions. I wanted to ask a question or maybe, maybe another question here on the SaaS side. I know there is a lot of focus on this revenue line item here. And so as we think about – I wanted to ask you a question on the visibility in SaaS. When I look at the net new revenue in SaaS after normalizing for that one-time, it looks about same as the fourth quarter. And so really trying to understand what your visibility looks like with your SaaS customers say for the rest of your business.
Ed Grabscheid: Yes. So what we see and what we’ve commented before is that we guide towards mid-40s, it’s on the commit. Anything above mid-40s would be usage and we don’t necessarily guide on usage. So if we see a percentage growth that is above the mid-40s that is because additional consumption. What we see today and what we have visibility to is in the commitments. And we continue to reiterate at mid-40s for our cloud business.
Koji Ikeda: Got it. That makes sense. And just to follow-up here, if I may. JFrog, we definitely view you guys as an enterprise DevSecOps tool. I think there’s no denying that. But you do have SMB and smaller bid markets as customers and so wanted to ask the question on how demand and resiliency is shaking out in the lower end of your customer base.
Shlomi Ben Haim: Thanks, Koji. Specifically on security, it’s a known thing for all sizes of companies. Software supply chain security is being changed, not only consolidated, but being changed because of the threat that is coming from the runtime environment in which you have binary stresses only. So the JFrog Advanced Security, the JFrog Curation and Xray are covering this need for the SMB as well. Now, all types of customers, all four pilot customers and I’m not speaking about really small developer jobs, but the SMB for sure are looking for solutions that provide a comprehensive coverage over the software supply chain. And this is what the JFrog Security solution is attract by.
Koji Ikeda: Thanks guys. Thanks for taking the questions.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Mike Cikos with Needham. Please go ahead.
Mike Cikos: Hey guys, thanks for taking the questions here. And I’ll jump on the bandwagon here, since we’re all asking about SaaS and cloud. Just to punctuate that point that we were speaking about with Koji, but I want to make sure one of the things we’re getting from clients here is you delivered the 47% growth in Q1. We’re reiterating the mid-40s for the full year, and I think what I’m getting from folks is the idea that, hey, it’s a skinny upside to mid-40s i.e. like, it doesn’t leave you a lot of wiggle room. And Ed, if I could just go back to your earlier comment, it sounds like the mid-40s that you’ve guided to for the years based on commitments, right? So in the context of that visibility, that mid-40s is “in hand, if you will” and then the consumption is really the go get to drive upside to that. Is that a fair characterization?
Ed Grabscheid: Yes. Thanks for the question, Mike. So first of all, our guidance suggests that our pipeline would support the mid-40s and that is based on consumption. Secondly, based on the, I’m sorry, commitments, the secondly, usage would be a driver of anything above that mid-40s growth, any acceleration beyond that would be migrations. Although we don’t anticipate anything from a migrations perspective to pick up from what we saw at the levels of 2023.
Shlomi Ben Haim: And if I may, Mike. sorry, just one more sentence about that. Well, listen, we started 2023 with the same volatility and the same hesitation in the market. People on the first quarter are far more cautious about their budget. They are planning; they are not yet executing big migration projects are not even being discussed at this point. They want to stabilize their expenses and then to start here. And exactly as it happened in 2023 and as we predicted and finished the year with a big hype on the cloud [ph] goal, this is what we will see here this year. The market is still not out of the wood and customers are looking at cloud expansion and cloud spending with the magnifier. So Q1 is very much aligned. We even exceeded our guidance. It’s very much aligned with our targets. But also, if you look at the dollar base, it’s a big success among our portfolio.
Mike Cikos: Understood. Thank you for that. And then just a follow up here. I think transparently, a little bit of the head scratching outside of your purview is just on the comment around the digestion in response to Sanjit’s earlier question. So I just like to get a sense that digestion, was that anticipated? And then the follow up is, has that been more front-end loaded? Was it back-end loaded to Q1, has there been any change in behavior in the interim? Again, to give you some sort of confidence that those projects that people are looking at are going to start coming online in the second half of this year.
Ed Grabscheid: Yes, this was not a head scratcher for us. This was something to be expected. The customer behavior and what we see in terms of seasonality there is typically seasonably weaker in Q1, as budget decisions are being made, new software development projects are being determined, and that typically will scale through and grow throughout the course of the year. And this is the trend that we’re seeing.
Mike Cikos: Got it. Okay. Thank you for calling that out. I really do appreciate it. I’ll turn it over to my colleagues.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jason Ader with William Blair. Please go ahead.
Jason Ader: Yes, thank you. Good afternoon, guys. I wanted to ask about security, Shalomi. Maybe talk about pipeline build for security and what you guys are seeing out there on the ground with the sales reps? And then what are the biggest challenges you’re seeing in terms of really just getting this thing out there and getting people onto the JFrog platform?
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes. Jason, these are two great questions. First, about the pipeline. We are thrilled to see the pipeline growing with our enterprise portfolio, and we are very happy to see that they are not only considering JFrog Advanced Security versus Curation, or Curation versus JFrog Advanced Security, but both. And to remind you, this is also coming with a different model on top of our subscription that comes basic. So we see the pipeline, we see it growing. These are very promising enterprises that are looking at full adoption of software security – software supplies and security. On the other side, on the flip side of it, none of them is coming from the dock. They all have security solution. They are all running a proof-of-concept. They are all looking to displace or to consolidate. And pipeline building on the landscape of security is taking longer. So on one hand, very thrilled, very excited about the pipeline and the type of customers that are approaching us and running a proof-of-concept, the solid one, very organized one, consolidating five or more different tools. On the other hand, the lifecycle of a proof-of-concept for security is longer than the DevOps one [ph].
Jason Ader: Got you. Okay. So how is that aligned, show me with your expectations, I guess six months ago. I mean, is this sort of what you expected or is it taking – is it a little bit slower than you expected? And you still are as optimistic as ever in terms of the value proposition, but it’s just going to take a little bit more time.
Shlomi Ben Haim: We are staying in confidence with our targets and what we guide you guys that this year security will become a material piece of our performance in our business.
Jason Ader: Very good. Good luck guys.
Shlomi Ben Haim: Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Miller Jump with Truist Securities. Please go ahead.
Miller Jump: Great. Thank you for taking the questions. I guess maybe I’ll ask one on the self-managed side of the business. You actually had a modest reacceleration there this quarter. Just curious if there was anything one time in nature or anything that made you indicate this might actually exceed your expectations for that part of the business this year?
Ed Grabscheid: Hey, Miller. This is Ed. Nothing one time based, slight acceleration in our self-hosted business. We would expect that the trend in self-hosted will be very similar in 2024 to what we saw in 2023.
Miller Jump: Okay, thanks. And then maybe just one more. Obviously, this is a lumpy metric, but it also looked like 100,000 customers were the slowest on net adds that they’ve been in some time. Is there anything to indicate that that digestion period that you talked about is indicating large customers more than the overall?
Ed Grabscheid: Well, what we saw in Q4, and a lot of this, you’re right, is lumpiness and seasonality. We had significant traction in our large customers really in the second half of 2023. So this quarter that we’re seeing somewhat digestion as customers are looking at their budgets and considering expansion opportunities. We saw in Q1, although there was nice growth, it wasn’t at the same pace that we saw in previous quarters. We would expect that that would start to trend more normalized in future quarters, and it will be similar to what we saw in 2023.
Miller Jump: Understood. Thank you.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Jason Celino with KeyBanc Capital Markets. Please go ahead.
Jason Celino: Hey, great. Glad to be on. We actually saw some big news this week that a major player in AppSec would be spun out as a private standalone. Have you seen any changes in the competitive dynamics in security over the last, call it six months? And then more importantly, do you see any incremental share gain opportunities on the horizon, just on the competitive landscape? Thanks.
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes, that’s a very good question. First of all, wow. The last quarter was full of events that change everything. And on one hand, we see the need for consolidation around best-of-breed platform, and therefore customers are mentioning the platform that they can consolidate around especially around security and DevOps together. On the other hand, there were a lot of changes. HashiCorp (NASDAQ:HCP) got acquired, synopsis of their entire stack and Atlassian (NASDAQ:TEAM) has some changes. So obviously there are a lot of changes. Tectonic plates are moving, but one thing is staying the same. Customers are looking to consolidate and to have a comprehensive security solution. And then on that hand, the security landscape and the competitive landscape didn’t change from last quarter.
Jason Celino: Okay. And then maybe just a quick one for Ed, the digestion that we’re all kind of discussing today. Did you start seeing it very beginning in the quarter, or was it toward the end, or just pretty consistent throughout? Thanks.
Ed Grabscheid: It was consistent throughout the quarter.
Jason Celino: Okay, great. Awesome.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Kingsley Crane with Canaccord. Please go ahead.
Kingsley Crane: Hi, thanks for taking the question. Shlomi, in the spirit of RSA, want to talk about security? In Mandiant’s report, 31 vendors were impacted by zero-day threats in the past year, that’s up from three in 2018 not mentioning thousands of end customers impacted by those breaches. You cited some of JFrog’s security research in your prepared remarks. Can you talk about the value of having that security research team in addition to your security capabilities including things like JFrog creation?
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes. Well, thank you for noting that. JFrog security research team is one of the largest in the industry, not only by the size of the team and how they were trained, but also by the amount of report and finding that we are sharing with the customers and with the community. Recently we released the state of the union for software supplies and security finding. And then just after the Docker Hub scanning and malicious packages on Docker Hub together with Docker. This is an amazing differentiator because our customers can know before the rest of the market from threats that might become, and it’s included in the database of our security solutions. So obviously it’s a great service for the community, but it’s also boosting our tools to be able to detect some threats before other tools can catch them.
Kingsley Crane: Thank you. That’s really helpful. And then for Ed, really strong gross margins at 85%. Can you talk about the efficiencies you’re finding there even as cloud generally increases as a percent of your overall revenue?
Ed Grabscheid: Yes, very strong gross margins. As you pointed out, 85.1%, one of the reasons that we had such strong gross margins in Q1 is that we removed, eliminated a third-party outsourced database as we now standardized on the Vdoo database that we acquired two, three years ago. So we saw some efficiency gain there. However, what we see in our model is that we’ll continue to spend and invest in those databases and other costs associated with our gross margins. So our model indicates that we’ll still, and as it’s in our guidance, between 83% to 84% gross margins during 2024.
Kingsley Crane: Thank you. Hopefully.
Operator: Our next question comes from Yi Fu Lee with Cantor Fitzgerald.
Yi Fu Lee: Thank you for taking my question. Question could be for Shlomi or Ed. In terms of, I want to focus on the consolidation opportunity. Maybe if Shlomi or Ed, you could comment on like the up sell to other products. I know in prepared remarks you talked about the security as an example. How about other parts like CI/CD, distribute, IoT device management, any updates on that front as well?
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes. So obviously the consolidation of tools around one platform comes with all the capabilities of the factory as the center as the single source of record than the registry of all packages on top of it the security solution, but also what you mentioned, distribution, automation, the database that I just mentioned, these are all coming in one platform, one package, and the expansion potential is around all of them. It’s differently packaged in the DevOps is the offerings versus the cloud, and the cloud we are looking to see more consumption based on more usage and more adoption. And in the self-hosted this expansion by seat and by number of servers, by location, by project, by sizes of teams and so on, so that’s the expansion motion that we see now with additional product on the platform.
Yi Fu Lee: Got it, got it. That’s extremely helpful. And then my last follow up is on the MLOps opportunity. It’s great that you’ve given customer obviously the freedom of choice. They don’t have to unlock – they don’t have to lock themselves up in anything like they could use Hugging Face [indiscernible]. I was wondering how material is the MLOps opportunity and when do you think it’s going to be more significant to I guess the contribution to JFrog.
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes, MLOps is not mature. AI is not mature, but the practices are being built now. And the nice thing about what we see is that the ML engineers, the Python engineers, the data scientists actually using the best practices of DevOps and DevSecOps to practice MLOps and MLSecOps. So it’s not mature. This might be a tailwind, but it’s not going to change our 2024 guidance and we are going to invest more and expand more getting JFrog platforms prepared to this big opportunity that is coming in the next year.
Yi Fu Lee: Thanks, for that Shlomi.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Brad Reback with Stifel. Please go ahead.
Brad Reback: Great. Thanks very much. Ed, on the digestion commentary, I understand the mid-40% cloud growth for the year, but it sure feels like you’re trying to point us towards less pronounced seasonality in the June quarter than we’ve seen the last couple of years. So maybe we’re towards the lower end of that mid-40s in 2Q. Thanks.
Ed Grabscheid: Yes, hi Brad. The way that we look at this is that it is a metric that has seasonality. What we’re guiding to in the mid-40s is for the full year. That means it’s around the mid-40s. It could be up a few points, it could be down a few points. What we know today and what we see is the commitments, and that’s around mid-40s. Anything above that would be usage. Anything below that, that could be because of monthlies. But what we see is around mid-40s. And seasonality will play a factor in that quarter-to-quarter.
Brad Reback: Okay, thanks very much.
Operator: Our next question comes from the line of Nick Altmann with Scotiabank. Please go ahead.
Nick Altmann: Awesome. Thanks guys. Just given the channel efforts and how you guys have bulked up the sales force over the last year. Can you maybe just talk to some of the productivity from some of the newly onboarded partners both last year and when you guys kind of held your first partner event, and then specifically on the direct go-to-market side, maybe just talk to overall sales productivity? Thanks.
Shlomi Ben Haim: Yes, Nick, the channel and partners, as we keep updating you, it’s one arm of the transition to the top down enterprise, indirect sales that we are running. The collaboration with the partners and with the channels is by geography and it’s by expertise. So it’s different partners that you will see on security versus different partners that you will see on DevOps is different partners that you will see in France versus different partners that you will see in Japan. And one last thing is that now we added and announced the Carahsoft partnership to also go after the public sector or the highly regulated environment, which they are super familiar with. So, we are expanding more and more the relationship with our partners and with our channels to have more resellers in the field that can promote the JFrog platform offering.
Nick Altmann: Okay, thanks. And then I wanted to follow up on the digestion comment. I think it was Koji asking about whether it was more sort of geared towards the SMB side of the equation. But any other trends that you saw within the installed base around the digestion? Was it sort of broad based? Was it GS [ph] specific, sector specific? Just any more granularity on that digestion comment that you made in Q1 and sort of any trends or patterns that you call out would be helpful. Thanks.
Ed Grabscheid: Yes, there was nothing that we saw in terms of trends. It was a broad base across the portfolio. Nothing that we can point out specifically.
Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I turn the call back to Shlomi for closing remarks.
Shlomi Ben Haim: Thank you everyone for joining our call. We had a wonderful quarter. We are looking for a more peaceful day in the region and may the Prague be with you. Thank you very much.
Operator: This concludes today’s call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.
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