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MongoDB, Inc. (MDB 7.69%)
Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call
March 13, 2018 5:00 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good day, and welcome to the MongoDB Fourth-Quarter Fiscal 2018 Earnings Call. Today's conference is being recorded. At this time I would like to turn the conference over to Brian Denyeau, ICR investor relations. Please go ahead, sir.

Brian Denyeau -- ICR Investor Relations

Thank you, Don. Good afternoon and thank you for joining us today to review MongoDB's Fourth-Quarter and Full-Year Fiscal 2018 Financial Results which we announced in our press release issued after the close of the market today. Joining me on the call today are Dev Ittycheria, president and CEO of MongoDB, and Michael Gordon, MongoDB's CFO. During this call we may make statements related to our business that are forward-looking under the 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 financial results, trends and guidance for the first quarter and full-year fiscal 2019, industry and market trends, our go-to-market and growth strategies, our introduction of future product enhancements and the potential advantages of those enhancements, our market opportunity and ability to expand our leadership position and drive revenue growth, our ability to maintain and up-sell existing customers, our ability to acquire new customers, our ability to expand our relationship with partners, and anticipated benefits of our platform for our customers and partners.

The words "anticipate," "continue," "estimate," "expect," "intend," or "will" and similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking statements with similar indications of future expectations. These statements reflect our views only as of today and should not be reflected upon as representative of our views at any subsequent date. We do not have plans to update these statements except as required by law. These statements are subject to a variety of risks and uncertainties that can cause actual result to differ materially from expectations.

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For a discussion of material risks and other important factors that could affect our actual results, please refer to those contained in our quarterly report on Form 10-Q filed with the SEC on December 15, 2017, and our other periodic filings with the SEC. These documents are available in the Investor Relations section of our website at www.mongodb.com. A replay of this call will also be available there for a limited time. The development, release, and timing of any features or functionality described for our products remains our sole discretion.

This information is merely intended to outline our general product direction and should not be relied on making a purchasing decision nor is it a commitment, promise, or legal obligation to deliver any material code or functionality. Additionally, non-GAAP financial measures will be discussed on this conference call. Please refer to the tables in our earnings release on the Investor Relations portion of our website for a reconciliation of these measures that are most directly comparable to GAAP financial measures.With that, I'll turn the call over to Dev.

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Brian, and thanks to all of you for joining us today to review our fourth-quarter results. MongoDB delivered strong performance across the board, which reflects our growing market momentum and position as the leading modern general-purpose database platform. To quickly summarize our fourth-quarter results, we generated revenue of $45 million, a 50% year-over-year increase and above the high end of our guidance. We ended the quarter with over 5,700 customers, up 78% compared to a year ago.

We saw strong growth across both Enterprise Advanced, EA for short, and Atlas customers, and now Atlas is over 10% of revenue, representing more than a 500% increase from a year ago. When looking at the larger industry trends, it has become clear that the success of every business rests on their ability to use technology and in particular software and data to create a competitive advantage. Businesses want to quickly develop new products and services to drive new revenue streams, improve the customer experience and engage them in a more meaningful way, and to constantly find ways to reduce the risk and the cost of doing business. As a result, nearly every business is fast becoming a software business or at risk of being eaten by one.

But these digital initiatives often fail. KPMG issued a study last year that found that 88% of CIOs don't think they have fully benefited from their digital strategy and 82% don't believe their companies are effective at using technology to advance their business. One of the main reasons they fail is their inability to leverage their data. A study by Localis found that companies don't think they are good at using their data, with more than 40% of CIOs mentioning that their data is too solid across the organization, it's highly complex to synthesize, that there are so many rules around data compliance that they have to work around, and much of the data is trapped in complex legacy infrastructure.

Consequently, we're starting to see the beginning of a real platform shift, where customers realize that the only way to solve this problem is to modernize their legacy infrastructure by moving to a next-generation data platform. This is driving a massive opportunity for MongoDB for three main reasons. MongoDB offers a superior way to work with data because of the power and flexibility of the document model. Our platform allows our customers to put data where they need it due to our intelligent, highly distributed architecture for reasons around scalability, availability, compliance, and geographic coverage.

We give customers the freedom to run anywhere, from the mainframe to the cloud, and including a database as a service offering, all with the same unified experience for developers. This allows customers to future-proof their work by knowing that they don't have to rewrite their applications if and when they move from on-premise to the cloud. Millions of developers have already discovered the power of MongoDB and as a result made MongoDB the most popular next-generation database. In fact, just this morning the Stack Overflow Annual Developer Survey Results, which polled more than 100,000 developers from 183 countries, were released.

This survey provides real insight into what technologies developers find most attractive and impactful. The survey showed for that the second straight year, MongoDB was the most-wanted database by developers. This provides yet another data point that shows that MongoDB has clearly established itself as the database of the future in the hearts of minds of developers everywhere. And we're just getting started: In mid-February, we announced that MongoDB 4.0, which is scheduled to be launched this summer and is now in beta will extend ACID transaction support available in a single document to multiple documents.

With ACID support, MongoDB can now provide all of the same data guarantees of a legacy database coupled with the performance, scale, and flexibility benefits of a document-based architecture, which reinforces our position as the leading, modern, general-purpose database platform. We've already seen great success replacing legacy databases, which represents approximately 30% of our new business. Now with the introduction of after-transaction support, we believe there's no reason the customer would need to use a legacy database instead of MongoDB. For those of you not familiar with ACID, it's a set of properties that were designed to ensure data integrity and consistency for legacy databases.

This was a must-have because they store data in tables. Specifically, the data is typically spread across multiple tables, often hundreds of tables. When adding new data or making updates, the database needed a set of guarantees to ensure that the data was properly and consistently entered or updated across all these tables. These guarantees are called ACID.

They're a cornerstone of the legacy world and something many users consider a must-have in order to be considered a viable database. With a document database, data does not need to be spread out in many different places. Rather, it is modeled in a single document. MongoDB has always provided ACID support within a single document.

It's our belief that people who are not comfortable using MongoDB for transaction-heavy use cases felt this way primarily because they didn't fully comprehend that most data relationships can be modeled in the document or that transactions within the document were already ACID-compliant. Having multi-document ACID compliance has been a highly requested product feature for some time and with the introduction of 4.0, we now give companies the peace of mind to build anything on MongoDB. As a result, we believe there's no use case today where the traditional database is a better fit than MongoDB. Delivering ACID compliance across a distributed multidocument database is a challenging technological problem and one that our engineering team has been working on for three years.

4.0 is a tremendous achievement and reflects the world-class engineering talent we have in this company.Turning to our fourth-quarter results in more detail, we're pleased with a combination of new logo wins and strong up-sell activity and the continuing trend of customers migrating workloads off legacy databases to MongoDB. We have a powerful land-and-expand-and-expand model and our fourth-quarter results show that it's working. During the fourth quarter, we were excited to add new enterprise customers, including ASML Netherlands, Culture Amp, LivePerson, MicroStrategy, Pizza Hut, and the State of Maryland. We also expanded our relationship with customers such as AstraZeneca, Cisco, Mount Sinai, Samsung, TIAA, and T-Mobile.

We had an exciting new customer win during the quarter with one of the largest car rental companies in the United States. A key strategic priority for the CIO was to modernize the infrastructure and move mission-critical applications off legacy databases. The company's reservation pricing engine, one of the most mission-critical applications, was built on a legacy database on the mainframes. As the business grew and customer engagement increased, they experienced degraded performance and rising costs.

They needed a database platform that could improve performance, lower costs, and support the company's future move to the cloud. They decide to migrate to MongoDB because of our powerful document model, faster query performance, ability to run anywhere, including on the mainframe as well as on the cloud, and the endorsement of their preferred systems integrator. In the first few months after deploying EA, this customer had been able to significantly reduce mainframe consumption for this application, which translates into millions of dollars in annual cost savings.Also, this past quarter we expanded our relationship with Freddie Mac, who launched an initiative to modernize a number of applications that were previously built on legacy databases. One application, their property appraisal tool, held massive amounts of property and loan information but was increasingly expensive and time-consuming to update with the relational database.

Leveraging MongoDB, Freddie Mac was able to collect information from a variety of different sources and in a variety of different formats to build a single view of all the information needed to accurately appraise a property. MongoDB was chosen because of its flexible data model and the high ability of the database. In the months since using MongoDB, Freddie Mac has seen an increase in developer productivity. Atlas delivered outstanding results in the fourth quarter.

It represented 11% of our overall revenue and grew more than 500% year over year. We're seeing healthy demand from new customers, existing EA customers purchasing incremental Atlas workloads as well as existing Atlas customers who continue to significantly expand their usage of Atlas. We once again saw a number of six-figure Atlas transactions and are seeing a growing percentage of Atlas customers have committed to certain usage levels. In seven quarters we've gone from launching Atlas to creating a business that's entering fiscal 2019 with a revenue run rate of over $20 million.

This is great validation of the opting [ph] for Atlas and we believe we've only scratched the surface. The flexibility of Atlas to serve as both a self-serve solution that can attract new customers, as well as a solution that customers can quickly scale up over time, is a key differentiator in the market. A good example of this is Snagajob, the largest platform for hourly work in the U.S., with more than 80 million registered hourly workers and 300,000 employer locations. Snagajob upgraded from Community Server to Atlas.

Snagajob had successfully grown its business on Community Server due to the power of our platform, but as the business continued to grow, the overhead of active [ph] provision, configure, secure, backup and manage infrastructure themselves detracted from their ability to focus on their own competitive advantage. After evaluating Atlas, they recognized it would be significantly more cost-effective to use Atlas than to manage their ever-growing infrastructure themselves. Snagajob made a multiyear, six-figure annual commitment to Atlas as the long-term platform on which it can build innovative applications and scale its business over time. We believe that there are hundreds of thousands of other Community Server-users like Snagajob that are great candidates to move to Atlas over time.In the fourth quarter, we also made significant progress in building out our partner ecosystem.

In December we announced the availability of MongoDB Atlas on AWS marketplace, making it easier for more than 160,000 existing AWS customers to buy and consume MongoDB Atlas. MongoDB has also joined the AWS SaaS sales alignment program, enabling the AWS sales force to drive MongoDB Atlas revenue through co-selling and to get compensated for it. MongoDB and Microsoft also launched a new co-sell program for MongoDB Atlas and Microsoft Azure, which enables the Microsoft sales force to do the same. Our cloud partnerships are truly win-win, as they provide us deeper access to our partners' customer bases as well as driving significant infrastructure revenue for them.

Finally, Tata Consultancy Services developed a mainframe modernization practice built around MongoDB and elevated MongoDB as a top 20 global strategic partner.As I look to 2019, I couldn't be more excited about the opportunities ahead. We have a massive market opportunity, which IDC estimates will be over $63 billion by 2020, a highly innovative product, a high-performance go-to-market model, and the team and the credibility to execute. We believe we're still in the early stages of establishing MongoDB as a seminal software franchise with the opportunity to sustain high levels of growth for a long period of time. When you look at the size of our market opportunity, we believe the best thing to drive long-term shareholder value is to remain focused on investing for growth while continuing to drive improved margins.

Specifically we're focused on the following priorities: continuing to invest in our strategic data platform. Transactions which I discussed earlier is just part of the many innovations coming with the release of 4.0; we're significantly investing in Atlas, adding new capabilities to drive adoption expansion, as well as enterprise-grade up-sell opportunities to drive additional revenue and margin expansion. We're also making investments to make it easier than ever for developers to build applications on MongoDB, with MongoDB Stitch. MongoDB Stitch provides a service that frees developers from undifferentiated and cumbersome back-end coding like handling user logins and highly granular access to data.

We're integrating with other third-party services like Twilio Stripe or running and scaling application servers. We're also making investments in mobile and expanding the aperture of [sp] what developers can do with our platform, including some very interesting data visualization capabilities that we plan to launch later this year. The second is driving strong revenue growth through expansion of our sales capacity and related marking investments. We're at the very early stages of penetrating one of the largest markets in software which is ripe for disruption.

In fiscal 2019, we plan to continue to expand our direct-sales team in order to expand into new markets as well as deepen our penetration where we already have sales coverage. We're attracting world-class sales talent, and we'll be looking to add sales reps who have experience closing larger, more strategic deals. Third, driving deeper relations with partners to elevate MongoDB's customer mindshare. We're seeing increasing traction with leaders in digital transformation, particularly the largest systems integrators in the world and we believe that their role as trusted advisors for digital transformation can help elevate our positioning among C-level executives, our prospective customers.

This year we'll invest to more tightly align with partners as part of our strategy to pursue larger, more strategic customer relationships. And fourth, making our culture and reputation a competitive advantage. Nothing is more important than having a culture that allows us to attract the best people. We're investing significantly in sales-enablement, technical-training and leadership-development programs, talent acquisition, and other initiatives to make MongoDB a place where employees can have the option to grow and succeed in their careers.Before I turn it over to Michael, I want to provide an update on our senior leadership team.

Carlos Delatorre, our chief revenue officer, will be leaving MongoDB at the end of our first fiscal quarter to become the CEO of our private technology company. Over the last few years, Carlos has helped MongoDB deliver rapid growth at scale, and most importantly for the long term, he has built a world-class sales organization that positions MongoDB incredibly well for the future. I'm personally excited for Carlos, as he and I have worked together closely over the last 13 years-plus and consider him not just a colleague but also a friend. We wish him well as he begins the next chapter in his career and thank him for his contributions over the last three-plus years.

Carlos will stay on until the end of the quarter to ensure a smooth transition. We are beginning a search process to identify our next sales leader and will carefully evaluate both internal and external candidates. In the meantime, sales will directly report to me in addition to my personal experience building high-performance sales organizations, we also have a deep sales-leadership bench most of whom I worked with before. We are also in the fortunate position of having a board member, John McMahon, who is probably the only individual who has been the head of sales for five different public software companies.

John and I worked together in leadership roles at two of those companies, so he is someone I know very well. John has been closely engaged with our sales team since joining the board a year and a half ago, and he will increase his level of involvement and support for the business during this transition.So in summary, the fourth quarter was a great finish to a record year for MongoDB. We're extending our product leadership, expanding our customer base, and increasing customer usage, all of which is helping to drive best-in-class revenue growth. And now to review the financials, let me turn the call over to Michael.

Michael Gordon -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Dev. As mentioned, we're very pleased with our fourth-quarter results, which capped a strong year for MongoDB. I'll begin with a detailed review of our fourth-quarter and full-year results and then finish with our outlook for the first quarter and full year fiscal 2019. Total revenue in the quarter was $45 million, up 50% year over year.

Subscription revenue was $41.9 million, up 54% year over year; and professional services revenue was $3.2 million, up 16% year over year. The strong performance of the business was broad-based during the quarter, with healthy new logo and up-sell activity among enterprise customers, as well as continued rapid adoption of Atlas. Atlas represented 11% of revenue during the quarter, up from 3% in the fourth quarter of last year, and representing an annualized revenue run rate of over $20 million. We continue to see strong global demand for our offerings.During the fourth quarter, we grew our customer base by approximately 800 customers, bringing our total customer count to over 5,700 customers, which is up from over 3,200 customers in the year-ago period and over 4,900 customers at the end of last quarter.

Of our total customer count, over 1,450 customers are direct customers, up more than 20% from the year-ago period. The growth in our total customer count is being driven in large part by Atlas, which had over 3,400 customers at the end of the quarter, compared to over 2,600 at the end of the third quarter. The growth in total customers includes growth in our Enterprise Advanced customers, as well as new Atlas customers. It is important to keep in mind that the growth in our Atlas customer count reflects both new customers to MongoDB, as well as existing Enterprise Advanced customers adding incremental Atlas workloads.

We also continue to see healthy expansion from existing customers. Our net ARR expansion rate remained above 120% in the fourth quarter. We ended the quarter with 354 customers with at least $100,000 in ARR and annualized MRR, which is up from 320 in the third quarter and up from 246 in the year-ago period. In addition, as evidence of our growing strategic value to customers, we now have over 20 customers with more than $1 million in annual recurring revenue, up from just two customers at that level two years ago.

Driving expanded adoption and spend among existing customers is a key component of our growth strategy and has been a consistent area of success. Even among our largest customers today, we believe that their spend with MongoDB represents a small fraction of their total database spend, which represents a large and attractive growth opportunity for us over time.Moving down the P&L, I will be discussing all of our results on a non-GAAP basis unless otherwise noted. Gross profit in the fourth quarter was $33 million, representing a gross margin of 73% and consistent with the year-ago period. We are pleased with the gross margin performance in the quarter, particularly in light of the growth in Atlas.

Recall, Atlas includes the underlying infrastructure and we've had success in reducing the infrastructure costs related to Atlas, resulting in improved Atlas gross margins. We still anticipate Atlas will be a modest headwind to gross margins overall, but we are tracking well relative to our original expectations. As a reminder, today Atlas represents incremental dollars of gross profit given that it's monetizing our free offering. Our operating loss was $21.1 million, or a negative 47% operating margin for the fourth quarter, which was a meaningful improvement from a negative 56% margin in the year-ago period.

We're pleased with our ability to generate this strong operating leverage while continuing to make investments to grow and expand our business. Net loss in the fourth quarter was $20.2 million, or $0.40 a share based on 50.3 million weighted average shares outstanding. Looking at our P&L results on a full-year basis, we generated a total revenue of $154.5 million, which was up 52% year over year. Gross profit was $112.9 million, or 73% gross margin, which is up 100 basis points year over year.

Finally, operating loss was $76 million, or a negative 49% operating margin, which was an approximately 1,500-basis-point improvement year over year.Turning to the balance sheet and cash flow, e ended the quarter with $279.5 million in cash, cash-equivalents, short-term investments, and restricted cash. Short-term deferred revenue was $114.5 million, up 45% year over year, while total deferred revenue of $137.4 million was up 47% year over year. We believe longer-term trends in deferred revenue are directionally correlated to the underlying momentum of our business. That said, as Atlas continues to become a larger portion of our business, it is important to appreciate that it is a usage-based model and does not generate meaningful deferred revenue.

Also as a reminder, Atlas is a consumption model that is typically billed monthly in arrears versus the annual and advance billing terms we typically see in our EA customers. Lastly, quarter-to-quarter comparisons of deferred revenue could also have some level of variability due to the timing of events that may occur. Operating cash flow in the fourth quarter was negative $7.7 million after taking into consideration approximately $400,000 in CAPEX. Free cash flow was negative $8.1 million for the quarter.I'd now like to turn to our outlook for the first quarter and full year fiscal 2019.

Beginning with the first quarter, we expect revenue to be in the range of $45.5 million to $46.5 million, including $3 million to $3.5 million of professional-services revenue. Non-GAAP loss from operations is expected to be in the range of $22 million to $21.5 million, and non-GAAP net loss per share to be in the range of $0.44 to $0.43 per share, based on 50.4 million weighted average shares outstanding. For the full fiscal year 2019, we expect revenue to be in the range of $211 million to $215 million. Non-GAAP loss from operations is expected to be in the range of $84 million to $82 million, and non-GAAP net loss per share to be in the range of $1.66 to $1.62 per share, based on 51.5 million weighted average shares outstanding.In closing, we finished a strong year with a strong quarter.

We're excited about the opportunities that lie ahead in fiscal 2019. And with that, we'd like to open up for questions. Operator?

Questions and Answers:

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. And we'll take our first question from Sanjit Singh with Morgan Stanley.

Sanjit Singh -- Morgan Stanley -- Vice President

Thank you for taking my question and congrats on the 50% growth this fiscal year. Very impressive. Maybe I just want to start with Dev on the ACID transactions subject. Can you give us some examples of what use cases are now available, or maybe types of applications that are now available that weren't before, prior to this introduction of 4.0?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So a good example would be, say, an e-commerce use case where say someone is ordering something, some widget, and associated with that order is some inventory-management system that has to deprecate the number of widgets that they are holding at a particular location. So in that situation, you want to have a transactional guarantee from ordering a particular widget, as well as decrementing the number appropriately in the inventory-management system. So those two data sources would be in two separate document collections and that's where ACID transactions would be, multidocument ACID transactions would be very helpful.

Sanjit Singh -- Morgan Stanley -- Vice President

That's very helpful. That was great. Makes a lot of sense. Michael in terms of, we're obviously seeing a lot of traction with Atlas, 11% of revenues.

Any sense of the pace of how that revenue contribution should evolve next year and beyond?

Michael Gordon -- Chief Financial Officer

So we're not giving a specific guidance number for Atlas in fiscal 2019, but we've been very pleased with the performance and the results of Atlas so far. I think if you think more holistically, though, what was our primary goal of the sales channel is getting customers to understand the value proposition of MongoDB. And as Dev mentioned, one of those three key pieces is the ability to run anywhere and so we're less focused with whether customers are deploying on-prem, in cloud, consuming in a subscription model or in a consumption model, but really we want to be focused on having MongoDB appreciated and permeated throughout the organization, and so that's really the key focus and so far the results show that we're having success with that.

Sanjit Singh -- Morgan Stanley -- Vice President

That makes a lot of sense. And then maybe just a two-part follow-up to Atlas. Any plans to release a more commercial version of Atlas? I know it's monetizing with the free offering today but any plans to release maybe an enterprise version of Atlas this fiscal year? And the second part of that question would be, if you can give us a sense of what the impact is on your invoice durations from Atlas constituting a bigger part of your bookings mix? Would be very helpful.

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure. So we definitely are, as part of our road map have a very robust road map in terms of adding new capabilities to Atlas. And so, unlike EA, where you get all the proprietary features literally out of the box, with Atlas, we will offer more of an a la carte model, where customers can pick and choose new features and capabilities that will be an upcharge to the base offering, so those could be things like security offerings around auditing, things like connecting to sophisticated key-management systems that a particular cloud may offer. Things around like enabling a connection to your BI tools, through a BI connector that will launch on Atlas.

So those would be just a small smattering of things that we have planned. We have a very robust plan but, unlike EA, where you basically get all the proprietary features as part of the licensing, with Atlas would be more of an a la carte model, which I think will attract customers, a broader set of customers who may pick and choose what capabilities they want now versus later. And I'll let Michael answer the second part of the question.

Michael Gordon -- Chief Financial Officer

So if you think about the models, over time they'll more converge even on their financial attributes, not just sort of on our product-functionality standpoint. Today, and historically there have been kind of two main aspects that are different. There is the margin profile and then they are sort of billing in the cash flow dynamics. I think that as evidenced by the result, we've continued to make progress and better progress than we had originally forecast on the Atlas margin.

There is more work that we want to do there and we'll continue to do, but so far we're very pleased with that progress. On the billings and cash-flow side, Atlas can be consumed in a couple of different ways: there is the self-service component to Atlas, which is very much sort of consumption-based and paid in monthly in arrears, and invoiced monthly in arrears, so that obviously has an effect on deferred revenue and ultimately the billings calculation [ph] that you all will do. But we're also seeing increasing traction for the sales force for applications where they don't need the full advantages, they don't need the full functionality of Enterprise Advanced being able to sell Atlas today, and some of those relationships are being struck on a paid-in-advance basis and others are being struck on a monthly invoicing basis. So there is sort of a mix across the board, if you will.

From a macro perspective, we don't see the increasing mix of Atlas changing our timing to get to free-cash flow positive. The self-serve customers due are monthly or in arrears, so that is different. And from sort of calculated billings, which we don't focus on as a management metric but you should understand there's certainly a billings and cash-flow impact of that in the short term.

Operator

For our next question, we'll go to Raimo Lenschow with Barclays

Raimo Lenschow -- Barclays -- Managing Director

Hey, congrats from me as well. Can you talk a little bit about the ACID compliance? It seems like it's a very important point as you mentioned on the call. How do you see that playing out in the market in terms of, I mean it's something that for a NewSQL database is kind of unusual, so how do you expect it to play out with customers? Are they kind of doing lots of tests now to see how they can use it? Do you see kind of a fast uptake? It's kind of unusual in development that I struggle a little bit to understand how it will impact your market.

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Sure. So customers actually are, have been incredibly excited by our announcement because, candidly, when you've grown up knowing databases and it's been drilled into your head that ACID transactions is an incredibly important feature that every database must have but you are very attracted by the power of MongoDB's document model and its distributive architecture, some people still feel a little nervous about using MongoDB for many use cases, even though they don't really need multi-document ACID transaction support. So the first thing this does, it just gives customers real peace of mind. When we made the announcement literally our salespeople got calls from lots of people.

We had meetings in a very short period time with CIOs. In fact, I had a meeting one CIO and he said, "Geez, if I had to rebuild my application portfolio, I'd never have to use another relational database." So the receptivity of that has been very strong and the reason it's really strong is that they literally can have their cake and eat it too. They can get all the data guarantees that they're used to with a legacy database with the power, the scalability, the availability, and the ability to be very sophisticated about where you put your data for things around GDPR and other compliance issues, or things around if you have a globally distributed user base, moving the data that's most relevant to them to a particular geography for low-latency access. That becomes incredibly powerful for customers.

And, as I mentioned earlier, there are some niche use cases where it actually becomes quite important. So now with the availability of multidocument ACID-transaction support, we believe that there is not one use case that we can't do better than a traditional database.

Raimo Lenschow -- Barclays -- Managing Director

OK, [Inaudible] that's pretty exciting actually. And can you talk a little bit too, I know we live in a world of [Inaudible] and as I listened to AWS at their conference in November, there was a lot more noise around NewSQL as well, but then I hear also now the partnership. Can you talk a little bit about how you see that playing out?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. Amazon is clearly an important partner of ours and so are the other cloud providers as well. The announcement we made with the AWS marketplace is that their customers can actually buy Atlas through the marketplace and use their own credits that they may have already kind of committed to with Atlas to apply toward Atlas, which is very compelling, as well as get billed directly by Amazon for those services. Moreover, as I mentioned in the prepared remarks, we also have joined their SaaS-alignment program, where their own salespeople get commissioned for selling Atlas.

So Amazon is a company that really allows its teams and its groups to operate fairly independently and autonomously. And so the [Inaudible] teams that are in the core hosting group, the people in the Lamda Group, there are people in a lot of other groups very excited about this. Clearly, the people who offer a competing database offering are not necessarily our partners, but overall, Amazon does a very good job of managing this relationship and we're very excited about the partnership with AWS.

Raimo Lenschow -- Barclays -- Managing Director

OK. And the last question for me. The increase of number of large deals seems really exciting. Can you talk a little bit about what you see in the field? Was that kind of a special year this year or -- because 20 versus two seems like a big jump?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I think it speaks to a couple of things. One, I think it speaks to the maturity of the product where people have seen the product evolve very quickly over the last few years and have been, are really comfortable using MongoDB for mission-critical workloads. It speaks to the sophistication of our sale force and our go-to-market model, where we can be more effective in capturing customers. And also speaks to our land-and-expand model, where once we get in, as Michael mentioned, we still have such a small percentage of the wallet share that those customers spend on database software and given the very clear and compelling benefits of MongoDB's features and architecture, our sales teams are being very aggressive in going after those existing workloads that are running on traditional databases.

The last thing I would say is that, given all this, we're actually getting bolder and being more aggressive in basically going higher earlier in the engagement cycle rather than just starting lower with, say, a department-level or certain business-level, business-unit-level kind of group. So that's also starting to pay dividends in terms of larger deal sizes. And while we don't disclose our deal size over time, they've definitely trended up and to the right and we feel that trend is not going to stop anytime soon.

Operator

We'll take our next question from Heather Bellini with Goldman Sachs.

Heather Bellini -- Goldman Sachs -- Managing Director

Most of my questions at this point have been answered but I wanted to dig a little deeper on what Raimo just said in regards to the $20 million with customers over $1 million in ARR. I'm just wondering, is there a commonality among those customers, whether it's by vertical that they're in or type of application that they're deploying, that you can share with us? And also just given the rapid adoption and uptake of Atlas, just wondering, I think you got asked a little bit earlier about the type of apps there but again, just wondering, if there is a commonality among the customers that you're seeing that you could share with us? Thank you.

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

The short answer is, there is no commonality in terms of the type of customers. We're seeing that in financial services, we're seeing that in telecom, we're seeing that in tech, we're seeing that across a broad set of vertical industries. I think the commonality is, frankly, the ability for us to go high and connect, and be able to clearly articulate the value of moving to a much more modern and cost-effective and flexible platform. And when that message resonates with the senior people in the organization, they tend to move much more quickly and aggressively, and tend to be more forceful in driving a lot of the migrations or the new use cases that we're going after.

So we as an organization are actually starting to institutionalize that across the entire sales force, where we believe that for the same amount of time and effort we can actually get a better yield out of sales [Inaudible] by starting higher in the organization. So that will take some time for all of our salespeople to get there, but we're very excited about the opportunity and it doesn't hurt to have a lot of great customer proof points. Some of the most sophisticated and demanding customers are using us for very, very important use cases, and so that gives customers even more confidence in going with MongoDB.

Michael Gordon -- Chief Financial Officer

I'd say the other thing, if you're looking for patterns, they would tend to be sort of expression of the strategic piece that Dev's talking about, it's the number of applications that a customer is running. Like, it's unusual that it would be a single application that is at that level of spend but it's that you've broken through from that initial application and you've become more strategic and are starting to permeate the balance of the organization, where you start to see the momentum and the relationships expand to that kind of size.

Heather Bellini -- Goldman Sachs -- Managing Director

Great. Thank you.

Operator

We'll take our next question from Richard Davis with Canaccord.

Richard Davis -- Canaccord Genuity -- Managing Director

Thanks very much. Actually, to corroborate your answer to Raimo's question, I was actually talking to a CTO who uses Google Dialogue Flow, NoSQL, and Atlas on AWS. So, I think you're right, it's a multifactor world for a long time. So one quick question, just a tactical question on technology, and just a real quick question on numbers.

So the tactical question, how hard it is to do kind of a, a stumbling block that you face, live migration of, to a new version of Mongo or from an old version to a new one, so how have you solved that question? And then on the numbers, just we ran back-of-the-envelope numbers, we get like an LTV-to-CAC of like 2-to-1 and I don't know if that's right because we're outsiders. Are you able to, you think you can get to 3-to-1, or what's your thoughts on that?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

On the first question, we actually, one of the design principles that's been from the get-go here at MongoDB is to really have customers not suffer any downtime. So whenever they migrate from one release of MongoDB to another release, we literally do it in a very seamless and graceful way. We do it node by node where we never have to take the application down, and we've also built tools to help customers do that in a way that helps them through the process, and we also have a professional-services team that can also help with planning and executing those migrations. But in general, it is far easier and less onerous process than doing it with a legacy database.

And then in terms of your second question, was, I forget [Crosstalk].

Michael Gordon -- Chief Financial Officer

Richard, here'd be my high-level -- obviously we don't give out specific numbers on that. I think what we shared in the context of the IPO was the contribution margin analysis, which showed some pretty attractive returns on the investments that we're making in sales and attractive paybacks, but I think importantly also showed significant growth even one, two years into a cohort's lifecycle, and so given the strong retention and the strong net ARR expansion rates, when we look at the unit economics, they're very, very attractive. I think the one thing that if you were to kind of take a snapshot in time, that burdens current point of view is, we still have a very high percentage of the sales force that is ramping and so those people are not productive, as we're in the early stages of trying to capitalize on the opportunity in front of us and so they would burden any kind of current-period analysis but even we do that analysis today, we're very pleased with the returns that we're getting on the investments that we're making in the sales and marketing efforts.

Richard Davis -- Canaccord Genuity -- Managing Director

Got it. That's super helpful. Thanks.

Operator

We'll go now to Pat Walravens with JMP Securities.

Patrick Walravens -- JMP Securities -- Managing Director

My first question, Dev, would be around your new head of sales and what you're looking for in that candidate? And then sort of related, what degree of changes do you have planned to territories and comp plans and things like that in fiscal 2019?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, the good news is that all the territory planning and the comp plans are already done and we typically start that process in Q4 and roll that out in early Q1. So that's already behind us and they tend to be some incremental changes around the edge of the plan, we get feedback on what happened last year, incorporate that with some of the goals that we're trying to drive this year. So, that's Point No. 1.

And Point No. 2, this is a pretty interesting business and a fairly unique business because we're selling to a very sophisticated technical audience but we also have to sell high, so we need people who know how to kind of clearly communicate the business value high but can also kind of engage with technical stakeholders, developers, architects, and so forth to really ensure that they are fully bought-in and understand and appreciate the power of our architecture. And then the other thing about our business, unlike, say, an application software or, frankly, even like hardware, is that this is a little bit of a conceptual sale in the sense that you can't really see, feel, or touch MongoDB. It's really driving an outcome, whether it's helping you build out an application or giving you insights into your business and so forth.

So you have to be comfortable selling, making a conceptual sale. So that's also an important skill. The third thing is that we have a very strong sales organization, the management bench is very deep. I was actively involved in helping to recruit senior leaders to the sales organization, both at Carlos's direct-report level and one level below.

So I have a lot of intimacy around the organization and I'm very proud of what we've built, so I don't feel the need to make any wholesale changes and so forth and I don't feel in a rush to go hire someone tomorrow. We want to be very thoughtful. As I mentioned, we're going to do a search and look at both internal and external candidates.

Patrick Walravens -- JMP Securities -- Managing Director

OK, great. And my second question is broader. I'd love to hear you just comment on sort of what you're seeing in terms of broader trends in the database market and how Mongo inserting itself into those conversations to sell. In particular, are people listening and shifting sort of these core database workloads?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So I would say that we're sort of seeing the beginnings of a real platform shift. What's interesting is that everyone's trying to use technology as an enabler to drive a competitive advantage and, invariably, they recognize that being able to leverage that data is an important part of being able to achieve that goal, but what they typically find is that data is not an enabler but a blocker, and it's a blocker because it's kind of trapped in legacy infrastructure, it's very solid across the organization, and so we're starting to see people really put a lot of focus around app modernization or legacy modernization. And that's also, obviously, buffeted by the desire to potentially move to the cloud, as well as a desire to roll out new use cases, new [Inaudible] around like machine learning, AI, even things like IoT, etc., are driving the need to be much more effective in using data.

And so we're starting to see a real focus on doing that. The second thing I would say is that there seems to be a real antipathy toward the existing incumbents. And so that's also driving a lot of senior-level stakeholders to contemplate going to a new vendor, and I think we are well-positioned. As you know, we have massive customer, sorry, developer adoption.

We're the only database company to go public in the last 20 years. We've raised a lot of capital to drive our business. And so we basically feel very well-positioned to pursue this opportunity, and that's resonating with customers.

Patrick Walravens -- JMP Securities -- Managing Director

Super helpful. Thank you.

Operator

[Operator Instructions]. For our next question, we'll go to Jack Andrews with Needham.

Jack Andrews -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Hi. Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to follow up on some of the other commentaries. You mentioned that you're engaging higher in the organization through your sales process.

So in these customer conversations do you still need to spend any time evangelizing the overall technology value proposition or do customers get it at this point? And how would that compare to these conversations maybe six or 12 months ago?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

It's a good question. I would say it kind of expands across the board, so we may be talking to customers who are very intimate with MongoDB and they are now just looking to really expand their use of MongoDB in a very aggressive way to all the way at the other end, where people have very limited understanding and so there needs to be a lot of education around the document model, the value of document model, the value of our distributor architecture and also the fact that they have a variety of options and actually that's one of the benefits of MongoDB, is that they have optionality to run themselves on-prem, run themselves on the cloud, or go to a more consumption-based model like Atlas, or do some hybrid combination thereof depending on what workloads they want to use where and when. But that can require some education. What we find is that if you go high and really link ourselves to some of the more important business initiatives -- people may be trying to improve the experience that they offer to their customers, people may be trying to develop new products and services -- and so if [Inaudible] more we can tie ourselves to some of the business initiatives that they try and drive, and explain to them how MongoDB can help address that problem, and then explain why we're the best solution to do so, that tends to accelerate deals as well as the size of those deals, and that's essentially what our sales team is starting to do now.

Jack Andrews -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Sure. Appreciate the color. And then, I guess, as a quick follow-up, could you just touch on the mainframe-modernization practice that Tata is building out? I mean, how prevalent do you think that this mainframe modernization can be as a use case moving forward?

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I think they are huge and I say that just, for a little bit of color, my background -- I used to be the president of BMC software. While I didn't run the mainframe business, I saw that business pretty up-close and I was always amazed how that business kind of chugged along. I think we're reaching an inflection point, frankly, for a number of reasons. One is that the mainframe-developer community is [Inaudible] retiring and so finding people who still want to build apps on the native platform, on the native mainframe, is hard to find.

IBM actually funded us to port MongoDB to the V-Series Linux, so as I mentioned in that one use case, we had a car rental company who had a very complex reservation application that was built on the legacy database that they ported to MongoDB on the mainframe today but then it gives them real optionality to then move off the mainframe to either go on-prem or ultimately to the cloud. We've seen customers like Barclays, who basically moved up mission-critical consumer applications in the U.K. off the mainframes to MongoDB and candidly, we're starting to see that all over the place. I think people are starting to realize that there's limited utility in continuing to invest in the mainframe, and so they're very open and very interested in trying to use MongoDB to help modernize that platform.

Jack Andrews -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking my questions.

Operator

That does conclude today's question-and-answer session. At this time, I'll turn the conference back to Mr. Dev Ittycheria for any closing remarks.

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Again, I want to thank you all for listening to our earnings call. We are really, really excited about what happened in Q4 but even more excited about the future. We feel like the combination of the product, the team, the market, and the larger secular trends are all in our favor, and we're very excited about a strong 2019. So thank you very much for your time and we'll speak to you soon.

Operator

That does conclude today's conference. Thank you for your participation. You may now disconnect.

Duration: 58 minutes

Call Participants:

Brian Denyeau -- ICR Investor Relations

Dev Ittycheria -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Michael Gordon -- Chief Financial Officer

Sanjit Singh -- Morgan Stanley -- Vice President

Raimo Lenschow -- Barclays -- Managing Director

Heather Bellini -- Goldman Sachs -- Managing Director

Richard Davis -- Canaccord Genuity -- Managing Director

Patrick Walravens -- JMP Securities -- Managing Director

Jack Andrews -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

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