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nCino, Inc. (NCNO)
Q4 2021 Earnings Call
Mar 31, 2021, 4:30 p.m. ET

Contents:

  • Prepared Remarks
  • Questions and Answers
  • Call Participants

Prepared Remarks:


Operator

Good day, and thank you for standing by. Welcome to the nCino fourth-quarter fiscal 2021 earnings conference call. [Operator instructions] Please be advised that today's conference is being recorded. [Operator instructions] I would now like to hand the conference over to Greg Orenstein, chief corporate development and legal officer.

Please go ahead.

Greg Orenstein -- Chief Corporate Development and Legal Officer

Thank you, and good afternoon, and welcome to nCino's fiscal 2021 earnings call for the fourth quarter and year ended January 31st, 2021. With me on today's call are Pierre Naude, nCino's president and chief executive officer; and David Rudow, our chief financial officer. During the course of this conference call, we may make forward-looking statements regarding trends, strategies, and the anticipated performance of our business. These forward-looking statements are based on management's current views and expectations and are subject to various risks and uncertainties, including those related to the impact of COVID-19 on our business, the financial services industry, and global economic conditions.

Our actual results may differ materially. Please refer to the risk factors included in our filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission which are available on the company's website at ncino.com under the investor relations section and on the SEC's website at sec.gov. Forward-looking statements made during the call are being made as of today, March 31st, 2021, based on the facts available to us today and nCino disclaims any obligation to update or revise any forward-looking statements. The guidance we will provide today is in part based on our assumptions as to the macroeconomic environment in which we will be operating in the future, including the timing and pace of recovery from any negative effects caused by COVID-19.

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Such matters that are beyond our control and our assumptions may not be correct. On today's call, we will also discuss certain non-GAAP measures that we believe aid in the understanding of our financial results. A reconciliation to comparable GAAP metrics can be found in today's earnings release which is available on our website and as an exhibit to the Form 8-K furnished with the SEC just before this call. With that, thank you for joining us, and I'll turn it over to Pierre.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks, Greg, and good afternoon, and thank you, everyone, for joining us to review our fourth-quarter and FY 2021 results. I couldn't be more pleased with the end of the year. Despite the uncertainty in the market, we closed a record amount of business in the fourth quarter through expansion deals with some of our largest banks in the U.S. by adding new logos for our commercial lending solution and cross-selling our retail and nIQ solutions into our existing customer base.

Wins in the fourth quarter also included key deals outside the U.S. For example, we closed a large expansion deal with our first enterprise customer in Continental Europe, a $500-billion bank in the Netherlands that we initially signed in the second quarter and also added a new logo in Continental Europe with one of the largest banks in the Baltics. Even with the sales success in the fourth quarter, we ended the year with one of the largest pipelines in the company's history, equally important is the quality of the pipeline. We are seeing interest in the nCino Bank operating system from financial institutions around the world.

In fact, over 50% of the pipeline is comprised of non-U.S. financial institutions. We also achieved a record number of go-lives for our retail banking solutions, up 100% over the fourth quarter last year. Customers who went live on retail included a $30-billion U.S.

bank, the U.S. arm of a $50-billion bank, and a $12-billion Canadian credit union, our first retail banking customer in Canada. We were also excited by the continued positive reception to the new products and our nIQ analytics platform, including automated spreading and portfolio analytics. Automated spreading, in particular, has been enthusiastically received by our early adopter commercial lending customers, where we saw strong interest and closed deals, both in the U.S.

and abroad. I've already noted our early international success many times. In the fourth quarter, 14% of our revenues came from outside the U.S. We expect the international growth to continue this year and we are investing to support it, more on that shortly.

Achievements this quarter and here included our strong financial performance. Subscription revenues in the fourth quarter grew 43% and increased 57% for the year. This helped drive our subscription revenue retention rate at year end to 155%, up from 147% last year. The results include approximately $13.5 million of PPP and CBILS subscription revenues.

David will discuss how that revenue impacts our 2022 outlook. Finally, I am pleased to report that for the full year, we were free cash flow positive, even as we continued investing in the business to capture the global market opportunity. I could not be more proud of the incredible work and dedication of the entire nCino team who achieved these results despite the challenges throughout the year from COVID. They responded almost overnight when the CARES Act and its PPP loan program in the U.S.

and CBILS and BBLS in the U.K. crystallized the need for a digital platform in small business lending. Our solution enabled banks and credit unions to efficiently respond to their clients, helping to process hundreds of thousands of loan applications. Financial institutions around the globe have now seen the power of technology and digital lending.

There is no going back to antiquated paper-based processes or continuing to rely on legacy solutions. COVID is only accelerating the move to the cloud for financial institutions around the world. Our results in FY 2021 were driven by success in four key areas: commercial lending, retail banking, nIQ, and international expansion. I thought it'd be valuable to discuss the progress on each of these areas as they are all core to our outlook for the years ahead.

So let's start with commercial lending, our flagship product. Commercial is where we first built and deployed our solution to financial institutions. Globally, it represents approximately $3.3 billion of our $10.1 billion serviceable addressable market or SAM. Yet, while commercial lending was approximately 90% of our subscription revenues in Q4, we are still early in penetrating the opportunity.

Currently, we are only addressing slightly more than 4% of the global market. Our commercial lending growth was bolstered this year when we provided our PPP and CBILS solutions to 98 customers, representing banks and credit unions of all sizes. Umpqua Bank, one of the largest banks in the Pacific Northwest with $29 billion in assets noted nCino's role in its PPP business on their recent Q4 earnings call. And I quote, in Q1, we will be leveraging the nCino platform to execute the new round of PPP that was just introduced.

And in fact, we started taking applications just this week. It's early, but our technology platform is already allowing us to meet PPP demands with less human involvement compared to last year. Our solution can be so integral to banks efficiently managing the PPP process that in the fourth quarter, we added a $15.5-billion bank as a new customer, and helped them with their PPP offering even before they went live with our commercial product. Professional services also helped drive the 47% growth in Q4 total revenues.

Professional services exceeded expectations as we again executed on successful remote deliveries with better-than-expected utilization and rate realization. We have continued to make strategic investments within our professional services organization to expand our footprint globally, further enable our SI partners and enhance our managed services and change management practices to ensure successful adoption of our solutions across financial institutions of all sizes around the world. We are often asked how M&A affects our client retention. The short answer is that it can often be a very positive development.

A great example is Truist, the result of the merger between SunTrust and BB&T. The $495 billion dollar asset bank, now the sixth largest in the U.S., has characterized nCino as an important element of their combined operating system. Kelly King, chairman and CEO, noted on their recent earnings call. For example, in our commercial lending area, we've taken the very new and very best-in-class SunTrust nCino loan origination program and the BB&T back end system in terms of commercial loans.

Another case is the merger of First Horizon and IBERIABANK. Iberia, a $20-billion asset longtime nCino customer, merged with First Horizon last year, creating an $18-billion asset bank. First Horizon has since committed to utilizing nCino's bank operating system across the combined entity. On its most recent earnings call, First Horizon's CEO commented, we're broadening and expanding our use of the nCino platform that's going to streamline a lot of our commercial lending business end-to-end.

First Horizon, now one of the top 40 U.S. banks, will be utilizing nCino's commercial and small business lending and treasury management sales and onboarding solutions across more than 2,000 of the bank's associates. Another important driver of our commercial growth is the strong success we've had in the U.S. farm credit space.

In the fourth quarter, we added three farm credit customers. With these new customers, we are working with about 60% of the institutions in this market. Upon successful commercial implementations in these institutions, we believe these customers will be great candidates to expand their use of nCino and adopt our retail and nIQ offerings. Next, let's discuss retail banking.

Building out our retail business was a key focus this past year, as globally it represents $6.8 billion of our SAM. I'm very pleased with the progress across the product line, including retail lending, account opening, and international mortgage. The fourth-quarter go-lives included some of our largest and most complex installations to date. The $30-billion U.S.

bank I mentioned earlier included 38 integrations of the bank operating system to disparate data sources as part of a large change management initiative. This customer is a terrific example of the complexity and greater regulation in the retail market. It has taken multiple years of R&D to create a retail solution that can meet these requirements. As we continue investing to mature and increase the depth and breadth of our retail functionality, including further product updates in April, we believe we are establishing a high barrier to entry for new competitors.

Our differentiated solution is driving success in cross-selling retail banking to customers of all sizes. In the fourth quarter, a $17-billion asset bank already on at nCino's commercial lending, small business lending, and customer engagement solutions expanded to include retail lending. Now turning to nIQ. As discussed last quarter, we have now integrated nIQ into the bank operating system, so we can drive intelligence across the platform.

We are very pleased with the progress we are seeing selling portfolio analytics and automated spreading, two of the initial products on the nIQ platform. Automated spreading customers have reported a 50% to 75% reduction in the manual requirements of loan underwriting which accelerates the time-to-loan approval. We already have five customers using automated spreading with three of them based outside the U.S. These customers are already using our legacy spreading product, so they were up and running on the new automated spreading solution in only a few short weeks.

The opportunity to cross-sell to our existing commercial customers with time to revenues in weeks, not months, is particularly exciting. In the fourth quarter, six existing nCino customers purchased portfolio analytics, including an $8-billion asset regional bank. With nCino's portfolio analytics solution, our customers receive performance, and compliance-driven analytics that enable managers to better assess risk from a single source of truth. Let me spend a minute on the impact of the nIQ platform on our SAM as nIQ has not included in the $10.1-billion estimate.

nCino has a track record of increasing its SAM. We started with commercial lending for community banks in the U.S., expanding to enterprise banks in the U.S., then expanded to include the global commercial opportunity and then added the global retail market to arrive at $10.1 billion. We are now again growing the SAM by approximately $2 billion based upon the anticipated revenue lift from the first three products on the nIQ platform: automated spreading, portfolio analytics, and commercial pricing which we plan to add in April. We see this $2 billion as just the initial sizing of the nIQ opportunity.

As pricing matures, customers realize the value and benefit of these solutions. We expect this $2 billion to grow. In addition, as we introduce new products on the platform in the coming quarters and years, we expect to further expand the nIQ SAM, and the addressable market opportunity for nCino. So now on to International.

All three of these business segments, commercial, retail, and nIQ are contributing to the growth of our international business. As I've said before, we believe COVID has had the greatest negative impact on our international growth as we couldn't get feet on the ground to hire in-country salespeople and build out our infrastructure as quickly as we would have liked. However, we made solid progress in the fourth quarter, hiring senior salespeople in both Germany and France. We were also pleased last quarter to expand our relationship with our first enterprise deal in Continental Europe, the $500-billion bank in the Netherlands I mentioned earlier.

This customer initially selected nCino in the second quarter for a compliance-driven use case and has already increased their adoption of nCino to include end-to-end commercial lending. The success was supplemented in the quarter by one of the largest banks in the Baltics, selecting nCino to utilize their commercial lending process. The go-live of the Canadian credit union noted earlier further illustrates our international success, as this customer went live on both retail and commercial lending. With our land-and-expand model, we are happy to gain a foothold with a new customer through, either retail or commercial, but it's even more efficient when we can sell the whole platform from the beginning.

Our presence in the Japanese market also took a big step forward in the fourth quarter. We named a general manager to run our Tokyo office, Itsuki Nomura and added two expats from our Wilmington headquarters to embed the nCino culture and product knowledge as we grow our footprint in Japan. Shortly after fiscal year end, we hosted our first ever nCino Summer Japan which was a virtual half-day event featuring nCino executives, partners such as Salesforce and financial industry leaders from across Japan. More than 1,100 people registered for this inaugural event.

And while we appreciate that it will take time to break into the Japanese market, we are already seeing a positive impact in our pipeline. Early in fiscal 2022, we also announced progress in building our presence in EMEA. We named Jennifer Geary as seasoned European finance executive as General Manager, EMEA, tasked with driving our expansion across the continent. A related step included the launch of our German subsidiary to focus on demand from financial institutions that recognize the need for a digital strategy in this $1.1 billion market.

These are just some of the steps we have taken to invest in our international footprint and further leverage the increased visibility and brand awareness we have enjoyed since our IPO, particularly overseas. I have challenged the team this year to land reputable customers in each of the new European markets we have entered. Let's talk for a minute about how we maintain the year-end momentum, leveraging one of the largest pipelines in our history. One area will be to increase specialization in our sales efforts.

As we enhance the breadth and depth of products across the platform, we have begun hiring salespeople who can add deep domain expertise, both by bankers for bankers has been the motto since nCino's earliest days and that includes bankers selling to bankers. The nCino Bank operating system brings business process optimization to the institution. We're improving efficiency, the cost structure and compliance and who better to address those pain points than someone who lived that complexity before joining nCino. We are confident that by expanding our sales teams with this additional level of expertise, we can accelerate both the land and the expand.

The cooperation required to successfully integrate another layer of sales ties directly to our culture. I am particularly proud that we have maintained the nCino culture even without being in the office together. This was especially evident during our recent companywide kickoff which is typically held every February in Wilmington and where this year, our 1,100 employees around the globe came together for a week of virtual learning, networking, engagement, and interaction. I'm telling you, you could feel the positive energy and the enthusiasm through Zoom.

Now let me turn the call over to David to dive deeper into our financial results and discuss our outlook for fiscal 2022.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you, Pierre, and thank you all for joining us to review our fourth-quarter and fiscal year 2021 earnings. To echo Pierre's comments, I am very pleased to have ended the year with such a solid quarter. Please note that all numbers referenced in my remarks are on a non-GAAP basis unless otherwise stated. Our non-GAAP financial information excludes the impact of stock-based compensation and the amortization of intangible assets.

A reconciliation to comparable GAAP metrics can be found in today's earnings release which is available on our website and as an exhibit to our 8-K furnished with the SEC. Total revenues for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2021 were $56.6 million, compared with $38.5 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020, an increase of 47% year over year. Full fiscal year revenues were $204.3 million, compared to $138.2 million in fiscal 2020, up 48% year over year. Subscription revenues for this quarter were $45 million, an increase of 43% year over year, representing 79% of total revenues in the fourth quarter.

Full fiscal year subscription revenues were $162.4 million, an increase of 57% year over year, representing 80% of total revenues. In the quarter, PPP contributed $4.5 million to subscription revenues. For the full year, PPP subscription revenues were approximately $13.5 million. The team is hard at work helping customers redeploy the PPP seats to other areas of their institution which can help mitigate the risk of PPP churn and we are pleased with their success to date.

Even with attrition factored into our guidance, we expect this $13.5 million to grow in fiscal '22 as we benefit from a full year of PPP revenues. However, as these seats are redeployed, they will move into commercial or retail or another bucket, making them difficult to track. As such, we do not plan on further calling out PPP revenues in fiscal '22. Subscription revenue retention rate for fiscal '21 was 155%, increasing from 147% for fiscal 2020.

This implies approximately $160 million of our recurring revenues were derived from customers who initially contracted for our solutions prior to fiscal 2021. We are very pleased with our success in expanding business with our installed base which, in many cases, included PPP revenues. While we continue to expect the retention rate to moderate over time, maintaining and growing the footprint within our customer base is key to our success and is reflected in the high retention metrics and customer satisfaction we have historically enjoyed. Professional services revenues were $11.6 million in the quarter, a 65% increase over $7.1 million in the fourth quarter of last year.

Professional services revenues benefited from better-than-expected utilization and rates in the quarter, and an easier compare versus the prior-year quarter which was negatively impacted by the implementation of ASC 606. Full fiscal year 2021 professional services revenues were $41.9 million, compared to $34.9 million in fiscal 2020, an increase of 20% year over year. As we have discussed, we expect professional services to become a diminishing portion of total revenues as we continue to leverage our SI partners, particularly as we expand internationally. Revenues outside the U.S.

were $7.8 million or 14% of total revenues in the fourth quarter, up from $3.3 million or 9% of total revenues in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. For the full year, 11% of revenues came from outside the U.S. and increased from 8% last year. We ended fiscal 2021 with over 1,260 customers, up from over 1,180 at the end of fiscal 2020.

Of these customers, 224 contributed greater than $100,000 to fiscal 2021 subscription revenues, an increase from 161 in fiscal 2020. Of these 224 customers, 36 contributed more than $1 million to fiscal 2021 subscription revenues, compared to 21 at the end of the prior year. Non-GAAP gross profit for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2021 was $33.8 million, compared to $20.9 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020, an increase of 62% year over year. Non-GAAP gross margin was 60%, compared to 54% in the first quarter of fiscal 2020.

Our gross margins continue to improve largely from subscription product mix, with new logos weighted more toward enterprise and international customers, as well as, subscription becoming a larger contributor to total revenues. Total non-GAAP operating costs for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2021 were $41.3 million or 73% of total revenues, compared to $29 million or 75% of total revenues in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. While we did see some cost savings due to COVID, especially around reduced travel and in-person events, we continued investing to grow our international footprint and expand the breadth and depth of our products, as well as, absorb additional costs related to being a public company. Sales and marketing expenses for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2021 were $15.9 million or 28% of total revenues, compared to $12.6 million or 33% in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020.

Research and development expenses for the fourth quarter were $15.9 million or 28% of total revenues, compared to $9.8 million or 25% for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. As noted, we continue to invest in building out the nCino Bank operating system, including nIQ and our retail products, as well as, localizing products to support our international expansion. General and administrative expenses were $9.5 million or 17% of total revenues, compared to $6.5 million or 17% in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. We continue to invest in our G&A function to help support our rapid growth, along with our increased public company-related costs.

Non-GAAP operating loss for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2021 was $7.5 million compared with non-GAAP operating loss of $8.1 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. Our non-GAAP operating margin for the fourth quarter improved to negative 13%, compared with negative 21% in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. Non-GAAP net loss attributable to nCino for the fourth quarter of fiscal 2021 was $5.7 million or $0.06 per share, compared to non-GAAP net loss attributable to nCino of $7.7 million or $0.10 per share in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. For fiscal year 2021, the non-GAAP operating loss was $14.2 million, compared with a non-GAAP operating loss of $20.7 million in fiscal year 2020.

Our non-GAAP operating margin for fiscal year 2021 improved to negative 7%, compared to negative 15% in fiscal 2020. Non-GAAP net loss attributable to nCino for fiscal year 2021 was $12.1 million or $0.14 per share, compared to non-GAAP net loss attributable to nCino of $20.1 million or $0.26 per share in fiscal 2020. Turning to cash. We ended the quarter with cash and cash equivalents of $371.4 million.

Net cash used in operating activities was $11.9 million, compared to $11.2 million in the fourth quarter of fiscal 2020. Capital expenditures were $0.6 million in the quarter, resulting in negative free cash flow of $12.5 million for the fourth quarter of fiscal '21. As a reminder, Q4 is our strongest billing quarter which usually results in improving cash collections in the first and second quarters. For the full year, we reported positive free cash flow of $4.9 million.

While we are very pleased to have achieved positive cash flow, we do plan to continue investing for growth in fiscal 2022, especially to build out our international footprint, and fund R&D in the light of the opportunity we see for the nCino Bank operating system. Our investment goal is responsible balanced growth. We've now demonstrated our ability to successfully generate cash, but it is not a short-term priority and we do expect to burn cash in fiscal 2022. Our remaining performance obligation or RPO, increased to $600.9 million as of January 31st, 2021, up 39% over $431.5 million as of January 31st, 2020, with $364.5 million in less than 24 months category, up 42% from $253 million as of January 31st, 2020.

Now turning to guidance. We are providing revenue guidance for both the subscription and professional services lines, reflecting the increasing impact of subscription revenues on our results as I noted earlier. For the first quarter, we expect total revenues of $59 million to $60 million, with subscription revenues of $48.5 million to $49.5 million; and professional services of $9.5 million to $10.5 million. Non-GAAP operating loss is expected to be approximately $4 million to $5 million and non-GAAP loss attributable to nCino per share is to be $0.04 to $0.05.

This is based on a weighted average of approximately 94 million basic shares outstanding. For the full fiscal year 2022, we expect total revenues of $253 million to $255 million, with subscription revenues of $209 million to $211 million, and professional services revenues of $42 million to $44 million. We expect non-GAAP operating loss for fiscal 2022 to be $23 million to $25 million and non-GAAP net loss attributable to nCino per share to be $0.24 to $0.26 based on a weighted average of approximately 95 million basic shares outstanding. Non-GAAP operating loss and net loss attributable to nCino per share guidance excludes the impact of costs related to the matters disclosed in our Form 8-K filed with the SEC on February 24th, 2021, in addition excluding stock-based compensation and the amortization of intangible assets as in prior periods.

In summary, the strong fourth-quarter performance, including our success in building such a high quality pipeline, sets us up for a very exciting fiscal '22, which is at the high end of our full-year guidance includes 30% subscription revenue growth. Our results would not be possible without the hard work of the nCino team around the world. I truly appreciate all of your efforts, as well as, your continued passion and enthusiasm for the opportunities ahead. Now I'll turn the call back to Pierre for his closing remarks and then we'll take your questions.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you, David. The fourth quarter was an awesome end to a milestone year for nCino. The record amount of business closed in Q4 and the strong pipeline already have us off to a fast start on what we expect to be another outstanding year. We ended fiscal 2021 with 24 of the top 50 U.S.

banks as customers with lots of existing runway inside each of those banks to expand within and across business lines. The international opportunity is even more significant as we are earlier in the journey. Globally, we believe we have only captured approximately 1% to 2% of the opportunity. I couldn't be more excited about the year ahead.

We have the right product. The nCino Bank operating system is a unique end-to-end platform, with the road map in place to continuously increase its functionality, including expanding the nIQ product set, providing actionable insights, and data to the bank operating system users. We have a sound reputation with our customers. This is truly one of our most valuable assets and something we work hard every day to earn.

And perhaps, most importantly, nCino has an outstanding team around the globe, ready to take this past year's progress and turn it into this year's success. As always, we value the confidence and support of our stockholders, and we look forward to sharing our progress with you as the year continues. We are now happy to take your questions.

Questions & Answers:


Operator

[Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Terry Tillman with Truist Securities. Your line is now open.

Terry Tillman -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Yeah. Thanks for taking my questions. Hey, Pierre, David, and Greg. Hope you're doing well and congrats on the bookings and also the cash flow.

Maybe the first question, Pierre, is for you in terms of -- it's nice to hear about the retail traction. What I'm curious about is, could we get like an update on how many customers have some sort of footprint of the retail banking platform? And how you're feeling about what kind of signals you're getting from, either the global banks or the enterprise banks as we look into FY '22 in terms of their willingness to move to this? And then I had a follow-up for David.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Hey, great to talk to you, and thanks for being on today. So what we're seeing is that across the market, there's interest in our retail offering. And let me remind you, remember, retail is mortgage on the international front.

It is account opening in the U.S. and Canada and its retail lending across the spectrum, OK? And so what we're seeing is that's a nice, healthy pipeline. The go-lives we announced was actually a great testimonial to the fact that the software can scale. You saw the sizes of the banks, OK? Initially, we thought we're going to have a lot of smaller banks doing this and for us to go live with that size bank shows that we, not only can scale from a volume perspective, but also a breadth of offering.

So we're seeing a nice pipeline. We're seeing great interest in our international mortgage product across the spectrum from Canada and the U.K. So I feel good about that. And from a customer number, because it's somewhat relevant because we've got a large number of deposit account opening accounts and retail lending in place already.

As I mentioned last time, we signed in very quick order of six Canadian mortgage customers and now we have to make that product settle and make sure we can go successful live because that's where the proof in the pudding is. But I see an increasingly interest in retail, as well as, the fact that retail is growing faster than commercial which is important to us. All our growth initiatives has to grow faster than commercial and we're seeing that.

Terry Tillman -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

That's great. And I guess, David, just my second and last question and they're always usually multipart, that's just the way I roll. But I'm curious on the international side, I mean it's a journey with your customers, so there's the landing and then you expand over time. But what is the landings like so far with the international business from what you've seen? And is there any kind of different implications on the activation schedules for seats in international deals versus U.S.

or North America deals? Thank you and congrats.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Thank you. Good to see you, talk to yoiu, Terry. On the international front, it's similar to what we see in the U.S.

Obviously, internationally, we need to land in each country and build reference accounts and that's what we're doing right now. So very similar, we land wherever we can to help a customer. If you look at the deal we did on the continent, we landed a very small deal portion of a deal in the third quarter, second quarter, I believe it was, and then we followed up and did a follow-on closing of a deal in the fourth quarter. So very quickly to upsell them.

So that's the idea. We just land, prove ourselves, we're good at what we do, we can make customers successful, and then we follow on and sell them more. And the turn to activation schedule, it's very similar to what you see in the U.S. So no real change there from what we talked about in the past.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Brent Bracelin with Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.

Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Thank you and I apologize if the question was asked, I got kicked off earlier. But Pierre, I wanted to start with you on the retail side. A little surprised to see just the early success, cross-sell success on retail this quarter. If you look at the 300 banker-less customers that you have today, help us understand how many of those customers do you think could use both the retail and the commercial LOS here over the next five to eight years.

Is this the opportunity where if you have good -- continued good success here, you could get half of those customers or all of those customers up for grabs? Help us kind of frame the five-year plus opportunity around retail, given some of the momentum you saw in Q4 here? Thanks.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Thanks. That's a great question. You know, as I look at that market, firstly, these go-lives we just mentioned with you, one of those big banks actually we landed with retail.

So they had no commercial beforehand. So that was a nice one for us, OK, a while back and that's why they could go live now. Apart from that, if you look at from a planning perspective, I exclude top 10, top 20 banks today and pursuing that for retail. I believe we will become more in the U.S.

for retail lending and account openings, we should become more mature with that product, but they're such a big market, if you take the top 20 out. And most of our customers, that 300-plus you mentioned is below that top 20, OK, from a customer account perspective. So I'm fine there. What I'm seeing with international mortgage, with spot the retail profile, is actually we're seeing interest with our largest customers.

So there's no reason that all of our international customers cannot have an interest in the mortgage product and actually use us for that. I see the same with unsecured lending in Europe and Canada, where there's a willingness to look at this solution like nCino to actually look at that. It's a very different mix of consumer business in Europe we're seeing, so I'm optimistic that we can win some business there. So as you look then at the big picture, to come back to your question, I think a large number of our logos will actually embrace the platform.

We're seeing that all the time. You see my net retention rate of 155%. The only way you get there is by cross-selling, OK? So I'm optimistic. And the movement and the interest we see in retail is that three years ago, people tell me, well, retailers kind of settled and build out.

Well, here we are, we are taking some fairly large banks live. So I think the cloud's time has come for retail as well.

Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Great. Super encouraging and then just as a quick follow-up. David, on RPO, just want to make sure I get that number right. I know last quarter, I think it was $453 million.

Did you say it was $500 million or $600 million this quarter? I just want to make sure I get that right.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. This quarter, the total was $600.9 million and then the less than 24-month bucket was $360.5 million.

Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Got it. And so I mean, that's a just a monster kind of new bookings quarter, $148 million sequential increase. Walk me through what drove such a monster kind of quarter here on the backlog build side. Are these some customers that might not necessarily go live this year but next year? Do you have some new renewals? That looks just like a monster quarter there.

I'm just trying to understand what drove RPO up so much sequentially here in just one quarter. Thanks.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. No, thank you. Yeah. The fourth quarter was very strong.

We saw deals -- balance deals across enterprise, community, regional come in, and it was just a record quarter from a business closing perspective. There's really -- I don't think the average contract length changed and the seed activation schedule is just, as we talked about, as we were going public with the team. So no change to that, those revenues will flow over the next, you know, up to 24 months as they activate. Yeah, we're very pleased with the activity that we saw in the fourth quarter.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

You know, I do think there was pent-up demand because the first six months of the year, banks were preoccupied with PPP, so that pent-up demand came through in fourth quarter. But on top of that, as we mentioned, we ended the year with one of the largest pipelines in the history of the company. So not only could we turn that business into contract or that prospect, we still sit on a big pipeline that bodes well for this year.Great. Well, it certainly sounds like that was an amazing quarter here.

Good to see the momentum and success you're having. Thanks.

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Josh Beck with KeyBanc. Your line is now open.

Josh Beck -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Thanks for taking the question. I just wanted to follow up on some of those comments, Pierre, that you had made. So when you think about maybe some of this pent-up demand coming through, obviously, the world and the environment has changed a lot in the last year. So do you feel like with your bank conversations now that maybe they're worked through the PPP and the forgiveness and they're maybe starting to look at modernizing commercial or retail more seriously? Just curious how those conversations have maybe tenured throughout the last year and how you describe the current state of the environment.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. It's very interesting. The first six months, the market clearly was distracted by PPP industry activity and the people working from home. I mean, indeed, it was just a state of mind that we all had to get used to.

In the second half, we started seeing the acceleration back to strategic initiatives. I've spoken to a number of CEOs over the past few weeks. It's very interesting. In banking, there's a new administration, so you clearly can sense that they get ready for more regulation and nCino was tremendously helpful there.

Number one, they look at competitive pressures in the market. They fully understand and you get the Googles and the AWSes, Amazons, I mean, looking at financial service as an opportunity. And so they have to wonder, do we partner? Do we compete and how do we address that? And the way if you step back then, if you're a banker, you look at your infrastructure and your API infrastructure, how do you engage with these players if you want to partner with them? And that's where nCino comes in. We can optimize, we can drive a fintech experience, but then we provide APIs into those third parties to actually do what's called embedded banking, OK? And that's a theme that you're going to hear more over the next year as banks look strategically at their IT infrastructure.

So we truly believe we can help them to prepare for the future to, not only survive, but to thrive by looking at modern infrastructures for their bank.

Josh Beck -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Really helpful. And then maybe a follow-up for you, David. I think you had mentioned net revenue retention actually improved to $155 million. So if we were to back out maybe the PPP contribution from existing customers, is that maybe a better year-over-year change to think about the moderation that we should see in this metric over time? Just curious on how we should maybe try to triangulate some of those data points.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. Now the -- so if you take out PPP, its impact for fiscal '21, our net revenue retention number came in at 143% for the year and that's versus the 147% we ended fiscal '20 at.

Josh Beck -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

OK. Really helpful. Thanks, team.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Mayank Tandon with Needham & Company. Your line is now open.

Mayank Tandon -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Thank you. Good evening and congrats, Pierre and David on the strong set of numbers. I wanted to first start with the SI partnership. I think, David, you mentioned that that's helping you scale internationally.

Could you just talk about just who are you working with? How does that work in terms of partnering with these on the larger bank side? I imagine that's where you're really leveraging SI partnerships and maybe we can start with that and then I have a few follow-ups. Thanks.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah, that sounds good. Thank you. Yeah. So on the SI side, we're seeing a lot more activity.

We -- at the time of IPO, we signed a number of 1,500 SI partners trained on nCino and that grew to 2,000 at year end. So we're really seeing good traction with them. As you see, our professional services growth is lower because of that. We're engaging more partners to deploy work and especially internationally, we don't want to build a massive services team, as we've said in the past.

This is exactly what we said we're going to do and we're just following through with that. So we're very pleased with the activity we're seeing, especially in the new countries that we're entering into and we're getting them up to speed and running. And then over time, we expect them to be able to help us win additional deals in the future.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah and then if you look at the names, it's Deloitte, PwC, Accenture. It's the same names. It's global companies. It's companies who knows us well, who is helping us to get into these markets.

Mayank Tandon -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Great. Thanks and then I just wanted to follow up, maybe, Pierre, in terms of international. Could you talk about what the specific markets that you're targeting? And then should we think about more organic or M&A? And then tied to that is how much is local expertise required to really win internationally? Thank you.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Yeah. So we've -- fortunately, I have experience of previous international businesses. So we established a product team in London to help us with integrations and localization.

We have product managers, as well as, strategic thinkers there. And so we literally look at every market segment because you've got the European or EMEAwide regulatory framework and then each country still have their own little dynamics and changes that you have to make. And that's why we take in with commercial first because it's less regulated. It's a broad platform and we can do tremendous business there, but we are looking at your typical Western Europe, Nordics, I guess you've got Germany, France, Spain, Italy, U.K., Ireland.

U.K., Ireland far being the strongest for us right now, that's really landed at first. We now have people in Germany, France, Spain, etc., in the Nordics and so that's beginning to help. As you know, from zero to one is always the toughest. Once you get that reference account, the rest will come like dominoes.

Then we've got a nice team in Australia and we've got a joint venture in Japan, where Salesforce has got a strong foothold and we feel that their brand recognition will help us and we see that. As we mentioned, we had a conference there with virtual 1,100 people attending which is tremendous. So I feel optimistic. Although that market is a tough one to crack.

Mayank Tandon -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

That's very helpful. Thank you so much.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Saket Kalia with Barclays. Your line is now open.

Saket Kalia -- Barclays -- Analyst

OK, great. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my question here. Hey, Pierre, maybe just to start with you.

A lot of great traction in international and it feels like it's just the beginning. So maybe just to think about this top down. Pierre, can you just maybe talk about the competitive backdrop in some of your larger international markets? And how that sort of compares and contrast to the U.S.?

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. It's interesting. We see different players. International, I would say, Pega is more of an interest that we see in trends in these banks, where they have done kind of, a Pega framework in both to compete with us.

We see a little bit -- FIS acquired a company a long time back. There we see there in the commercial origination where they try in the underwriting space, OK, but not that active. It's the same pattern as here where the legacy players are in each country and there's some homegrown systems, so it's a patchwork. And then once you get into the bank, you realize, but then you have 10, 15 systems do the same job we do with one platform, OK? And then it's a question of getting them over the hump with a cloud and it's a new company, where the IPO was tremendous helping us with brand recognition and so on.

We've cracked the U.K. and Ireland. We're well entrenched. We're well known, every bank you walk into will know about us.

When you get into Germany, it's a bit less common. We are, obviously, we've got people on the ground now and so you tackle every country like that. And there's 1,500 plus banks in Germany. Then you go to Spain and there's four, five big ones.

So you just have to get to know them. There are people and feet on the ground, that is helpful.

Saket Kalia -- Barclays -- Analyst

Got it. Got it. David, for my follow-up for you. Understanding, we're not going to be talking about PPP as a cohort in fiscal '22 and I think you said it's about $13.5 million in revenue here in fiscal '21.

Can you just kind of give us a sense for what kind of assumption is embedded in '22? I mean it's going to be a full year impact, but any assumptions around churn or maybe even cross-sell that we should sort of be thinking about, as we kind of think about that blending in with the rest of the total?

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. No, that sounds great. Nice talking to you Saket. So we ended the fourth quarter with $4.5 million in PPP revenues.

That's the run rate looking out into the new fiscal -- in fiscal '22. Now as we exit out the year, we'll start seeing some of those fees being redeployed elsewhere within the bank and that $4.5 million also includes any level of churn that we assume for the year. So it's not -- it doesn't end, it's not a cliff. Our PPP revenues continue into next year and gives us the opportunity to spin those seeds elsewhere and place in the bank to use them in some of the other segments.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. We've already seen customers recontracting some of those seats, redeployed them. It's a great opportunity for them to actually drive efficiency in the broader small business lending market or use it for commercial as I see fit. So we're actually pleasantly surprised by how that is going.

Saket Kalia -- Barclays -- Analyst

Makes sense. Thanks, guys.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thanks.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Brad Sills with Bank of America. Your line is now open.

Brad Sills -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Oh, great. Hey, guys. Thanks for taking my questions and congrats on a nice bookings quarter. The backlog looked real nice.

Wanted to ask, you know, one of the comments you made, Pierre, was -- that stood out is 50% of the pipeline is international now. You know, U.K. and Ireland is where you've been strong in the past and you mentioned Germany, France or areas of Japan where you're investing. Should we take that to mean that those countries are contributing more to the pipeline at this point? Are they coming in? How challenging is it to build feet on the street? You mentioned that you're a bit behind on hiring there, but that pipeline suggest that perhaps you're efficient there with the feet on the street that you have.

So just any comments, if you could follow-up on the hiring effort, how difficult it is to kind of address these new countries and at that makeup of 50%, how much of that is in these new countries?

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yeah. So we've been very fortunate. We've now got feet on the ground, OK, in these countries. And it makes a difference.

Because when a German living in Stuttgart calling on Germans or in Hamburg, it just -- it's different than me calling from London, OK? So we're beginning to see the impact of that and that's in the pipeline. It's well-qualified deals. I've been personally on calls with some of these German customers. So that plus the IPA has been tremendously helpful.

I've challenged the team to look at the reference account in each of these markets as we go forward in this year and my team typically responds pretty well to these kind of challenges with just the competitive ones. So what I'm seeing is the pipeline growing, well-qualified deals and we're overcoming the cloud resistance and people are going to believe. And so our goal is to see if we can get reference accounts in each of these markets.

Saket Kalia -- Barclays -- Analyst

That's great and with the strong RPO backlog, could you help us unpack the land versus expand? How much of that growth is coming from land versus expand? Were you surprised to the upside on either? It sounds like both were strong. But just any color on that and any color you can make on just the initial lands. Are you finding customers committing larger initial deal sizes, given the efforts you guys have made in broadening the footprint with nIQ and retail? Any comment on that would be great. Thank you so much.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. What I would say is fourth quarter characterized a return to the normal business pattern which means the contract and activation schedules is coming back to normal. PPP, as we all know, was a distortion in first half of FY '21 and so what we're seeing now is it's normal contracts. As I mentioned earlier, the big banks could focus on strategic initiatives and that's why we signed a larger number of those.

So if you take those two factors and now the smaller banks are coming back, I'm seeing it after the year end, but as you take those factors, those contracts were larger. They are thinking strategic, and that added to that RPO. Anything to add there, David?

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

No. That's, as you said, things are returning back to normal. I mean our plan is to -- our goal is to get into a customer and help them in any way we can, because we know we can upsell them once we get in. So those trends continue and we did see a good level of activity from new customers in the fourth quarter as well.

Saket Kalia -- Barclays -- Analyst

That's great. Thanks, David. Thanks, Pierre.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Thanks.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Fred Havemeyer with Macquarie. Your line is now open.

Fred Havemeyer -- Macquarie Group -- Analyst

Hey, thank you. No, I think -- I'd like to touch on something that you discussed in part already, but I'd like to ask about how to think about your post-pandemic pipeline? So between recent PPP demand or rather beyond that, could you roughly bucket the reasons that banks are looking at your platform between, say, improving business resiliency, better in customer experience, gaining efficiencies with software? Or generally, any other categories you would highlight is driving this demand?

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

I would say the biggest thing is probably digital transformation. There is now a heightened urgency for banks to understand that the current mode of operation will not make them competitive in the future. That they truly have realized that strategically, you cannot go on like today and so many of these banks look at the different business segments. They look at the competition out there, they look at the renewal efforts of software infrastructure, and they say, what is coming down the pike, and it varies.

Then you look at these massive fintech players or the Amazons of the world and etc., coming to the market, OK? And they realize that the customer expectation because of COVID have just changed. The way they're going to interact is different. And so what we've convinced them effectively is that, look, if you want to participate in this future banking environment, connecting to third parties, driving efficiency, be much more customer friendly, etc., and have a more fintech experience for your end customer, all of that combined is driving an urgency in the banking community to understand. If you want to survive, you're going to operate different and that's what I'm seeing in every conversation I talked to.

And we even you know -- we talk about -- to CEOs of banks about this whole concept of embedded banking which, by the way, it's not that strange. If you buy a car today, you rarely go to the bank to get a loan before you buy the car. You go to the car dealership and you get your loan right there, that's embedded banking. That happens in mortgages.

There's a whole ecosystem of mortgage brokers out there, OK? These companies we partner will -- that -- will do that in the construction environment now, like both. So there's a number of these players that's out there, that's connecting to us, and us creating an ecosystem where the banking services get pushed out there into third parties. And the bankers understand that's how consumers consume financial services and they have to get the infrastructure in place to do that.

Fred Havemeyer -- Macquarie Group -- Analyst

Thank you. And then if I can get one follow-up question here as well. You've already called out a very strong new business quarter and it also looks like we had a very strong collections quarter as well between positive free cash flow and also deferred revenue growing about 51% year over year, it looks like. So I'd like to ask, what is driving this? And how do you see this growth reflecting in the underlying dynamics of your business?

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So as we've talked about in the past, our strongest billing quarters are the Q4 and Q1. So our cash flows will trail in the third and fourth quarters. And really, we had a very strong cash flow year because of PPP, we had cost savings in travel and conferences.

So that -- very pleased with the cash flows for the year, but you know, we will continue to spend next year. And as mentioned in the prepared remarks, we plan on burning some cash in the coming year around those investments.

Fred Havemeyer -- Macquarie Group -- Analyst

I appreciate it. Thank you.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. Our next question comes from Brian Peterson with Raymond James. Your line is now open.

Brian Peterson -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Hi, gentlemen. Thanks for taking the questions and congrats on the really strong RPO number in the fourth-quarter results for the year. So two questions for me. So first, Pierre, I know you don't manage to the SAM per se and I know we can segment it by geo or by product.

But I'm curious, you know, the $2 billion incremental SAM, that's a pretty big number. So, you know, as we're thinking about the cadence of new products that you're adding to the platform, how should we think about that? Is that organic? Is that through M&A? What do you think the SAM could be five to 10 years from now?

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. So look, to me, the holy grail of this whole thing was to both an architecture and infrastructure, of something that is client-centric and fits together. And you know, I've got many competitors who's actually a Frankenstein, who bought a bunch of companies and put them in a bucket and tell you, you can buy all this from me, OK? So we were very focused forever and even now in taking that approach. That's why we're building all these different product lines of retail, account opening, commercial, etc., small business.

And as I mentioned before, we always look at the market. We look at great companies that we feel we can plug-in specifically in the nIQ arena and some we built. So if you look at Portfolio Analytics, that's a company we acquire. They have great domain expertise that applies to the global market and then we build automated spreading from that, OK? Then the second one in nIQ is the whole analytics platform, which is we built a company in Salt Lake City or we bought one and now we're taking that platform and we're building it out and we've got Portfolio Analytics going on there.

And then we decided based on those two pieces of infrastructure, we can actually build our own commercial pricing platform, OK? And if you take those three, we've looked at what the upsell capability in our banks is and what the market will price at, and that's how we got -- if you look at the total global market and you apply that upsell, we have realized now, we feel pretty good about a $2 billion. And so then as we mature those products and we decide to, either acquire a product to put in there or to build it organically, that will actually add to the SAM. So if you ask me, there's a tremendous opportunity to expand the SAM. But what I've learned in my life with software business is, I don't want to be too soon and too wide.

I would rather be a market leader in all my segments I address because business just comes easier your way that way. If you become the safe choice, you become the place that people just buy from because it works, it's well known. I've got people moving around between banks, and they say, nCino is a great company to work with. So I'm not so hellbent on continuing to grow that SAM in the short-term because I want to capture more of the SAM.

And then as we get to a point where we believe there's an opportunity, we can expand it again.

Brian Peterson -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Right. Understood. OK. Great, Pierre.

And so, David, I just want to clarify, there were some mentions on the call adding some more specialized sales reps. I'm curious, how should we think about the impact of that? Is that more on upsell? We'd see that more purchasing more in the platform or would see that in bigger lands? I don't know the size of that investment, but just curious how we should be thinking about the impact there. Thanks, guys.

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Yeah. So we're adding specialized people to help us on retail and nIQ in the Americas. And really because the retail is such a big product, and it is different than commercial, we need specialists to go out and help talk to our customers, how they talk on retail and the same thing with nIQ. It's specialized analytics, spreading, and commercial pricing, we have to be able to go in and talk to customers and be the expert to help them make the decision on whether to buy us or not.

It's a good size investment and it just adds to the sales team and helps the sales team, but most of that specialization is in the U.S.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

You know, we talk many times about we compete with point solutions or specialized companies. So you have to realize that's the only thing they do and they focus on that one thing. My -- my head of sales at the front line, my account manager now has to go in and talk about a whole platform with a suite of products. And you can't expect that person to be a specialist on commercial, small business, retail lending, account opening, [Inaudible], trip, etc., all these regulations.

So what you do is you have a layered sales approach. There's an account manager to fund only account relationship and actually understand the full extent of the account and then we've got a layer behind them which is self-support people. When they're on a specific opportunity, we bring the experts through the table and explain why we believe, not only we have the best product, but we have the best platform because it's client-centric, and you can go across the enterprise with that solution.

Brian Peterson -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Great color. Thanks, guys.

Operator

Thank you. We have time for one more question, and that question comes from Joe Vruwink with Baird. Your line is now open.

Joe Vruwink -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

Oh, great. Thanks for squeezing me in. Hi, everyone. Yeah.

Maybe pressing my luck with this question, but I was hoping to maybe get some rough guidepost on a midterm framework in thinking about subscription growth. So when I think about guidance for '22 being near 30% at the high end, obviously, we -- you saw a big step-up in the midterm RPO and you have great visibility on activation schedules. So it doesn't seem like a big deceleration is imminent, particularly, given the low levels of penetration within some of your existing accounts. But just any thoughts you might have on, perhaps, the two- or three-year kind of outlook for subscription growth?

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Yes. Joe, we're not giving guidance beyond FY '22. However, I have challenged my team that when it comes to subscription revenue, and I want to emphasize subscription revenue, that we, as a team, should target to grow at 30% or exceed that. We can do it.

The market is there. We've got the wherewithal. We've got the products. So as an internal challenge to my team, we should maintain or exceed that in the longer-term and that's where we stand as a management team and we agreed upon that.

Joe Vruwink -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

That's great. I'll leave it there. Thank you.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Thank you.

Operator

Thank you. I would now like to turn the call back over to Pierre Naude for closing remarks.

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

Well, thank you so much for all of you joining us today. We really appreciate this. As you can hear, we're excited about the business. We see a tremendous pipeline.

We see an opportunity as the markets are opening up and we can start traveling. I think you're seeing that in our expense line. We plan to travel. There's nothing better than to go see a customer in person and actually convince them of your value proposition, especially on the international front.

So we are excited and we have previous -- we appreciate your attention today.

Operator

[Operator signoff]

Duration: 70 minutes

Call participants:

Greg Orenstein -- Chief Corporate Development and Legal Officer

Pierre Naude -- President and Chief Executive Officer

David Rudow -- Chief Financial Officer

Terry Tillman -- Truist Securities -- Analyst

Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst

Josh Beck -- KeyBanc Capital Markets -- Analyst

Mayank Tandon -- Needham & Company -- Analyst

Saket Kalia -- Barclays -- Analyst

Brad Sills -- Bank of America Merrill Lynch -- Analyst

Fred Havemeyer -- Macquarie Group -- Analyst

Brian Peterson -- Raymond James -- Analyst

Joe Vruwink -- Robert W. Baird & Co. -- Analyst

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