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Shopify (SHOP -1.78%)
Q3 2020 Earnings Call
Oct 29, 2020, 8:30 a.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Thank you for standing by. This is the conference operator. Welcome to the Shopify third-quarter 2020 financial results conference call. As a reminder, all participants are in listen-only mode and the conference is being recorded.

[Operator instructions] I would now like to turn the conference over to Katie Keita, director of investor relations. Please go ahead.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, operator, and good morning, everyone. We are joined this morning by Tobi Lutke, Shopify's CEO; Harley Finkelstein, Shopify's president; and Amy Shapero, our CFO. After some brief prepared remarks by Harley and Amy, we will open it up for your questions. We will make forward-looking statements on our call today that are based on assumptions and therefore subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from those projected.

We undertake no obligation to update these statements, except as required by law. You can read about these risks and uncertainties in our press release this morning, as well as in our filings with U.S. and Canadian regulators. Note that the adjusted financial measures we speak to today are non-GAAP measures, which are not a substitute for GAAP financial measures.

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Reconciliations between the two can be found in our earnings press release. And finally, we report in U.S. dollars. So all amounts discussed today are in U.S.

dollars, unless otherwise indicated. With that, I turn the call over to Harley.

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Thanks, Katie, and good morning, everyone. We continue to see incredible demand as the decisive shift to digital commerce persisted in our third quarter and more entrepreneurs than ever before turn to Shopify to start to run and to grow their businesses. Making commerce better for everyone is what we do, and Shopify is achieving this by lowering the barrier to entry to entrepreneurship. Last quarter, I outlined several initiatives we shipped to help merchants adapt quickly to a rapidly changing retail environment triggered by COVID, getting them online fast and building resilience into their businesses at a really challenging time.

We believe these changes in the landscape will endure as consumers' new shopping behaviors stick and become the new normal. Shopify has always taken and always will take a merchant-first approach. This year, this translated to an increased urgency around helping entrepreneurs to get online fast and start selling easily to get discovered and to get their products to buyers. Today, I'll talk about how our efforts are paying off for our merchants and for Shopify.

In Q3, a record number of merchants became paid subscribers to Shopify, even excluding merchants who converted following the end of their 90-day extended free trial. The extended free trial made it easier for new stores to get online fast and make sales, enabling many of these entrepreneurs to generate cash while their physical stores were shut down at the onset of the pandemic. Some of these businesses made their first online sales faster than typical entrepreneurs coming online for the first time, proving out the power of omnichannel commerce for brick-and-mortar retailers. Fast transitions like this contributed to Shopify's tremendous GMV performance, which increased 109% over the same quarter last year.

Not only did we help merchants get up and running quickly. We gave them more tools to get them discovered by new buyers, shipping native sales channels through integrations like Facebook shops, Walmart and Pinterest. It's early days, but given the traffic to these venues from browsers and buyers, merchants are well-positioned to benefit from the increased number of eyeballs on their brand and their products. Sales channels will continue to expand as TikTok will be testing with a limited number of Shopify merchants, features that make it easy for them to sell organically directly from their videos and their profile pages.

Channels are supplemented by our expanding marketing capabilities that help drive traffic to our merchant stores, opening up their buyer universe with features like TikTok for business and strengthening relationships with existing buyers. Ease of repurchase by fans that a merchant has already won over is critical. Research has found that 80% of the business' future profits come from buyers they've sold to before. Merchants are increasingly leveraging how easy we make it for them to remarket by using tools like Shopify email through which merchants have sent 500 million emails through email campaigns since launching the product in the first quarter this year.

After getting online and getting discovered, merchants need to get their products to buyers. Step one is helping buyers checkout quickly and easily while giving them flexible payment options, both benefits shown to improve sales conversion. Providing an amazing shopping experience through fast and easy checkout is exactly what Shop Pay, our accelerated checkout does. Shop Pay has experienced phenomenal growth since its launch three years ago, facilitating over $14 billion in GMV, with more than 60 million buyers opted in at the end of Q3, facilitating more Shopify GMV than Apple Pay, Google Pay and Amazon Pay combined.

Not only does Shop Pay offer frictionless checkout, but it enables buyers to offset the carbon emissions produced by their deliveries. We started rolling out our 'buy now pay later' product, Shop Pay Installments in the U.S. in Q3. Shop Pay Installments lets merchants give buyers more options by paying in installments with no interest and no fees.

Installment products are gaining in popularity as consumers look for alternative payment methods to credit cards. In addition to improving sales conversion, businesses offering 'buy now pay later' options have seen higher card sizes and an increase in repeat customers. Shop Pay is also integrated into the Shop App, a personal shopping app that helps merchants deepen their relationships with existing buyers through a fantastic shopping experience that includes a smooth faster checkout, product recommendations from the merchants they love and order tracking so buyers can keep up-to-date on delivery status. The Shop App has reached nearly 10 million monthly active users, with thousands of merchants leveraging the built-in features to strengthen their relationship with buyers and increased customer lifetime value.

Getting goods to buyers also means delivering a great post-sale experience through fast and affordable fulfillments. More than half of eligible merchants in the U.S. and Canada adopted Shopify Shipping in our third quarter, up from 45% in the same period last year. Physical retail merchants also continue to offer buyers ways to receive their goods at a safe distance using curbside pickup and local delivery.

And of course, we continue to build the Shopify fulfillment network to help democratize fulfillment for merchants of all sizes. Turning to Shopify Plus, which had another incredible quarter. We added a record number of merchants for the second quarter in a row and Shopify Plus merchants use more merchant solutions, including Shopify Payments and Shopify Capital as they scale their businesses. Enterprise brands are realizing that the center of gravity is shifting from digital commerce being an add-on to now being the control center, or as I like to say, their retail operating system for their business.

These large merchants are realizing that having a modern, agile and flexible commerce solution is paramount and that Shopify Plus represents this on multiple fronts, offering multichannel commerce, flexibility and partner integrations, a fast and reliable tech stack and constant innovation. Considering its low-cost of ownership, Shopify Plus is becoming the obvious choice. More notable brands across a variety of verticals launched stores at Shopify Plus in our third quarter, including the following: the global luxury brand, Dior; women's fashion brand, BCBGMAXAZRIA; motion picture production house, Paramount Pictures; sustainable fashion brand, MATT & NAT; meat alternative food producer, Beyond Meat; nutrition bar company, Clif Bar; multinational telecommunications company, Telefonica; and weight loss brand, Jenny Craig. Turning to our partner ecosystem, which has become a true competitive advantage for Shopify.

As of Q3, more than 37,000 partners referred merchants to Shopify over the past 12 months. Our partners make Shopify better for every merchant, helping to extend Shopify's functionality via our APIs so merchants can customize their stores and meet their unique commerce needs. Partners also work with merchants to build their branded stores on Shopify. Through these challenging times, they have played a vital role in helping our merchants get online fast, contributing to both the success of our merchants, as well as to Shopify.

The majority of respondents to a recent merchant survey conducted by Shopify anticipate more online than in-store purchasing during this year's Black Friday Cyber Monday weekend. In fact, more than half of the retail merchants that responded are actively making improvements to their online store to make up for anticipated lower in-store sales that weekend. Our merchants need our help to navigate this new territory, and we're working hard to help merchants make the most of BFCM, not just with features and functionality, but with helpful content ranging from optimizing the performance of their online store to promoting their brands in a way that creates value beyond the holiday shopping weekend. Entrepreneurs are the backbone of our economies, and Shopify is doing everything we can to make more of them and make them stronger.

Before I hand it off to Amy, I want to share a merchant interaction with Tenita, who owns Status Co leather studio in Alabama that illustrates why Shopify exists. We are here to make the opportunity for entrepreneurship accessible to everyone because commerce is far better when more independent voices participate.

Amy Shapero -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks, Harley. As that conversation just illustrated, businesses of all sizes rely on Shopify during these challenging times. We are in lockstep with them on their journey, as demonstrated by another strong quarter, thanks to e-commerce tailwinds, our merchants' resilience and the continued strong execution by the Shopify team. Revenue nearly doubled once again in our third quarter to $767.4 million, up 96% over the same period last year, driven by strong performance from both our merchant solutions and subscription solutions segments.

Subscription solutions revenue increased 48% year over year to $245.3 million, largely due to exceptional growth in monthly recurring revenue. MRR growth accelerated to 47% year over year to $74.4 million as merchants from both a 90-day free trial offered from March 21 through May 31 and standard 14-day free trial offered from June 1 onwards converted into paying merchants in the quarter, creating a double cohort effect. While demand remains higher for subscriptions compared to pre-COVID levels, we do not expect a year-on-year MRR growth rate in Q4 to match what we saw in Q3, given the benefit to third-quarter results from this double cohort effect. Shopify Plus contributed $18.7 million to MRR or 25% compared with 27% of MRR in Q3 of 2019 as the strong growth of standard MRR outstripped that of Shopify Plus, primarily due to the double cohort effect just discussed as Shopify Plus was excluded from the 90-day free trial.

Merchant solutions revenue grew 132% to $522.1 million in Q3 compared to the same period in 2019. This tremendous growth was driven primarily by merchants' strong sales with GMV increasing 109% year over year to $30.9 billion, and increased adoption of Shopify payments, capital and shipping, driving revenue from these products higher. $14 billion of GMV was processed on Shopify Payments in Q3, an increase of 124% versus the comparable quarter last year. Payments penetration of GMV was 45% versus 42% in Q3 2019 and up more than 0.5 percentage point over Q2 this year.

New merchants across all segments joining the platform, opted to use Shopify Payments and Shopify Plus and international merchants expanded their share of GPV year over year. Demand for Shopify Capital increased in Q3, with merchants receiving $252.1 million in funding across the U.S., the U.K. and Canada in preparation for the holiday selling season. This record quarter for Capital represents a 79% increase in funding over the third quarter of 2019, while maintaining loss ratios in line with historical periods.

Businesses need financial resources to survive and fulfill their potential, especially in these uncertain times. And as you heard just now, capital greatly increases the value of Shopify to our merchants. Adjusted gross profit dollars grew 88% over last year's third quarter to $412.6 million, which reflects the significantly greater mix of Merchant solutions revenue versus last year. The acquisition of Six River Systems in Q4 of last year and our ramp-up of investment in Shopify Fulfillment Network.

Adjusted operating income was $130.9 million in the third quarter, compared to adjusted operating income of $10.5 million in the third quarter of 2019, reflecting our strong revenue performance in the quarter. Adjusted net income for the quarter was $140.8 million or $1.13 per diluted share compared with adjusted net loss of $33.6 million or $0.29 per diluted share in last year's third quarter. Adjusted net income in this year's third quarter excludes an unrealized gain on an equity investment of $133.2 million or $1.07 per share, stock-based compensation and related payroll taxes of $75.4 million or $0.60 per share and other adjustments totaling $7.5 million or $0.06 per share. Finally, our cash, cash equivalents and marketable securities balance was $6.1 billion on September 30, strengthened by the capital we raised in our third quarter, which provides us more flexibility to pursue our growth strategies.

The pandemic has fast track commerce to digital domains, and there is incredible demand on both the merchant and consumer sides to enhance the commerce experience. Shopify is in a unique position to help entrepreneurs in this emerging landscape. Our investments in core expansion and ambition initiatives, which correspond to near, medium and long-term return horizons pave the way for building a powerful global commerce operating system that is the one thing merchants need to start and scale a successful business. Harley already provided an update on Shopify Plus, a key core initiative.

So I will start with progress on our expansion investments, international expansion and retail POS. In Q3, we continued to build product-market fit for our international merchants, making it easier for them to get online and start selling. Our merchant admin, partner admin and theme store are now available in 20 languages. With the recent launch of Shopify Payments in Belgium, which supports payments with credit cards, Bancontact debit cards and local payment method iDEAL, Shopify Payments is now available in 17 countries.

The more intuitive we make our platform regionally, the more we're seeing our merchants succeed as reflected in the strong year-over-year GMV growth from our international merchants in the third quarter. And our work localizing in focused international markets continues. We are digging into complex areas to deepen our product-market fit, such as evolving the merchant user experience, growing our partner ecosystem, launching more sales channels, simplifying cross-border and mobile commerce and introducing new ways to get products to buyers, such as pickup points, which are quite popular in Europe. Retail margins have been extremely resilient, finding new ways to reopen and operate safely, such as adjusting the flow of in-store traffic, appointment-only shopping, using curbside pickup and local delivery features or changing store hours to accommodate demand.

As our merchants adapted, we saw retail GMV recover and exceed pre-COVID levels in Q3. Retail merchants are increasingly adopting our all-new POS software and tap-and-ship hardware for a seamless omnichannel experience. POS pro features and, in particular, smart inventory management are especially resonating with retail merchants as they face capital constraints due to limitations relating to social distancing measures. Our smart inventory management capabilities enable merchants to effectively create and manage purchase orders, accurately transfer, receive and track inventory across locations and perform demand forecasting, so merchants can proactively stock up with the right products, helping to reduce errors and optimize inventory decision-making.

Turning to our ambition initiatives, first, addressing Shopify Fulfillment Network. We made solid progress in Q3 as we continue to develop the foundation of our fulfillment network software infrastructure, activated more partner nodes in the U.S. added Six River Systems technology and more partner nodes, expanded our set of transportation partners and enhanced the merchant-facing app and merchant-support functions. We continue to enroll merchants and fulfill volumes at a rate where we can maintain high-quality standards.

With Black Friday, Cyber Monday and the holiday shopping season around the corner, our fulfillment network is preparing for a rise in demand in view of the dramatic shift to online commerce. We're working with our partners to increase staffing within fulfillment warehouses, keeping health and safety top of mind, as well as with our carrier partners to mitigate capacity issues by optimizing processes. And we're staying close to our merchants, communicating frequently and educating them on how they can best prepare for the selling opportunities and the challenges they may face due to higher demand on logistics networks. Building a vertically integrated fulfillment service is complex, and we continue to be in the testing stages of a very young product.

We are committed to building a reliable fulfillment solution so our merchants can focus on building a successful business. In Q3, Six River Systems hosted its second annual user conference, FLOW 2020, announcing a host of enhancements to its wall-to-wall fulfillment solution that gives warehouses more visibility into and control of their operations. Retailers are being impacted by the secular shift from pallets to parcels in the B2B space, along with increasing labor shortages and rising labor costs associated with the pandemic. As a result, Six River Systems automated fulfillment technology is resonating more than ever, as these businesses seek a flexible, scalable and cost-effective solution.

This translated into Six River Systems' strongest quarter ever for bookings as new customers signed on and existing customers added to their orders in preparation for the peak holiday shopping season. Wrapping up, Shopify is helping merchants adapt and thrive in today's environment and to succeed over the long term. Through a steady pace of innovation that solves merchant pain points over different time horizons, we are building a global commerce operating system that aims to stand the test of time and future-proof our merchants' businesses. The immediate future remains uncertain, however, as the second wave of the COVID pandemic hits regions around the world.

What is clear is that the spirit of entrepreneurship is strong and access to entrepreneurship needs to be in the hands of the many, not the few. Shopify remains committed to lowering the barriers to entry to entrepreneurship so that anyone with an idea and a desire is able to reach for their independence. With that, I'll turn the call back to Katie.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thanks, Amy. And before I turn the call over to the operator for your questions, I want to remind everybody to please try to limit yourself to just one question and then. And well, let's get going. Ariel?

Questions & Answers:


Operator

We will now begin the question-and-answer session. [Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Thomas Forte of D.A. Davidson. Please go ahead.

Thomas Forte -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst

All right, thanks for taking my question. So I know you discussed this at length in the prepared remarks, but I wanted to highlight my question and get your short answer on it. So I think this is going to be a very challenging holiday from a supply chain and logistics standpoint. So what gives you confidence in your merchant's ability to have in-stock inventory for the upcoming holiday and for Shopify Fulfillment Network's ability to deliver products in time for holiday? Thanks for taking my question.

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Thanks for that question. It's Harley here. So a couple of things to point out. First of all, as we mentioned in the prepared remarks, we now have 51% of our merchants -- elder merchants using Shopify Shipping.

That's up from 45% last year. Now see more merchants use Shopify Shipping means that as the entire macro environment for shipping has issues, we think Shopify merchants are better positioned. We're also working with them now to ensure that they advise customers when purchasing that there may be some delays based on either supply chain or on the last mile side of things. That being said, our focus in 2020 around SFN is to achieve product-market fit, which we plan to continue into 2021.

We want to ensure that the foundation of the fulfillment network is strong and the merchant's experience is outstanding before we enter sort of the scale phase. But in terms of how we are arming our merchants are arming the rebels to ensure that they have a great holiday season. We're doing everything we can to make sure that we give them the tools, the information and the context so that they can ensure that their end consumers understand and appreciate what is happening. But so far, so good.

We see that there has not been too much of a slowdown. And again, more people using Shopify Shipping means that more people have -- more merchants have more information.

Operator

Our next question comes from Ken Wong of Guggenheim Securities. Please go ahead.

Ken Wong -- Guggenheim Partners -- Analyst

Great. Thanks for taking my question. Another solid quarter, guys. And I just wanted to maybe pick your brain, Harley, in terms of kind of what you guys saw from a linearity perspective as far as merchant growth and GMV volumes through the quarter.

And then, to the extent that you're able to comment, just kind of how you're thinking about the shape of the holiday season, lots of moving pieces there from macro to elections to social distancing and just the surge online. How might this comp to maybe Black Friday last year?

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Yes. Thanks for the question, Ken. A couple of things. First of all, I think the Black Friday Cyber Monday weekend is now becoming an entire season.

So we're certainly seeing merchants start much faster. We also know that more consumers have already decided to do the majority of their holiday shopping online. And so, obviously, that's going to provide some good tailwinds to our merchants. In terms of GMV, as Amy mentioned, plus merchants certainly continue to grow their share of GMV.

And we're one of the biggest contributors to GMV in absolute terms. International merchants also maintained their share of GMV and continue to grow quickly year over year. This is mostly coming from apparel, accessories and cosmetics as are sort of the largest ranking categories and verticals for us. That said, with the onset of COVID and the pandemic, we are seeing food beverage and tobacco continue to experience strong growth in Q3 as well.

So the nice part about our GMV growth is that it's not coming from any one particular vertical, it's not coming from any one particular type of merchant. It's coming across the board. And we look forward to a very strong Black Friday, Cyber Monday and holiday season.

Amy Shapero -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. And I think if I could just add, you had asked at the very beginning of your question about merchant growth. So I want to just highlight that we did have a record quarter in Q3 for merchant growth due to the double cohort effect that I talked about in my opening remarks. But I think it's really important to emphasize that even excluding the 90-day free trialists who converted in Q3, we still would have seen an acceleration in our merchant growth over pre-COVID levels, which tells you that there are more merchants coming to the platform with this shift to online commerce and COVID.

The demand for the platform has increased as we're seeing more business generation occur in this environment and a desire for multichannel commerce.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, Ken.

Operator

Our next question comes from Siti Panigrahi of Mizuho. Please go ahead.

Siti Panigrahi -- Guggenheim Securities -- Analyst

Thanks for taking my question. I just wanted to -- just a follow-up to last question. You mentioned 71% increase in new store creation in Q2 and mostly they are on 90-day free trial. So how was the conversion rate from that free trial, considering subscription revenue grew 48%? And how is the new shop creation trend again in this quarter?

Amy Shapero -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So the new store creation in Q2 or the new stores coming on the platform associated with a 90-day free trial, so we were not able to count them as merchants in Q2. We saw many of them convert to paying merchants in Q3. The conversion rates that we've seen on the 90-day free trialists is slightly lower than cohorts historically on 14-day free trials, but we think that's OK because they're more intentional when they convert because they've had a longer time period.

The data that we have in the three months in some of the earliest 90-day free trial cohorts and converted suggest that those merchants have a higher retention than 14-day free trialists. We know many of them coming online in Q2 were established businesses looking for a multichannel platform. And so we believe that those 90-day free trialists will be more sticky than the 14-day free trialist cohorts historically.

Siti Panigrahi -- Guggenheim Securities -- Analyst

Thank you.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, Siti.

Operator

Our next question comes from Colin Sebastian of Baird. Please go ahead.

Colin Sebastian -- Baird -- Analyst

Good morning, thanks for taking my questions. And congrats to Harley on the new title. I was hoping you could talk about the combination of Shop Pay and the Shop App in terms of how this benefits merchants I assume in areas such as conversion rates or repeat order volume. And if there are plans to push adoption of these more consumer-facing services more aggressively in the year ahead through more marketing, advertising or other promotions.

Thank you.

Tobi Lutke -- Chief Executive Officer

This is Tobi. Yeah, so I mean, Shop App and Shop Pay, they're connected in as much as business like the brand to the buyers, like this is, obviously, a little bit hard to appreciate from all the specifics. You all have a good understanding of Shopify as a company. But again, Shopify is a brand to merchant entrepreneurs, and we decide to go shop for -- on a buyer-facing side.

So this is clearly something we are doing now -- like more of now. I don't have specific plans for like media purchases or so and amplification. Our Shop and Shop Pay are growing really, really, really good on merit, I think, right now and because that's not real problems. It's a focus of ours.

We want to try to figure out how to make all of -- all of commerce as very, very, very -- the weight organically sort of core less onto the Internet, it's -- there's a very strong line of delineation, like you go to basically we started in 2,000 where you go to a browser and you hopefully may device some way to an online store and the moment you place the purchase, like the role of the e-commerce software has really stopped. It might have sent you some emails, but you had to go like an email client to figure out where your orders, maybe it had a tracking number, it takes you to USPS. And there, you figure out, maybe they can look up the thing wherever your package is. And if you ever wanted to return, you go find the email ideally via search, if you can even find it.

And like it's a junky as hell experience. We all got used to it, so we are familiar with it, but that doesn't mean it's good. So we are trying to like as much as Shopify can, we try to aim for global maxima, accepting sort of a winding path toward there and Shop Pay, specifically avoiding that anyone has to enter that address, let's say, funds and the Shop App then taking the LAU to the personal computer of our times, which is a phone and telling you exactly your packages and when it might be arriving and further into the relationship process. So this is sort of a vision around it all.

And you'll see a lot of brokers, I think, from us over the next while along those lines.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

All right. Thank you, Colin.

Operator

Our next question comes from Josh Beck of KeyBanc. Please go ahead.

Josh Beck -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thank you for taking the question. You mentioned that Six River, I believe, had its strongest bookings quarter ever. I think, which is a great example of the product and the interest. A little bit curious about its application within SFN.

Really, if you could maybe just talk about how that's progressing and how important the robotics automation component is to really be able to scale SFN over time.

Tobi Lutke -- Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So SFN and Six River Systems exist at two different levels, like what Six River Systems does -- role it has within Shopify is to modernize the insights of the warehouse and really gets the fulfillment warehouse to the point where it's almost a software addressable black box. It's just, obviously, not what we are leading this, but like from the perspective of most of Shopify, which is a company that mostly does like things in software and in bites. This is ideal because once we can treat warehouses as a -- basically a task management system, where we just say, OK, this package has to go there, and here's the pallet, there are things that need to be stocked and so on.

And this can happen with 99-point-something reliability and all these kind of things and the exceptions are managed. Then as then can think about warehouses globally, right? And say, we can have tens, hundreds, potentially thousands, potentially like partners and some homegrown ones around the world and balance the products that our customers need to where they need to be stored. So the robotics are really very important for a warehouse. They increase efficiency enormously.

They like just gotten more important because of it's easier to social distance among people than robots do a lot of moving of things. And we're seeing really, really great results. It's a great product. And those two things absolutely need each other to be successful.

Operator

Our next question comes from Paul Treiber of RBC Capital Markets. Please go ahead.

Paul Treiber -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thanks very much, and good morning. This as a follow-up, a little bit of a follow-up to Tobi's previous comment -- or first comment, but there's been, obviously, moss acceleration in e-commerce, but it's been in a unique environment with so many people working from home. Broadly, what's your view on the biggest remaining points of friction for e-commerce and to what degree is it possible for Shopify to develop solutions to address these remaining points of friction or are some outside of the control of the company?

Tobi Lutke -- Chief Executive Officer

That's a good question. I mean, I don't think there are multiple challenges in the world. It's been just a question of time and capital allocation. So it's certainly in scope for us to make the whole thing as simple as possible.

I mean, literally, I mean, the ideal way for us to do with Shopify Fulfillment Network is employ teleportation. Like if we can figure out the physics related to that and can just make things appear on the desk right when you want them, then that would be awesome. Failing that, we're sort of -- like this is actually our starting point. It's been literally the first line in the memo I wrote for SFN.

And then, we walk backwards toward what's possible. And of course, there's logistics is hard. I'm sure everyone -- I know this is -- you will hear it from everyone in the logistics world. But it's hard.

And it's really, really, really, really harder when people think even those who know that it's hard. So there's a lot of friction in this process. And a lot of that is hard to see right now how to avoid it, like processes can only get you so much and software can only do so much. Like there is headroom.

But it's final headroom. So in the end, you will have to -- the way you're dealing with things going wrong is ends up being much more important than the quality of the processes when everything goes right, which is, I mean, obviously, this is -- everyone knows that this is true everywhere now, thanks to COVID. And there is a writing by [Inaudible]. So we want to solve all sort of friction.

Logistics has a lot of it in -- like there's information -- like a lot of the friction exists right now in different systems, not talking to each other, like the systems that look logistics knows how long it will take to get the package to people unless something goes really, really, really wrong. But the systems aren't sophisticated enough to really resurface the spec to the buyer at the time that they want to purchase. And so that's a lot of our work goes into bridging some legacy systems to modern systems, with a lot of machine learning that can help getting more specificity around this. And so we are shipping away one step at a time.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, Paul.

Operator

Our next question comes from Brad Zelnick of Credit Suisse. Please go ahead.

Brad Zelnick -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Thanks so much, and congrats again on all the success. Tobi, I actually want to follow up on the last question. In the past, you've talked about how the pandemic has accelerated e-commerce trends by a decade. And in terms of solving the problems ahead of us and things to come, there's no doubt Shopify is capitalizing on this opportunity today, but you said these adjacencies and really it comes down to time and capital allocation.

But with $6 billion in cash, why not deploy more capital to even further distance Shopify ahead of everybody else to ensure your leadership for more years to come?

Tobi Lutke -- Chief Executive Officer

I mean, that's a fantastic question. And I don't know the best way to answer it. Like I think we have the money in the bank for optionality, and there's not -- like we will use it. But there is -- I mean, I think I hope that we've shown that we are prudent capital allocators.

And I think actually we're probably not the best company in the world with capital allocations, like from a financial thing, but I think we might be among the best companies in the world in attention allocation, which is actually the much more finite resource. And so this is the tricky thing, like there's a lot of reduction is thinking, especially about M&A, which sort of people think that the deal ends up at the transaction time or when the money is in the bank. Like the opportunity cost of integrating is enormous, right? And so we are trying to take a world picture perspective. So this has made us potentially more careful, but I also think just more realistic about what M&A can do for a company like in the past.

But we're also like rethinking every one of our previous approaches and biases and learned from it all, right? Like, so very well may be that we are going to see a lot of things that would help us accelerate the road map. But that's going to be the way to do it, like we will want to accelerate our road map through M&A. That's all the M&A deals you have done in this way. I'm not a huge fan of M&A for acquiring revenue.

So going to be the strategy going forward.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Right. Thank you, Brad.

Operator

Our next question comes from Richard Tse of National Bank Financial. Please go ahead.

Richard Tse -- National Bank Financial

Yes, thank you. So it's, obviously, been a challenging environment. So kind of outside of the obvious operating response, has there been any change from your former strategic plans going forward? Because I know there's some organizational changes in this quarter, perhaps you can sort of talk about that.

Tobi Lutke -- Chief Executive Officer

I mean, like, what hasn't changed. The first thing I asked the company to do is like to lead our plans, and then COVID happened. It's times of significant change like times where we're most adaptable are doing well. Now I think we have a better idea for the shape of what's happened.

We've seen the acceleration of e-commerce. I think we've seen sort of a final truth in that, like it's really retail world. It's e-commerce sort of -- it's a tactical channel. It all has to be combined.

We saw that. Like this was really the content of my kickoff in 2012. So it was about like, it's all going to go together. So it's like, this was not a surprise.

It was not a surprise to anyone in the industry. But we have now, I think, shipped a lot of what we needed to do, like I said, we are working on a lot of like really sort of detailed machine learning modeling to try to get -- make sure that we can do an even better job forecasting demand and assessing risk and telling people when their packages arrive and all different things. So we're now going really, really deep on the various things that we've launched over the last half year. So now what organizationally, for us, a really important thing now is to go and build infrastructure again because I think great products -- I mean, great products are basically just pick an important topic and get a million tiny little details, right.

But the only way to get details right is to be able to draw on infrastructure you've built and built up over years. And so like this is maybe going to organizationally to make sure that we are building up the infrastructure that a company that can serve millions and millions of business around the world can support. So there's lots of -- this is not what I'm thinking of, and I say this because there's a million things that are related to this. But around the world thing is really important, like we've just spent a lot of time, for instance, on performance work, like so we -- in some cases, we are now serving people in Australia from Australia, which is global deployment.

This is the kind of thing, again, we can do at scale for the entire platform, but no individual retail I could believe -- small and medium business would not invest in this kind of deployment otherwise. So there's a lot of these kind of things that we can do now because of infrastructure that we've done a couple of years ago. And it's really important to keep that balance, that the infrastructure is basically the fuel that will run the engine off and we revv the engine pretty hard for COVID to make sure we fill the fuel again.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, Richard.

Operator

Our next question comes from Walter Pritchard of Citi. Please go ahead.

Walter Pritchard -- Citi -- Analyst

Hi. I'm wondering if you could update us on how you're thinking about the marketing channel, your email product that's been out there and the partnerships you have and sort of what impact that's having driving the front end. Obviously, the demand is very strong generally, so may be hard to tell. But just curious how the current environment, and what you're seeing there may impact your views?

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Thanks for that. It's Harley here. So a couple of things. On email, as you heard earlier, we've now -- merchants have now sent out more than $500 million emails in Q3.

And we've now also -- there's now a monetization model around email. So 500 emails or free and then it's $1 per 1,000 emails after that. The reason we're doing email and the reason that we're spending time investing in the marketing channels and generally, marketing for merchants is that for a lot of merchants, getting the products, making the products, building the online store and building the retail model, is they can do that. We've given them the tools to do so.

But finding customers is something that remains a challenge. So anything we can do that further levels of playing field so they can have a single dashboard where they can see where their traffic is coming from, what's converting better than other traffic sources, and therefore, they can go and invest further in those channels. That is going to be helpful. Tobi mentioned earlier that retail in itself is not overly complicated, but bringing it all together into that centralized retail operating system, that really is the value of Shopify, that we take all the different pain points, all the different challenge areas, and we simplify them so that small businesses can become very large businesses on our platform in the long run.

So whether it's email or it's new things we are doing with TikTok, for example, or if any of the other marketing channels we have, what we're trying to do is make it easier for merchants to get started and then to scale their businesses indefinitely on Shopify and email and some of the other stuff we've announced recently are just more furthering that goal and that objective.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

All right. Thanks for your question, Walter.

Operator

Our next question comes from Darren Aftahi of ROTH Capital Partners. Please go ahead.

Darren Aftahi -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Yes, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking my question. Congrats on your results. Question on the mix of the domestic versus kind of non-English-speaking merchant adds in the quarter.

And then, I'm kind of curious about the relative conversion rate of those two segments? Thanks.

Amy Shapero -- Chief Financial Officer

So we saw similar trends across all of the regions, very comparable to the overall trend that you saw. So strong internationally, as well as in our core English speaking, and the conversion numbers were similar as well.

Tobi Lutke -- Chief Executive Officer

I think one thing I'd like to add is conversion numbers are one of our super and obvious things. I know they matter a lot of in the enterprise space, but like in the SMB space. The company might actually get significantly better, while the conversion rate goes down because you're feeling like your marketing is better, you're filling more people in the funnel that's more general interest in the topic of entrepreneurship. So as people are developing their models, I would encourage not to use conversion rate is kind of a proxy for health.

So just make sense.

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Yes. One final point on that. I think many of you know, but Q3 2020, the United States had a record number of new business creations, actually the highest it's been since 2004. What we're trying to do is we want to capture anyone who's thinking about starting a business, whether or not they become the next Jim Shoulders, the next Alberts remains to be seen.

But the idea is that we want to capture anyone who has any ambition to start a business on Shopify.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Right. OK, thanks, Darren.

Operator

Our next question comes from Brian Peterson of Raymond James. Please go ahead.

Brian Peterson -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Hi, everyone. Thanks for taking my question. So Harley, I just wanted to hit on the Plus strength. Obviously, that was strong this quarter.

Curious, how should we think about the upgrades versus net new logos? And anything you can share on competitive dynamics? Thank you.

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Thanks for the question. Yes. So Plus had its second consecutive record quarter of net new merchants in Q3. It wasn't just upgrades.

It was also a lot of strong new brands are in the platform coming online. In some cases for the very first time, we also continue to see these replatforming from other providers. And they're coming to us because of flexibility, cost effectiveness of the platform. What seems to be happening is that the world is refactoring off of old legacy systems to modern platforms.

And you see that affect -- you will see that effect on GMV in the future with Plus. So a part of it is we're seeing upgrades. We're seeing more merchants become more successful on our platform that we are officing continued migrations. And as I mentioned earlier, brands like Dior or Telefonica or Jenny Craig, some of these brands didn't sell online ever before.

Some of them were migrating from legacy platforms. And with new products that were coming -- that we're developing for these larger merchants, whether it's automation, enhancing flow to make it easier for merchants to automate their business tasks or integrate with other platforms or it's the new Plus admin, which allows for far more flexibility and the multi shop admin on itself, it's been quickly adopted because it allows large brands to manage large organizations, have all the security that they require. And I think, as I said, I think last quarter in the earnings call, Shopify Plus remains the best solution and certainly the best value for enterprise and fast-growing brands.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thank you, Brian.

Operator

Our next question comes from Samad Samana of Jefferies. Please go ahead.

Samad Samana -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Hi, good morning. Thanks for taking my questions, and a great quarter. First, Tobi, we won't factor in teleportation into economics into our take rate, but we're hopeful you'll get there. But for the short term, Amy, my question is on sales and marketing, Shop has seen incredible efficiency with record net adds without really a material dollar increase in sales and marketing.

How should we think about that S&M efficiency? And is this leverage sustainable and maybe just what's the short, I guess, short or medium-term philosophy on investing in that sales and marketing line. Thanks again for taking my question.

Amy Shapero -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So we have seen efficiencies or operating leverage on the sales and marketing line and really, first and foremost, driven by the significant growth in revenue. But also keep in mind that with COVID, it's reduced some of our event marketing. We've also been more intentional about brand and studio spend into COVID.

And really, we decided to pull back on some of the brand work that we did in 2019 and focus more on meeting the immediate needs of merchants during COVID with like the 90-day free trial instead. And actually, I would say we're leaning into this opportunity that we see with new business formation increasing and spending more for online marketing and some other initiatives that that we're doing, including the operation hope announcement that we made, where we see some real opportunity to widen the upper part of the funnel and continue to democratize commerce. So there is leverage there, but where we see opportunity, we are going to lean into it.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thanks, Samad.

Operator

Our next question comes from Koji Ikeda of Oppenheimer. Please go ahead.

Koji Ikeda -- Oppenheimer and Company -- Analyst

OK, great. Thanks for taking my questions, and congrats on a really great quarter. I wanted to ask you a question on take rate. Our model shows that there was really just a slight compression in the take rate quarter -- in this quarter.

And I know it's really nitpicking. But I wanted to ask, since we haven't seen take rate compression in our model in 2016 and also considering there are a lot more GMV monetization levers today compared to four years ago, so was there anything meaningful that would have caused that compression in the take rate in this quarter that we should be aware of?

Amy Shapero -- Chief Financial Officer

Yes. So let me review that with you. But first, let me start by saying we did see a compression quarter over quarter, but we still posted a healthy gain year over year in our take rate. The quarter-over-quarter decrease was driven by Shopify payments and payment transaction fees, and it was more a function of Q2 than anything specific to Q3.

So let me walk you through Q2 first. In Q2 with the rush to online given COVID and the extended free trial that we offered, we saw two things happen. First, a jump in our GMV mix processed at the higher payment rates associated with lower cost subscription plans, our basic plan for both Shopify Payments, as well as for the transaction fee for those not on Shopify Payments. The second thing, we saw a dip in average order value in Q2, resulting in a higher fixed per transaction fee on a percentage or take-rate basis.

So fast forwarding to Q3, we saw a return to a mix more similar to our pre-COVID distribution with increased plus GPV mix quarter over quarter. As you know, Plus is lower payment take rate in basic and Plus had a very strong Q3 growth in GPV. Second thing, in Q3, we saw a return to an average order value to pre-COVID levels, similar to Q1, it went up versus Q2. So we fully expect our take rate will continue to rise over the long term.

And we've been clear that mix shifts and other movements like AOV may play a factor quarter over quarter.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Thanks, Koji.

Operator

Our next question comes from Ygal Arounian of Wedbush Securities. Please go ahead.

Ygal Arounian -- Wedbush Securities -- Analyst

Hey, good morning, everyone, and thanks for taking my question. I want to ask about SFN and as logistics, obviously, takes center stage a little bit more. And it's going to help myself understand, what are merchants considering when they're thinking about SFN versus the 3PL or another shipping partner? Even if it's whether they're fulfilling on their own versus moving to 3PL. And what are -- what's in the consideration set for them? And as you move up and look at larger merchants, what are the missing pieces? What do you need to kind of do around SFN to get your largest merchants on board? I would think that they have a lot more complexities in their needs.

And then, just lastly on the same topic. In the past couple of quarters, you updated on kind of penetration volumes. Any update you can give around the numbers and volume during the 3Q? Thanks.

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Yes. So the number of merchants enrolled in Q3 was fairly consistent with Q2. We're continuing to manage enrollment. We want to build volumes at a rate that we can maintain really, really high-quality standards.

Demand continues to increase in the quarter just because, I mean, commerce is accelerating. But also to your point, merchants generally and retailers generally find that fulfillment is not something that is easy for them, either they are not able to maintain particular two-day delivery at a reasonable price that consumers are now beginning to expect and demand. What we think we can do is we can simply -- we now have about nine-partner nodes operational in the U.S. That's in addition to the R&D center we have in Ottawa, which opened in Q1.

Four of those nodes are using 6RS technology. So what we're trying to do is we're trying to make it -- so that merchants don't have to think about fulfillment. They have to think about their shipping. Now who is going to be the exact target for SFN longer term? Well the nice part of having some time to experiment is that we can figure out which merchant should put which products into our fulfillment network.

And it may not be for every merchant. There's going to be smaller merchants who simply outgrow their living room as a fulfillment warehouse. There's going to be very large merchants who simply are unsatisfied with their existing 3PLs, and we think we can attract both sides of it. But we're trying to be -- like everything else to do at Shopify, incredibly thoughtful of who we accept and how we deliver great SFN service to them.

And that's the reason why we are taking our time and building something that we think is going to be really high quality.

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Hey, thanks, Ygal.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 58 minutes

Call participants:

Katie Keita -- Director of Investor Relations

Harley Finkelstein -- President

Amy Shapero -- Chief Financial Officer

Thomas Forte -- D.A. Davidson -- Analyst

Ken Wong -- Guggenheim Partners -- Analyst

Siti Panigrahi -- Guggenheim Securities -- Analyst

Colin Sebastian -- Baird -- Analyst

Tobi Lutke -- Chief Executive Officer

Josh Beck -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Paul Treiber -- RBC Capital Markets -- Analyst

Brad Zelnick -- Credit Suisse -- Analyst

Richard Tse -- National Bank Financial

Walter Pritchard -- Citi -- Analyst

Darren Aftahi -- ROTH Capital Partners -- Analyst

Brian Peterson -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Samad Samana -- Jefferies -- Analyst

Koji Ikeda -- Oppenheimer and Company -- Analyst

Ygal Arounian -- Wedbush Securities -- Analyst

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