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Automatic Data Processing, Inc. (ADP 0.21%)
Q4 2018 Earnings Conference Call
Aug. 1, 2018, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:

Operator

Good morning. My name is Kristy and I will be your conference operator. At this time, I would like to welcome everyone to ADP's Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2018 Earnings Call. I would like to inform you that this conference is being recorded and all lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. After the speaker's remarks, there will be a question and answer session. If you would like to ask a question during this time, simply press *1 on your telephone keypad. To withdraw your question, please press #. Thank you. I will turn the conference over to Mr. Christian Greyenbuhl, Vice President, Investor Relations. Please go ahead.

Christian Greyenbuhl -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Thank you, Kristy, and good morning, everyone. This is Christian Greyenbuhl, ADP's Vice President, Investor Relations, and I'm here today with Carlos Rodriguez, ADP's President and Chief Executive Officer, and Jan Siegmund, ADP's Chief Financial Officer. Thank you for joining us for our Fourth Quarter Fiscal 2018 Earnings Call and Webcast. During our call today, we will reference non-GAAP financial measures, which we believe to be useful to investors and that exclude the impact of certain items in the fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2018 as well as the fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2017. A description of these items and a reconciliation of these non-GAAP measures can be found in this morning's press release and in the supplemental slides on our Investor Relations website.

Today's call will also contain forward-looking statements that refer to future events, and as such, involve some risk. We encourage you to review our filings with the SEC for additional information on factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from our current expectations. I would also like to note that as we outlined during our recent Investor Day, beginning with the first quarter of fiscal 2019, we will be making some changes to our disclosures and reporting. You will find an explanation of the changes in the Financial Outlook and Additional Materials sections of our Investor Day presentation. Accordingly, our fiscal 2019 outlook reflects these changes and, to ensure comparability, includes all the necessary adjustments to fiscal 2018 results.

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For the fourth quarter and full year fiscal 2018, our results and related discussion do not reflect these changes and are therefore on the same basis of presentation as our previous quarters. We recognize the complexity of this transition, and therefore, to bridge the two, we have included select fiscal 2018 pro forma financials and metrics in the appendix to our earnings presentation, found on our Investor Relations website. As always, please do not hesitate to reach out should you have any questions regarding these new metrics and disclosures. Now, let me turn the call over to Carlos.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, Christian. Good morning, everyone. This morning, we reported our fourth-quarter fiscal 2018 results with revenue of $3.3 billion, up 8% reported and 6% organic constant currency. We ended the year with total revenue of $13.3 billion, up 8% reported and 6% organic constant currency.

We're very happy to report our new business bookings grew 18% in the fourth quarter and 8% for the year, both ahead of our expectations. We saw strong performance across all of our businesses this quarter, which we believe serves as further validation of the renewed momentum within our sales force following fiscal 2017. We were also pleased to see our new logo strategy continue to show results, with double-digit new client growth this quarter and nearly double-digit growth for the full year.

Now, let me spend a few moments on the recent performance of our PEO. Revenues for the year grew 12%, in line with our expectations, while average worksite employees grew 9% to $504,000.00. After a softer third-quarter bookings and retention performance, we took certain actions to address our internal lead flows that we believe will help drive a reacceleration next year, and we are pleased to see positive signs of this working this quarter, with double-digit bookings growth and solid double-digit new local growth.

Similar to last quarter, our PEO bookings and retention were strong in the down market, but we have continued to see some pressure from larger client losses in the midmarket. However, our competitive position remains strong and the volatility in our midmarket retention is not new and follows a record high retention in fiscal 2017. We have previously outlined the volatility of retention within the PEO, and particularly, the impact of the timing of larger client losses.

As we work to overcome some of these challenges from the second half of fiscal 2018, we continue to believe that the PEO represents a significant opportunity for us. With nearly $1 billion of revenues excluding pass-throughs and very healthy margins, we remain excited about the future of the PEO.

Now, I'd like to focus on the strong progress of our investments to improve the client experience. With our midmarket migrations behind us and our service alignment initiative nearing completion, we are happy to see a continued overall improvement in our client satisfaction scores this quarter. In particular, we were very happy to see our midmarket scores return back to levels last seen in early fiscal 2015, and we are confident our recent service initiatives will help drive continued improvements across our entire portfolio.

Our Employer Services revenue retention for the quarter and for the full year were both in line with expectations. As you know, on a quarterly basis, this metric can be volatile, and this quarter, we saw a decline of 120 basis points. However, more importantly, for the full year, we were pleased to see continued positive year-over-year momentum as our overall annual retention increased by 50 basis points to 90.4% and continues to benefit from the improvements in client satisfaction that I just outlined. Going forward, we will be guiding to annual retention and Jan will take you through some of these changes later.

In early June, we hosted an Investor Day where we discussed in detail our strategic vision, transformation initiatives, and financial outlook for the next three years. We received a lot of positive feedback, and for those of you who may have missed it or would like to revisit it, the materials and the video replay have been posted to our Investor Relations website.

Our goal for the event was to outline our plans for driving sustainable long-term profitable growth and provide a deep dive into our product strategy and the actions we have been taking to accelerate our transformation initiatives. Through our investments in product, service, and distribution, we will continue to build on our momentum. We are shaping the HCM industry through organic innovations, such as our next-gen platforms, as well as our strategic acquisitions, such as Global Cash Card and WorkMarket.

Our leading position in the global HCM market continues to represent a significant opportunity for us, and earlier today, we were proud to announce the acquisition of Celergo, a respected provider of international payroll management services. Celergo complements and augments our current multinational offerings through the combination of a proprietary cloud-based platform and a broad local partner network across 150 countries, and we couldn't be more excited. With these investments, we are expanding on our position as the only global HCM provider that can help businesses address their full hire-to-retire needs across their entire workforce, be that traditional or freelance.

We also continue to engage with a number of key partners, including our recent partnership with Microsoft to bring together Workforce Now and Microsoft Dynamics 365 Business Central and innovators like Slack and Zip Recruiter. As the world of work continues to evolve rapidly, we continue to focus on staying ahead of the curve.

Last quarter, with the assistance of the transformation office, we finalized plans for a voluntary early retirement program. We were pleased to start fiscal 2019 through a successfully managed first wave of transitions, and we remain focused on executing this initiative in an orderly and timely manner. As a result, we recognized a non-GAAP charge of $337 million in the fourth quarter and anticipate annualized pre-tax savings of approximately $150 million, with about two-thirds of the anticipated benefit expected in fiscal 2019.

All this growth and success would not be possible without the hard work and dedication of our associates, who continue to be an integral part of our efforts to drive change and ensure our successful transformation. And, with that, I'll turn over the call to Jan for his commentary on the fourth-quarter results and fiscal 2019 outlook.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Carlos, and good morning, everyone. As Carlos mentioned, we finished the year with solid momentum driven by better than expected consolidated new business bookings growth of 8% to $1.8 billion for fiscal year 2018. ADP's reported revenues also continued to show improvements relative to our expectations and grew 8% in fiscal year 2018, or 6% organic constant currency, supported by our continued improvement in our employer services retention.

On a reported basis, earnings before income taxes decreased 14%, while our adjusted earnings before interest and taxes -- or, adjusted EBIT -- increased 8%, including approximately a 1-point lift from FX and 1 point of pressure from the impact of our fiscal-year 2018 acquisitions. Adjusted EBIT margin was up about 10 basis points compared to fiscal-year 2017 and was slightly above expectations covered at our Investor Day despite higher selling expenses due to the strong bookings performance while also being well ahead of our original expectations set at the beginning of the year.

Our performance benefited from continued improvements in our infrastructure and sales spend and from the successful execution of certain transformation initiatives that we outlined during our Investor Day. We achieved all of this while also overcoming about 30 basis points of pressure from our fiscal-year 2018 acquisitions.

Adjusted diluted earnings per share grew 18% to $4.35, and in addition to our revenue and margin performance, was aided by a lower effective tax rate and fewer shares outstanding compared with a year ago. Our adjusted effective tax rate for the year was 26.1% and benefited from corporate tax reform. In addition to delivering this solid operating performance, we have paid about $1.1 billion in dividends and returned about $1 billion through share repurchases for fiscal-year 2018.

Let me now take you through our segment results. In our Employer Services segment, revenues grew 5% for the year, 4% organic constant currency, in line with expectations. Our same-store pace for control metric in the U.S. grew 2.7% for the fiscal year. Average client fund balances grew 6% compared to a year ago. This growth was driven by a combination of wage inflation and growth in our pace for control, offset by pressure from lower state unemployment insurance collections and corporate tax reform.

Outside North America, our solutions have continued to perform well, largely helped by the continued strong performance of our multinational solutions, which serve businesses of all sizes. Employer Services' margin increased about 10 points for the fiscal year and included approximately 40 basis points of pressure from the impact of acquisitions.

PEO revenues grew 12% for the year, with average worksite employees growing 9% to 504,000 employees. Following the slowdown last quarter in the 50-employee-and-above market, we were pleased to see some recovery in our PEO new business bookings as we started to take certain actions during the fourth quarter. The PEO segment margins increased 10 basis points for the year. Overall, we generated significant momentum over the course of the year. The actions that we're taking have helped us to expand our margins, leading to better than expected performance in fiscal-year 2018 despite some incremental pressure from our recent acquisitions, and more importantly, we continue to make important investments into our business to set us up for the future.

Let us now move to our fiscal-year 2019 outlook. As a reminder, my discussions of our results for fiscal-year 2018 was on the same basis of accounting as our previous quarters. In contrast, our fiscal-year 2019 outlook includes the expected impacts of ASC 606 for both fiscal years 2019 and 2018 as well as the expected impact from certain other adjustments we outlined for you earlier. As you look to adjust your models, you should find all the necessary details in the appendix of our quarterly presentation and of our earnings release. Both are available on our Investor Relations website.

With that said, I'll first provide our consolidated fiscal-year 2019 outlook and then focus on the segments, with some added color on some of the more nuanced changes. We anticipate total revenue growth of 5% to 7% for fiscal year 2019. We expect adjusted EBIT margin expansion of 100 to 125 basis points, including approximately 20 basis points of pressure from acquisitions. As you can see from this morning's press release and the appendix of our investor presentation, this margin expansion would have been about 30 basis points higher on an ASC 605 basis.

We expect an effective tax rate and adjusted effective tax rate of 25.1% at fiscal year 2019 as compared to our prior estimated adjusted effective tax rate of 25% to 26%. All this drives anticipated growth of adjusted diluted earnings per share of 13% to 15% compared with the $4.53 in fiscal year 2018. Similar to our margin expansion, this growth would have been higher on an ASC 605 basis for about 2%. Regarding shareholder distribution, as usual, it remains our intent to continue our return of excess cash to shareholders, subject to market conditions.

Now, for some more detail on the segments, we expect 4% to 6% revenue growth in our Employer Services segment, which includes anticipated pace for control growth of about 2.5% and now benefits from growth and interest income at actual rates, reflecting one of the changes we made to our segment reporting. We expect Employer Services new business bookings growth of 6% to 8% as we continue to build positive momentum from our investments in headcount while driving improvements and productivity from our product and channel strategies.

This new metric is specific to the Employer Services segment, and we hope that you also use the materials from our Investor Day that will help you with your models. You will recall that this is a shift from our prior worldwide new business bookings guidance, which included sales for the PEO segment. To further help you with your models, we have given you some historical quarterly growth comparisons in this morning's earnings schedules.

Let's now move to the Employer Services revenue retention. As Carlos mentioned, our Employer Services revenue retention for fiscal year 2018 was 90.4%. For fiscal year 2019, we're expecting our revenue retention to increase about 25 to 50 basis points compared to the 90.4%, driven in part by expected improvement in our mid- and up market, supported by the completion of our midmarket migrations a few months ago.

Since this is the first time we're guiding to retention, I'll provide a little extra color. We generally have several months of visibility for clients leaving in the mid- and up market and less direct visibility in the down market, as clients do not provide such much notice. In addition to this direct visibility, we look at trends in our NPS scores as a leading indicator, and that helps us directionally anticipate where retention is heading. Also, because our service teams work closely with our clients, we monitor various other metrics and operating statistics that we try to leverage when forecasting our anticipated losses.

Lastly, there's some mix impact to retention over time, as our different products can have very different retention rates because of the market segment characteristics, and so, we take into account our anticipated revenue growth in these various offerings. All this is to say that we have generally some visibility where retention will end up for the year, but given the breadth of markets and clients that we serve, certain factors can ultimately move the needle, particularly the timing of larger losses. We expect margin in our ES segment to expand by 150 to 175 basis points, inclusive of 30 basis points of acquisition drag, and by way of comparison, the impact of adopting ASC 606 to our ES margin expansion exceeds the 30-basis-point impact on ADP's consolidated margin expansion.

Our margin continues to benefit from a combination of operating leverage as well as some of the discrete initiatives that we spoke about at our Investor Day. For example, our voluntary early retirement program will be a key contributor this year, and as we expect minimal dual operation expenses related to our service alignment initiatives in fiscal year 2019.

With that said, let's now touch on the PEO, which also includes a number of moving pieces. We expect 7% to 9% PEO revenue growth in fiscal year 2019, driven by 7% to 8% growth in average worksite employees. As Carlos mentioned, we saw progress in our PEO bookings this quarter and we have continued to make certain additional targeted adjustments to our PEO distribution process. We believe these will help drive a gradual reacceleration in worksite employee growth. We also anticipate 5% to 7% growth in PEO revenues excluding zero-margin healthcare benefit pass-throughs. This, too, is a new revenue disclosure that we discussed at our Investor Day, and I want to remind you that it does include revenues from workers' compensation and state unemployment insurance premiums.

As you might infer from our guidance, we expect some drag next year from lower workers' compensation and SUI rates, which impacts our revenue but is ultimately a positive development for our clients and for our PEO prospects. For PEO margin, we expect 75 to 50 basis points of margin decrease. Among the changes we made to our segments is the inclusion of ADP Indemnity into the PEO segment earnings, which we believe enhances our disclosures.

As a reminder, ADP Indemnity is our captive workers' compensation insurer, and the results of which used to be accounted for in the other segment. Including Indemnity into the PEO segment adds no revenues but does impact margins. ADP Indemnity uses a third-party actuary to assist with the loss reserve estimation process, and changes in the assessment of workers' compensation loss reserves may at times introduce a little bit of noise to the PEO margins now that it is included in our segment results.

More specifically, as we regularly adjust our loss revenue estimates, we have realized some P&L benefits over the last few years, including fiscal year 2018. However, we typically do not forecast any material change to these reserves going into a fiscal year, and as a result, for fiscal year 2019, this results in more than 75 basis points of anticipated grow-over pressure for the PEO segment margins. Excluding this grow-over pressure, we would have otherwise expected our margins to be slightly positive.

Moving on to the remainder of our outlook, we expect interest on client funds to increase approximately $80 million to $90 million, driven by higher rates and anticipated client funds balance growth of 3% to 4%. We expect our total impact from the client funds extended investment strategy to be up about $60 million to $70 million. The details of this forecast can be found in the supplemental slides on our Investor Relations website.

Overall, I think you can tell we are happy with our performance and with the momentum that we are building from our investments in the business. At our Investor Day, we set margin and EPS target ranges throughout fiscal year 2021, and we will continue to execute toward these goals, with fiscal year 2019 being a step in the right direction. So, with that, I will turn it over to the operator to take your questions.

Questions and Answers:

Operator

Thank you. If you wish to ask a question, please press *1. Please be aware of the allotted time for questions. Please ask one question with a brief follow-up. We will take our first question from the line of Jim Schneider with Goldman Sachs. Your line is open.

Jim Schneider -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I was wondering if you could maybe comment on the retention decline you saw in the quarter. Clearly, as you got to the end of the midmarket transition, we would have expected some impact there, but can you point out other areas of the business that might have seen a little bit of pressure there, or was it purely in the midmarket ES part?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

We actually sad -- so, we still feel pretty good about our momentum when you look across the different businesses with retention and you look at our client satisfaction scores. As usual, there was some noise from a couple of large losses, so we did have a particularly large loss in what we call our comp solutions business, which really provides stand-alone services. So, there was a company that we were providing stand-alone services to that was a relatively large revenue loss, and that had an impact on the numbers.

So, I guess it's the old story -- this happens every several quarters -- that we have one or two large losses that may move the needle, and I think that's what happened this quarter because we still feel pretty good. In full transparency, our midmarket retention actually was pretty good, and it's because we did finish the migrations, so, even though we had some losses toward the end of the migrations, in relation to the size of the business, there were few enough left that even though we lost some at the end, we still now are seeing what we were hoping to see, which is our strategic platform has higher retention rates, and as the amount of business on the old platform goes to zero, you see the math just work in your favor, and so, I think we have nothing but positive things to report about our midmarket retention in the fourth quarter.

Jim Schneider -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

That's helpful color, thank you. And then, maybe looking forward, in terms of the new business bookings outlook, can you maybe talk about some of the products where you're seeing the most traction? Specifically, as we think about the cadence of bookings for the year, is it fair to say there's a little bit more weighting in the first half of the year versus the second half of the year relative to your outlook? Any color on that would be helpful.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

I can take the sales outlook. As we indicated, the momentum that we experienced on new business bookings for the fourth quarter was very broad-based across all market segments and good momentum for a lot of products. So, the overall forecast that we have for ourselves continues to be that all business units will experience solid, healthy growth, maybe a little bit more strengthened down market, but overall, I would say a very balanced portfolio. We do have a little bit of selling season, but the quarters are actually fairly balanced.

It's like different market segments have different selling seasons, and we experience at times at year end a big push toward the end, which has to do with our incentive systems, I believe, but nothing unusual relative to our sales distribution effort. But, we're feeling really good, well-staffed, the sales force is excited about the core product, and it's excited about the product additions we have brought with new acquisitions to the table, so we're confident about sales.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Adding to Jan's comment, I always worry when we have the strong finish, as Jan was alluding to, we typically have incentives that drive very strong performance toward the end. That tends to happen to be magnified when you already are having a very strong year, and I think we definitely had a good year, but as you know, the first half was still a challenge for us, and it was really in the third quarter where we picked up the momentum, and then, in the fourth quarter, that momentum accelerated. So, we did have a strong finish. I think people were racing toward those accelerators, but again, this is more art than science in terms of trying to get a feel for where we are, but I would echo Jan's comment that we're feeling pretty good, at least about the start. The momentum carrying into the first quarter is good.

Jim Schneider -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from David Togut of Evercore ISI. Your line is open.

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Managing Director

Thank you. Good morning. Could you talk about some of the initiatives in the PEO business to accelerate lead flow and bookings growth? And then, in connection with that, what do you see as the main drivers for the weakness in the first place? Is this more of a competitive issue, or are all these within your own control?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

We looked at the balance of trade numbers to really see if there's any kind of competitive issues, and we didn't see anything there throughout the whole year, so after the first half, we started looking back to see is there something typically -- when you don't see any issues that are competitive, or the economy, or otherwise, there's usually -- in my experience at ADP and taught to me by my predecessors -- there's usually something around our incentives internally, because as you know, whether it's in the PEO or other parts of our business, our incentives are quite aligned to drive business to our most profitable, highest-revenue sources, which are the PEO, and we get about 50% of our business from internally generated leads.

So, that system and incentives of lead flow is very important, and we did make some changes that I'm ashamed to say I wasn't 100% aware of that I think created a distraction, let's just say, to lead flow, particularly for midmarket clients into the PEO, so we readjusted those incentives -- I believe it was in the third quarter, toward the end of the third quarter of this fiscal year -- and we already saw in the fourth quarter double-digit growth in bookings in the PEO. We don't want to split it in terms of how much was up market and down market, but suffice to say we had strong double-digit sales growth and bookings growth in the PEO, and the midmarket contributed to that, without getting too specific.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Maybe one other pointer is that the unit growth of new business bookings in the PEO actually accelerated meaningful and was in the high double digits and the high teens, which means we had really an overall acceleration, which bodes well for competitiveness. It just happened to be that we had to fix this midmarket situation, so I think that bodes well overall.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I think Jan's comment about double-digit unit growth is for the full year. It's in addition to my comment about the fourth quarter. I think it's another triangulation to get to the conclusion -- right now, our conclusion is that there's no competitive issue.

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Managing Director

Understood, thank you. And then, just a quick follow-up. What is your expectation for FY '19 in the PEO for workers' compensation reserve treatment? Would you expect reserves to go up, to go down, and what impact on earnings will that have versus what you saw in FY '18?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

A couple points from a historical perspective: We started using reinsurance -- as you know, we disclose all this in our 10-K, and remember, the amount of reserves we have is related to years back between -- I believe it's 2004 and 2012, if I'm not mistaken, or 2013. From that point forward, we have less volatility even though there is some risk-sharing collar, if you will, but it's relatively limited. So, this issue about reserves is historical, but fortunately, we have seen overall positive development in the last several years. And so, '18 is not the first year that we've had a benefit from what we'd call release of reserves, if you will.

Now, some of that is possibly related to the economy, it could be related to healthcare -- there's a lot of things that go in. Workers' compensation is a long-tail insurance, so there is quite a bit of volatility in those numbers themselves. But, over the last four years, we've consistently had benefits, if you will. In '18, it was a particularly large benefit, which is why in his comments, Jan was explaining that we have a grow-over issue.

As you can imagine, we can't plan for the release of workers' compensation reserves because that has to do with actuarial work that gets done -- it actually gets done on a quarterly basis, and we adjust those reserves on a quarterly basis, but we continue to have favorable loss development, which is what causes the release of these reserves. We should have some benefit in '19; we just don't believe that it could be as large as it was in '18 and don't have that planned currently.

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Managing Director

Just a quick follow-up -- what was the EPS benefit in 2018 from the reserve release?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

It's really not significant enough to -- we had lots of other things that were of similar size. For example, go in the other direction. So, we had acquisition drag, our migrations expense went up by almost $20 million for the year, so the issue is that because we have segment reporting, we're giving you margins at the segment level and we're increasing our disclosure, we're just giving you a lot of extra color, but we're not trying to imply that we made our numbers or that our EPS was driven by the reserves. It just happens to be that these are the sizes of PEO -- when you exclude pass-throughs in the PEO and you look at that margin, it's a large business, but the release of those reserves, I think, can impact those margins from quarter to quarter and from year to year. But, don't read anything more into it other than at the segment level, which is what we're trying to give you color on.

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Managing Director

Understood. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Jason Kupferberg of Bank of America. Your line is open.

Jason Kupferberg -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Thanks, guys. Good morning. I just wanted to come back on PEO because it seems like for fiscal '19, that's where there's some delta between what the street was looking for and what you're guiding to. So, there's some deceleration baked in here, obviously, relative to fiscal '18 growth levels. Can you just walk us through the pieces there? Your qualitative commentary actually sounds more upbeat in terms of some of the newfound bookings momentum in PEO, but obviously, the revenue guide of 7% to 9% -- so, just explain to us the pieces of deceleration that seem to be embedded in the guide there.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I think there are a couple different pieces. One is the momentum in terms of underlying worksite employee growth, which I think we've been talking about for the last -- we talked about it the last quarter, I think. It was also a focus item and you guys had questions about it then. Again, no different than the rest of our recurring revenue businesses, if we believe that -- and, we do believe that we're optimistic about next year around new business bookings and retention. It's not something that turns around in July or in August. It's a gradual lift back up over the course of the year. So, I think some of it is just the core slowdown in worksite employee growth, which has gone from somewhere in the low teens to 9%. I think that's how we just said we ended the year.

So, that's one factor, and the other factor, which is actually more significant if you're focused on top-line growth, which I would be careful about doing in the PEO, is what happens with pass-throughs. And so, as Jan was alluding to, we have an issue with workers' compensation and SUI rates coming down, which is, frankly, a huge positive for us from a selling standpoint, it's a positive for our clients, it's a positive for retention, but that puts pressure on revenues.

And then, the biggest factor really is benefits. When you look at top-line overall revenue in the PEO, we've had years -- particularly as ACA was starting to kick in, in the early years of the Affordable Care Act, we had higher participation rates and benefits, so you had not only inflation of benefit rates, but you had higher participation of benefits, and by "participation," we mean the number of worksite employees -- the percentage of worksite employees taking benefits. So, that was adding and actually putting downward pressure on margins because it was putting upward pressure on revenue growth.

We now have the opposite effect, which is lower participation on benefits plans -- it's been a trend that's been in place for six quarters or so. We've been watching it quarterly. We think that it probably has something to do with ACA because you had people gearing up at first for ACA, and then you had implementation of ACA, and although technically, many of the rules haven't changed around ACA, some of it has been defanged, and you're getting the outcome that you would expect if you are taking away laws and rules that encourage or force people to have benefits coverage. And so, we are seeing -- again, this is not a dramatic drop in benefits participation, but it's enough to pressure the revenue component of overall PEO revenues, which is the largest component of total revenue.

Jason Kupferberg -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Okay. That's helpful. Just to switch gears to the EPS growth outlook for fiscal '19, we're talking about 13% to 15%. It sounds like ASC 606 cost you 2 points, so we're really looking at 15% to 17% if we were in an ASC 605 world. And so, I'm just looking at that 15% to 17% relative to the 16% to 19% CAGR from the Analyst Day. Do we need to recast that 16% to 19% in an ASC 606 context? I think a lot of people are just trying to think about this apples to apples versus -- you were living in the 605 world at the time of the Analyst Day, but now, you're obviously living in the 606 world.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I'll have Jan touch on that in a second, but I should have finished my PEO thought because I don't think I completed the answer to your question. The reason we remain bullish about everything I just said about benefits -- I'm trying to give you color and explain what's happening in the revenue growth numbers and in the noise. But, in the PEO, the most important thing for us is profit per employee, and that is something that we continue to see reasonable growth in, and so, the noise around margins and around pass-through revenue growth is just not really the right way to look at value creation because as we now answer your question about EPS, the most important thing for us is contribution to EPS.

So, the only place where we're unhappy about the PEO is that we had a slight deceleration in worksite employee growth, which obviously leads to slight decrease in overall growth of profit, assuming all other things being equal. So, that's a fair issue that's related to our net new business -- to bookings and retention -- which we feel better about now going into the new year. But, all the other stuff is just noise, and I think the important thing is to remember that every time we move a client to the PEO or a worksite employee onto the PEO from a pay, it adds profit to the company, and so, we have an incentive -- we're highly incented to do that as much as possible.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Relative to the impact of 605 and 606 to our medium-term expectations regarding EPS, as you can deduct from our disclosures, the impact of 606 in fiscal year '18 was a little bit higher than we had initially anticipated, and it's a little bit higher also, I think, in '19, actually. But, we have no outlook relative to its impact that changed compared to our Investor Day schedule that we provided for the outer years. So, what that means is we finished '18 a little bit ahead of our own expectations, so we have really terrific momentum going on, and we feel '19 is in line and contributing to our overall goals, so we're not really changing our expectations for the medium run.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

I would say if anything, we feel like the finish we had for '18 gives us a lot of confidence about the momentum we have to be able to deliver on the commitments that we outlined at Investor Day, so I think the answer would be absolutely not, that we actually feel better. I realize that the guidance in the discussion we had were about '19 through '21, but when you finish '18 ahead of where you thought you were going to finish, we'd like to get a little bit of credit for that because what we're trying to get to is higher overall margins, higher overall profit, higher overall EPS, and I think whether it happens in '18, '19, '20, or '21, those are all good things for us.

Jason Kupferberg -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Agreed. Clearly, absolute levels of EPS are being guided above the street, so, kudos to you guys on that. Thanks for the color.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Bryan Keane with Deutsche Bank. Your line is open.

Bryan Keane -- Deutsche Bank -- Managing Director

Hi, guys. Just wanted to ask a little bit about the top-line guidance. Employer Services at 4% to 6% -- I know it's been running about 4% organic. What's the path there to push it up toward the higher end? I think acquisitions and FX probably cancel each other out, so, just thinking about what would cause the push toward 6%.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

So, one of the things that is helping, which is obviously the positive, is we clearly see what appears to be -- because of the recurring revenue nature of our business, when you have the challenges like we had with retention and new business bookings, it causes a lot of pressure on the core growth on an organic services, whether it's Employer Services or the PEO. I would say that the middle of fiscal year '18 appears to be the trough. Certainly, as of today, it's the trough. You don't know a year from now, when you look back, if that will be accurate, but today, it looks like the trough.

And so, we see clear acceleration of the net of our new business -- what we call a net new business, which is the difference between our starts that result from sales and our losses. And so, part of the acceleration in Employer Services is around a half a point, if you will, of acceleration, which is good in our world. When I look back to '12, '13, '14, '15, shortly after I became CEO, we had really great momentum around bookings like we have now, we had good retention, which we have now, and we added between a half a point to 1 point of core growth, if you will, to the business.

So, that's my hope now for the next two or three years, and I think '19 is the first year where we have that baked into the plan because we have the good bookings and we have a small improvement in retention also planned. I think Jan actually -- when he talked about retention, he mentioned something about 2018 and 2019. So, 2018 retention was 90.4%, and we're expecting a 20- to 25-basis-point improvement over that in '19. So, I'm sorry, that's one of the factors. We also did include -- we are including our client fund interest income now as part of the Employer Services segment, and as you know, that's improving and growing, so that's probably helping a half to three-quarters of a point, so I think that's how you get to the numbers you're asking about.

Bryan Keane -- Deutsche Bank -- Managing Director

Okay, great. On the PEO side, I know on the Analyst Day, we talked about 11% to 14% longer-term growth. Is there a path to get back to that as well, or are some of these changes that we've talked about today for the lower growth more permanent in nature?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

That's a good question. We looked at that yesterday and it's a hard path for sure, but the question is do we really -- is that really -- even though we provided the guidance and we don't like backing off of guidance, as I just talked about previously, that top-line revenue growth from the PEO is not really the most important number to look at from a value creation standpoint, which is why we're providing other disclosures around the PEO now to help with that.

But, clearly, it could happen because as we now were surprised by the deceleration in benefits revenue and the deceleration in workers' comp and SUI, you could have -- in '20 or '21 -- healthcare inflation, which is not out of the realm of possibility, that then gets us to that guidance. But, frankly, if we got back into that range, it probably wouldn't change the EPS, and it would change the margins, but it wouldn't change EPS and it wouldn't change dollars of profit for the company because what that's driven by is the growth of worksite employees and by retention in new business bookings.

Bryan Keane -- Deutsche Bank -- Managing Director

Okay, helpful. Thanks so much.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Tien-Tsin Huang of JPMorgan. Your line is open.

Tien-Tsin Huang -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Thank you. Just wanted to test your confidence in replenishing the backlog or the pipeline given the strong bookings in the fourth quarter. Any change in sales force growth or productivity assumptions? How is the pricing situation looking? And, maybe if you could comment on what segments might lead or present a challenge for you in fiscal '19 bookings. Lot of questions there, sorry.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

We have strong confidence. I would say that our confidence is strong in continuing the momentum into the first quarter. I think given the way new business bookings work, for us to sit here and say -- we're obviously providing what we think are very confident numbers about the full year, but trying to look forward to the fourth quarter, hopefully, you're not asking about that. So, if you're just asking coming off of the fourth quarter, how do you feel going into the new year, I would reiterate: Strong. We feel very strong confidence in our momentum right now. In terms of -- I think Jan said in his comments I think the strength we see is really across the board.

So, I think all of the business units, frankly, are performing well from a new business bookings standpoint. It took some time for our sales force to -- I know it seems like a long time ago, but three or four years ago, everyone was talking about compliance for HCA, and increased government regulation, and new laws around overtime, and so forth, and so, it was a fairly large shift in climate that required a retooling of a sales force that had been focused more on selling additional business and selling additional modules to one that was focused on selling logos.

And, to the credit of the sales force, which is really the greatest sales force in the world, it made a massive turnaround, and now, I think close to 60% of our new business bookings come from new business and new logos versus probably 40% at the low point, when we had Affordable Care Act giving us that tailwind. So, it was a pretty massive retooling, and it took some time. We had to change incentives, we had to change focus, and as usual, they came through, and you can see the results there.

Tien-Tsin Huang -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Good to hear.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

A good part of the new logo growth acceleration, which I think is a good measure of the competitiveness in the new market is that it was strong across our segment. So, we saw new logo growth as we sold to new clients in all segments, which was a particular focus, as we talked about in the Investor Day, and those playing off should give us a good run rate going forward.

Tien-Tsin Huang -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

All right, thanks for that. My quick follow-up -- just on Global Cash Card and the Wisely app, is the rollout there still on track? Can we still expect to see something in the market by year end? I ask because it seems like there's a lot of activity in that in-market.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Not to steal the thunder of the product teams, but Global Cash Card has a lot of momentum. We're already selling the Global Cash Card product, but also, new products are coming out, and both acquisitions are meeting their milestone, so we continue to be very excited about them.

Tien-Tsin Huang -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from James Berkley with Wolfe Research. Your line is open.

James Berkley -- Wolfe Research -- Vice President

Thanks for the time. Just to start, just wondering what were some of those incentive changes that hurt PEO growth that were referred to in your earlier remarks, Carlos, and if the rebound you saw in the fiscal fourth quarter holds, would that not imply that your guidance for '19 on the PEO side could be conservative?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, I don't think that's fair. I think we would have taken that into account. It'd be nice to think that we had -- we really try to be pretty transparent in terms of providing guidance, and we take all factors into consideration, including momentum, including recent results. So, there's some fairness to that in the sense that the PEO plan was built during the fourth quarter while we were experiencing some of this improvement.

On the other hand, if you look at the trajectory, which is now different, the trajectory was down if you looked at the second and third quarter. We would have had a hard time building a great plan, so I think the good results in the fourth quarter just added confidence, if you will, to a turnaround that we were planning for anyway and that we were trying to position ourselves for. So, all things being equal, as with all of our other guidance, I think we're giving you what we really believe is achievable, including in the PEO. And, I'm sorry, the first part of your question was...?

James Berkley -- Wolfe Research -- Vice President

Some of the changes that hurt PEO growth that you guys ended up reversing.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I don't want to be mysterious or complicated. So, we have other -- our sales forces have incentives that we can vary at times. For example, our midmarket sales force has an incentive to provide leads to the PEO, and they get a certain percentage sales credit, which then drives commissions. By the way, the sales credit is probably more important in some cases than the commission just because of the culture of our sales force, but either way, we have these incentives in place, and if there are other products that someone is -- that we're trying to sell, and we provide -- we may not necessarily change the incentive to the PEO to drive leads to the PEO, but if we change an incentive to provide leads somewhere else, it may lead the sales force somewhere else, which is what happened.

I don't want to get into too many specifics, but we have other -- for example, BPO solutions that are also midmarket-oriented that have also grown at a very healthy rate, and I think we saw a temporary shift, if you will, and we have much higher value. Both businesses are great businesses, both are growing very rapidly, both have good profitability, but the PEO has a higher dollar profit per worksite employee, so we went back and readjusted that incentive. So, it's not anything complicated or mysterious, it's just the leads started going to a different place where they maybe had the highest value to ADP.

James Berkley -- Wolfe Research -- Vice President

Understood. Thanks a lot. Real quick, this is more of a higher-level macro-type question, but I figure it's worth asking given the environment. Given both the labor participation rate and unemployment levels are at historical lows now, also thinking about demographic trends, and the impact rate such as retiring baby boomers have on the business, and those unemployment and labor participation trends, how do you view the health of the U.S. employment market and sustainability of payroll growth overall going forward in the next one, two, three years?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

It's a great question for the obvious reasons in terms of where the numbers are, but I think today, we reported 200,000 -- what was it? 217,000 additional added to the payroll. So, honestly, I think Jan and I have been cautioning and telling ourselves that as unemployment goes down and the labor market tightens, that we should see some kind of slowdown there, but we haven't seen it, and it could be as a result of -- if you look at labor force participation, and yes, it's driven somewhat by demographics, but there are some arguments to be made that there could be 3 million to 3.5 million people that are still on the sidelines. If you think you could get back to labor participation rates around 65% -- I think we're 64% going on 65%.

Again, I'm not the macroeconomist, and we try to plan based on the environment we have, the interest rates we have, and we try to be cautious about momentum, but right now, frankly, the momentum is really good, so it would not have been prudent for us for '19 to plan some large drop in employment or some -- because it just doesn't feel like that's in the cards. Despite the apparent tightness of the labor market, you also have an economy that is incredibly strong, and it's picked up momentum from a GDP standpoint. That generally creates demand for labor. It'll also create demand for improvements in productivity, which will help the economy. So, it feels to me like a pretty good environment right now, but something that we should definitely watch out for. So, I'm not trying to dismiss your point, but there's not much I can do about it now because it's too much good news.

James Berkley -- Wolfe Research -- Vice President

That makes sense. That's what I was trying to get at -- the labor participation rate being so low that there could be some slack despite unemployment being low as well. I appreciate the commentary. Thanks for your time.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

By the way, we're just now getting back to -- I think it was in the Journal today they talked -- we've been seeing the same thing with wage inflation starting to pick up, but it's just now getting back to where it was on average over 2001 to 2007, as the Journal said, and I think it's 2.7 or 2.8. We show the same kinds of trends in our wage inflation. So, even though you're seeing wage inflation and that's for sure a response to tightness in the labor markets, it doesn't change the fact that it's still not running at 4%. So, there's something happening -- there must be slack in the labor market. There has to be something there.

James Berkley -- Wolfe Research -- Vice President

Thanks a lot.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from David Grossman of Stifel Financial. Your line is open.

David Grossman -- Stifel Financial -- Managing Director

Thank you. Good morning. So, you laid out three broad drivers of growth at the Investor Day. I think it was sales headcount, sales productivity, and new products. Could you help us understand your expectation of relative contribution from these initiatives in fiscal '19 and how that may evolve once we get past next year, given the timing of the broader new product rollout?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I'm going to let Jan go through the specifics, but I think what we intended to talk about in Investor Day was a formula going forward not just for '19, but I think it's the way we think about the business, which is to have, generally speaking, balanced growth around headcount, productivity of our headcount in sales, and then, from new products. So, if you look at our guidance, I think generally a good way to look at it would be a third of that growth coming from headcount, about a third coming from new products, and a third of it coming from productivity. And, Jan, I don't know if you want to add.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

That's what I would have said. It may be gearing ever so slightly higher on the headcount side and productivity side, but in general, that's the mix, and I think the team is optimistic about '19 to achieve it with some moderate headcount growth in the quarter carry-aside, and then, with a bunch of these new products aided from additional acquisitions that come into the pipeline, to drive the overall productivity in addition to the headcount growth for the overall result. So, that's exactly what...

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

To the previous question, Global Cash Card would be in that category.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

For example, Global Cash Card is a new product that is actually meaningfully adding to our sales growth in '18.

David Grossman -- Stifel Financial -- Managing Director

Okay. I guess I was thinking in new products more like some of the next-generation --

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Next-generation products will be a very small part of our '19 numbers. We disclosed that we accelerated the number of clients on the strategic platforms in order to scale and test, but that number is not going to be impacting '19. It will be more meaningful in '20 and '21.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

As you know, we're very bullish on our next-gen platforms and what they're going to do to the long-term health of the business, but from a technically speaking standpoint, we're such a big company, I think our bookings for next year are $1.8 billion or somewhere in that neighborhood.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Growth on top of $1.8 billion --

Christian Greyenbuhl -- Vice President, Investor Relations

$1.5 billion is the Employer Services booking number, and we're guiding --

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I'm sorry, right, the Employer Services booking number. But, the bottom line is the numbers are big enough now that as we roll out new products, you have to have a lot of them, so our sales force -- when we tell them the same thing about next-gen should be really helping you, they focus on this gen. They want to know what's available to sell now. And so, the good news is we have things like our analytics products, we have the acquisitions we just talked about, so we do have a number of things that we've been working on over the prior several years that have now provided ammunition for them to be able to go out and have some portion of that sales guidance come from "new products," notwithstanding the fact that our next-generation platforms are quite at the point where they're going to make a meaningful impact on sales in '19.

David Grossman -- Stifel Financial -- Managing Director

Okay, got it. Thanks for that. And then, just two quick follow-ups. One is I didn't quite understand the unit growth comment that Jan made about the high teens. Is that client growth versus WSC growth? Maybe I just missed that. If you could clarify that --

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

I was imprecise, so I apologize for that. Because you're asking, our ADP client growth overall -- number of clients that are with ADP -- grew by 6%. That's to the entire base of 740,000 clients or so. That's about 6%, which is very healthy growth. It's nice, and we're very proud of that. When I referred to our high teens in new logo growth, we refer about the number of new clients that we were able to sell to and compare that to the number of new clients that we sold last year, and that's a different number. That's a new logo growth number relative to our new business bookings number, and that really accelerated very nicely in the PEO last year, which basically means we had a reacceleration of new business bookings in the PEO, but a lot more smaller clients, and the average deal size was a little smaller.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

That average deal size had actually grown, had gone up in the last several years, and I think some of it was -- again, I hate to keep going back -- I think we drove some of that through our incentives because I think it's a product that fits both the down market and the midmarket very well.

David Grossman -- Stifel Financial -- Managing Director

Okay, got it. One last quick one. Does the acquisition contribute -- can you size that for us in terms of revenue and profit contribution in 2019?

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

The acquisition of Celergo that we announced today is going to be not meaningful to the overall revenue growth.

David Grossman -- Stifel Financial -- Managing Director

Got it. All right, guys. Thanks very much.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Very meaningful strategically, if I may add, because again, as Jan was alluding to, we're always in this conundrum where we talk about our size. We're $13.3 billion in revenue, or whatever the number is, for '18 here, so when we make an acquisition that is meaningful, and strategic, and we're very excited about it, unfortunately, it might not have a big financial impact, but we certainly expect it to have a big impact in our ability to continue selling and be successful in the multinational space, which is a mid-teens growing business for us, and this just extends that leadership and that success that we're having in that space.

David Grossman -- Stifel Financial -- Managing Director

Okay, got it. Thanks again.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Jeff Silber with BMO. Your line is open.

Henry Chien -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Hey, good morning, guys. It's Henry Chien calling for Jeff. Just wanted to shift over and ask about the margin outlook and where you're getting -- or, where you're looking to drive margin expansion. Just curious if you could share a little bit more about what areas of the business you think you can get that expansion beyond the early retirement, and any color on how much of that is leverage versus some of the more discrete items that you're doing to improve margins overall. Thanks.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

We've been doing a lot of work, and I think Jan can probably add a couple of examples, but we've been doing a lot of work over the last year or two around what we call "process improvement" and trying to really -- as an example -- reduce non-value contacts. So, we want to make sure that the products themselves are intuitive, easy to use, and that we build in solutions so that people don't have to seek out help. Clearly, we're a solutions provider, not just a software provider, so if someone wants help, we're there to help them, but we want it to be value-added. Non-value-added interactions are dissatisfiers for the client and also increase costs for us.

So, I think we've made progress in the last couple years in reducing what we refer to as our non-value contacts, so that's a source of margin improvement because it reduces the number of people we need to service X number of clients, so it's really a productivity enhancement effort. So, I'd say most of the margin improvement that we expect to get -- and, I would say that the voluntary early retirement is wrapped up into that because it has to be factored into the overall amount of labor you have to increase productivity, so it increases revenue per associate or per employee while revenues continue to grow.

So, as an example, I think in '18, we finished with our growth in full-time employees being relatively flat compared to what we consider to be pretty good revenue growth, and I think for '19, we would see a similar picture -- maybe a slight increase -- but we've brought down the nose of the ship, if you will, in terms of the growth of the number of people we need in order to service X number of clients. So, we're trying to grow the business obviously faster, but we're trying to grow the expense and the number of people who service those clients at an even slower rate than we were growing before, and I think that's what leads to margin improvement. So, that's a simplified way of describing dozens of things that we have under way to make ourselves better and more efficient.

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Part of the source of the margin expansion, for your benefit -- the most important one, of course, Carlos just described, and they're driven and underlining with tools like the early retirement, like our service alignment initiatives and general business improvement initiatives, to reduce the workload, make our workforce more effective, so that's a very important part of this, but also, our IT folks made meaningful progress to support our infrastructure, so we do see some benefits of reduced complexity because our product set is now simpler, and they have worked hard to drive and control our overall IT infrastructure costs.

So, we have seen help from that in this fiscal year, and we're going to anticipate that going forward, and not to give -- when we talk about scale, scale doesn't happen on its own. The most important driver to help with scale is improving retention, and we have emphasized throughout our communications that healthy revenue growth and improving retention is very important to support sustained margin growth because if you keep a client, obviously, you don't have to sell it to a new client, and it's generally a high-margin business for those clients retained, so we have other factors that also help in the margin expansion momentum, and I think in the Investor Day, I mentioned other initiatives like focusing on our vendor spend, for example, and a broad range of other things that we are undergoing that will help. But, it's not only one thing. It's a lot of initiatives.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

But, the bottom line is I think fewer platforms, a simplified environment, and then, next-generation solutions that are much more efficient to operate, more efficient to develop on, and more efficient to maintain, is part of the formula.

Henry Chien -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Got it, OK. That's very helpful, thank you. A quick follow-up on the client migrations -- what areas of the business still remain for migration, if there are any?

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

We're still focusing on our enterprise space, where we have a bunch of legacy clients to migrate, and there's also work for us to do in our international business. So, we maintained our migration investment year over year and focus now a little bit more on the enterprise space.

Henry Chien -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Got it, OK. That's very helpful. Thanks, guys.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question is from Mark Marcon of R.W. Baird. Your line is open.

Mark Marcon -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. I was just wondering with regard to ES, on the service center side, can you give us an update with regard to the service centralization across the five big project centers, and how that's progressing, and what you're seeing in terms of client satisfaction scores? And then, the second part of the question is as you look out toward ES for 2019, would you expect the strongest growth to be on SBS and majors relative to national, or would you expect international to be one of the strongest growth areas? How would you characterize the strongest growth?

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Let me give you a quick update on our service alignment initiative, which is really progressing very nicely. We're very satisfied with the momentum that we have and the transition that worked out. So, we have about -- we hired close to 2,700 associates in these new service centers, which were three new ones and two existing ones -- all in all, about 6,000 associates now -- and we have exited about 90% of all targeted locations on schedule or slightly ahead of schedule. So, the program has been working, and now we are rooting in, and as we have indicated, as the trend continues, we have great employee engagement and excellent client satisfaction scores.

That's now so meaningful because a large chunk of the business is in these service centers, so that's helped the improvement in our overall satisfaction. So, this is going very well. For '19, we are at scale, so I don't anticipate any dual ops pressure. We had dual ops in '18, so that's coming out, and we have expanded a few additional locations based on the success of those centers, so, all in good light relative to service alignment and our business case. Relative to -- I apologize. The second question was...?

Mark Marcon -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Basically, as we look at ES growth for the coming year, where we would expect the strongest growth versus more moderate growth?

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Good question. The strong growth in the ES portfolio is a little more centered around the down-market components and our HR BPO offerings throughout all segments, actually. So, we had good growth in the non-PEO HR BPO offerings and our multinational offerings. So, we expect the strength of the growth drivers that we have historically observed to continue, and actually see an acceleration of the revenue performance in the up market. So, it's accelerating and improving, so all segments are really improving in '19 as planned.

Mark Marcon -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

Looks great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And, we have time for one more question. Our last question is from James Faucette with Morgan Stanley. Your line is open.

James Faucette -- Morgan Stanley -- Executive Director

Thank you very much. Most of my questions have been answered, but one question I did want to ask was related to M&A. Should we anticipate that we may be entering into a period of elevated M&A activity, or do you expect to maintain the same pace you have over time? And, can you just give a little bit of color on the conditions in the M&A market in terms of being able to find appropriate targets and valuation, et cetera? Thank you.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

It's a great question. I'm very pleased with what we've been able to do on the acquisition front over the last 12 to 18 months, and I think if we could continue to find things like we have found in the last 18 months, we would do those all day long. The challenge, of course, for us, as you know, is we are in the process of simplifying, reducing platforms, focusing on our next-generation platforms, so that makes it hard to do what I would call traditional -- make traditional acquisitions. So, for example, we're not looking for the next benefits platform. We're not looking for the next payroll platform. We're building our own next-generation payroll platform. We have a great one already that is serving us well and is very profitable.

So, it's challenging because when you look at the HCM space, we really operate across almost every segment from hire to retire, and we feel great about the products and the platforms we have, but as you saw over the last 18 months, there's always some stuff you can do that's new and can add to the portfolio. So, I think as long as it's additive and fits into our strategic roadmap, we are buyers, and we're on the lookout for those types of ways to use our capital to add shareholder value. So, it's hard to give you a completely bullish answer because we're trying to be very disciplined, but we've been very fortunate in the last 18 months, and I hope that our luck continues and that we find things that can really be difference-makers for our clients and to our growth rates, but that also fit into our strategic roadmap and don't just add additional complexity.

James Faucette -- Morgan Stanley -- Executive Director

That's great. Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. And, this does conclude our question and answer portion for today. I am pleased to hand the program over to Carlos Rodriguez for any closing remarks.

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks. Just quickly, obviously, this year, we spent a lot of time listening to our shareholders and to all of you as well, and I think our interactions this year reinforced our conviction in the strategy that we're pursuing. We got very positive feedback from Investor Day about our plans and our strategy to create sustainable long-term value, so we're obviously going to continue on the path that we're on. I think the results this year really set us up for fiscal '19. We feel like we've seen some acceleration. As I mentioned, I would call it a trough, if you will, in the middle of this last fiscal year, so I think heading into next year, we have really good momentum.

So, whether it's the next-generation platforms that we just talked about, or the midmarket migrations, or the acquisitions that we just talked about, or progress on the service alignment initiative, or the voluntary early retirement program, I think it's pretty clear that we are committed to accelerating the pace of change at ADP and that we're actually well under way. I'm particularly pleased, I have to say, this year with the ability of the organization overall to overcome the pressures that we had from bookings and retention a couple of years ago that were right in the middle of the perfect storm of the Affordable Care Act and some other things that distracted us, but we're past that.

You can see that we had solid performance in 2018, and that makes me very optimistic about the future for ADP. Lastly, as always, I have to say that when we reflect on all these accomplishments in 2018, which are many, I just want to thank all of our associates for their dedication to providing the best-in-class solutions to our clients because our business is all about our clients and our clients are all about the associates that serve them. So, with that, I want to thank you for listening in today and thank you for your continued interest in ADP.

Duration: 74 minutes

Call participants:

Christian Greyenbuhl -- Vice President, Investor Relations

Carlos Rodriguez -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Jan Siegmund -- Chief Financial Officer

Jim Schneider -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst

David Togut -- Evercore ISI -- Managing Director

Jason Kupferberg -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Bryan Keane -- Deutsche Bank -- Managing Director

Tien-Tsin Huang -- JPMorgan Chase -- Analyst

James Berkley -- Wolfe Research -- Vice President

David Grossman -- Stifel Financial -- Managing Director

Henry Chien -- BMO Capital Markets -- Analyst

Mark Marcon -- Robert W. Baird -- Analyst

James Faucette -- Morgan Stanley -- Executive Director

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