Warby Parker (WRBY 0.58%)
Q1 2023 Earnings Call
May 09, 2023, 8:00 a.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
Thank you and good morning, everyone. Here with me today are Neil Blumenthal and Dave Gilboa, our co-founders and co-CEOs, alongside Steve Miller, senior vice president and chief financial officer. Before we begin, we have a couple of reminders. Our earnings release and slide presentation are available on our website at investors.warbyparker.com.
During this call and in our presentation, we will be making forward -- will be making comments of a forward-looking nature. Actual results may differ materially from those expressed or implied as a result of various risks and uncertainties. For more information about some of these risks, please review the company's SEC filings, including the section titled Risk Factors in the company's latest annual report on Form 10-K. These forward-looking statements are based on information as of May 9, 2023.
And except as required by law, we assume no obligation to publicly update or revise our forward-looking statements. Additionally, we will be discussing certain non-GAAP financial measures. These non-GAAP financial measures are in addition to and not a substitute for measures of financial performance prepared in accordance with U.S. GAAP.
A reconciliation of these items to the most directly comparable U.S. GAAP measures can be found in this morning's press release and our slide deck available on our IR website. And with that, I will pass it over to Neil to kick us off.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Welcome and thank you all for joining this morning to discuss Warby Parker's first quarter 2023 results. 2023 is off to an encouraging start as many of the positive trends we experienced across our business late last year accelerated in the first quarter, driving operating results that surpassed expectations. Q1 revenue increased 12% to 172 million, compared to our forecasted range for revenue growth between 7% to 9% and an acceleration in growth compared to the second half of 2022. Q1 results were built off of a strong December, which was highlighted by the return to a more normalized FSA shopping period late in the month.
While the optical industry continues to face demand pressures and our growth has been impacted by our pullback in marketing spend, we are capturing market share gains through our focus on the customer experience, product innovation, and store expansion. The combination of double-digit revenue growth, along with the actions we took midway through last year to rightsize our corporate cost structure and a more efficient use of marketing dollars, fueled significant leverage and a sizable improvement to adjusted EBITDA margins in the quarter. Q1 adjusted EBITDA of 17.7 million represents a quarterly record for the company and was $17 million higher compared to last year and 2.7 million above our guidance range. By channel, stores led the way, with average productivity reaching 103% of Q1 2022 levels.
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This solid performance helped offset the expected softness in e-commerce demand compared with a year ago as we are in the final stages of realigning marketing spend with pre-pandemic levels, a process that began in the second quarter of last year. We also opened six new stores in the first quarter, including one in new market. All six stores include eye exam capabilities, which brought the number of locations offering eye exams at quarter-end to 155 or 76% of our fleet. As we've increased the number of stores offering eye exams, we have seen a nice uptick in average revenue per customer, driven by both eye exam revenue and a higher penetration of progressive lenses.
We have also seen positive responses to our two bundling programs, which are aimed at capitalizing on lower traffic levels in the current environment and meant to promote cross-product purchasing and amplifying the fashion aspects of purchasing a pair of glasses. On a trailing 12-month basis, the average revenue per customer was $270, up 8.4% from a year ago. At the same time, we increased active customers 2.5% to 2.29 million, with strong gains in retail customers offsetting declines in e-commerce customers until we lap the reduction in marketing spend in the second half of this year. Overall, we are pleased with our start to the year, and we continue to be positive about the outlook for Warby Parker and the optical industry at large.
While inflationary pressure and recent changes in how consumers are spending their time and money have changed the normally steady and predictable patterns in the optical industry, we continue to see a long runway for growth for Warby within the $76 billion vision care market. We expect that our attractive pricing, new and exciting products, and exceptional customer experiences, combined with our growing store base and greater brand awareness, will return the business to its long-term growth trajectory and continue to fuel sustained market share gains. And with that, I'll turn it over to Dave to walk through the progress we've made against our primary growth driver this quarter.
Dave Gilboa -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Good morning, everyone. As Neil just outlined, we are pleased with the positive financial results we delivered in Q1 in light of the current demand environment. While we have seen some positive consumer trends to start the year, we remain cautious with our forecasts. The Vision Council is projecting the overall optical market to contract a little less than 1% in 2023 after only growing 0.5% in 2022.
This compares to the industry's historical growth rate of 3% to 5% between 2011 to 2019. We are clearly outpacing the industry with revenue up double digits in Q1 despite reducing marketing spend by 35% year over year. We believe our approach to balancing long-term strategic investments in the business with disciplined cost management positioned the company to accelerate growth and continue to deliver enhanced profitability as market conditions normalize. Opening new stores and advancing our omnichannel presence remains a key focus.
Two of the main reasons consumers who are aware of Warby Parker have not purchased from us is because we don't have a store nearby and they can't get an eye exam. Stores remain capital efficient with compelling returns even in the current demand environment. New stores continue to pay back within 20 months and generate strong four-wall adjusted EBITDA margins in line with our target of 35%. And stores are integral to advancing our holistic eye care ecosystem through their eye exam capabilities.
We find that exam stores drive higher sales than non-exam stores while offering a more seamless experience for our customers and patients. Industrywide, nearly 80% of prescription glasses are purchased at the same location an eye exam takes place, and our store channel represents the gateway to increase penetration of progressive lenses, our highest ASP and highest margin product, while attracting new and existing customers to our burgeoning contacts offering. We continued our strategic investment in stores in Q1, opening five new stores in existing markets and one in a new market, including four suburban and two urban locations. As we look to the remainder of 2023, we are on track to add a total of 40 stores this year.
Longer term, we believe we can open 900-plus stores in the U.S., a significant opportunity for further penetration of new and existing markets for years to come while still representing a small fraction of the 48,000 optical shops in the U.S. In addition, stores act as an accelerator of progressives sales. As our store footprint has expanded, so have progressives. Progressives penetration was up 210 basis points year over year to 22.9% of prescription eyeglass units in Q1.
Our omnichannel experience remains unique in our category. And while e-com growth has been disproportionately impacted by a reduction in marketing spend, we are excited to continue to evolve our digital experience by increasing accessibility and capability of our virtual try-on, enhancing frame recommendations, and making it easier than ever to reorder contacts or book an eye exam. Along with channel expansion, we are also placing an increased emphasis on driving conversion and higher revenue per customer to help offset lower traffic trends in 2023. We have seen gains in in-store conversion and the percentage of customers purchasing multiple products from us.
Along with our core glasses business, we are committed to growing the other verticals of our business. Our contacts business, with its more frequent order cycle, represented 7.7% of Q1 revenue, up 70 basis points versus a year ago. The figure is still well below the industry average of 20% and represents significant whitespace opportunity for future growth. Our growing eye exam business is another area of focus this year as we continue to add this capability to new and existing stores.
Eye exams now represent 3.8% of revenue in Q1, versus 2.1% last year, and we continue to see the vast majority of our exam customers go on to purchase glasses, contacts, or both. While we are pleased with the increases we've seen in average revenue per customer, we are also intently focused on driving new customer growth with a two-pronged strategy. The first is through organic growth, driven by our retail expansion and new product introductions. Our largest source of new customers is word of mouth, and stores are great customer acquisition vehicles.
We expect to see retail customer acquisition scale in step with our store expansion plans, which, along with the pickup in e-commerce traffic in the second half of this year once we are past the difficult marketing spend comparisons, should provide the overall business with a stronger tailwind heading into next year. In Q1, we launched five new eyewear collections in a new unique reversible sunwear collaboration with Jimmy Fallon, which generated significant press, awareness, and traffic. Second is strategic investment in marketing. We plan to strategically and judiciously invest in demand creation and brand building through different tactics, including ongoing investment in linear TV and digital programs like SEO and SEM.
With our channel mix between stores and e-com now rebounds to pre-pandemic levels, we expect marketing spend as a percent of revenue to remain in line with pre-pandemic levels in the low double digits. We are pleased with the marketing efficiency we are seeing, and at these levels, expect to drive steady and sustainable new customer growth. Insurance remains a big opportunity for us, both in attracting new customers and enabling us to deliver even better value. More than 60% of our customers have vision insurance, a mix in line with the overall market.
A portion of those customers are leveraging their benefits with us, while others recognize that their out-of-pocket spend is still lower at Warby Parker than if they were to go to a different in-network provider. We have a number of efforts underway to make insurance reimbursement more seamless for our customers. First, we are continuing to develop contracted reimbursement relationships with a range of managed vision care plans. In Q1, we saw strong growth from in-network insurance customers.
More customers than ever can seamlessly apply their benefits with us, paying just their net price at checkout. And those who do spend more than those who don't apply their benefits at checkout. In parallel, we plan to introduce new features this quarter that will make it faster and easier for all of our customers to look up their benefits regardless if they are in or out of network. And lastly, we are maintaining a healthy balance between driving growth and expanding adjusted EBITDA margins.
We continue to carefully monitor expense levels, both at headquarters and stores, to align with current traffic trends, and we expect to benefit from lower media rates and more efficient marketing spend going forward. While a portion of these savings will flow through to our bottom line, evidenced by our adjusted EBITDA margin guidance for 2023, we are being flexible and plan to reinvest a portion of these savings back into the business in support of our long-term growth objectives. And now, I'll pass the call over to Steve to cover our financial performance in more detail.
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Neil and Dave. Good morning, everyone. Starting with revenue. We generated revenue of 172 million, up 12.2% year over year and above the high end of our guidance range of 164 million to 167 million.
Deferred revenue recognized in January from the strong FSA expiration period in late December, combined with improving store performance, contributed to our strong start to 2023. From a channel perspective, retail revenue increased approximately 28%, while e-commerce revenue declined approximately 8% versus Q1 of 2022. For the first quarter, e-commerce represented 36% of our overall business, compared to 44% in 2022, and in line with our pre-pandemic channel mix. The decline in e-commerce revenue was in line with our expectations and driven by an intentional reduction in marketing spend by 35% year over year as we bring marketing spend as a percent of revenue back to pre-pandemic levels in the low teens.
We expect e-commerce revenue to begin comping positive in H2 of this year as we anniversary the pullbacks we've made in marketing spend and begin to increase marketing spend dollars year over year. We finished Q1 '23 with 204 stores, an increase of 35 stores and an increase in our store count of approximately 21%, which compares favorably to retail revenue of up 28% year over year. Retail productivity in Q1 was 103% versus the same period last year. From a customer perspective, we finished the quarter with 2.29 million active customers, an increase of 2.5% versus the same period a year ago.
And our average revenue per customer increased 8.4% year over year to $270. It's worth noting that our revenue growth follows a similar pattern to our growth in active customers, where active customers are increasing in retail, driven by new store openings, and decreasing in our e-commerce channel as we rebalance marketing spend. We're pleased with our increase in average revenue per customer, which was driven by a few factors, including an increase in progressives as a percentage of our business mix and continued ramping of both contact lens and eye exam sales. Progressives represented 22.9% of total prescription glasses sold in Q1 2023, up from 20.8% when compared to the first quarter of 2022.
This is still well below the market average of approximately 40%, leaving a substantial runway for product category growth. Progressives are also our highest gross margin and highest price point product, starting at $295. We continue to make progress on our move into holistic vision care as we evolve from a glasses-only brand into one that offers glasses, contacts, and eye exams to customers. From Q1 '22 to Q1 '23, contact lenses have increased from 7% to 7.7% of our business mix.
Over the same period, eye care has increased from approximately 2% to 3.8% of our business mix. Contacts and eye exams both represent large opportunities for future growth, and we remain well underpenetrated for sales of these products as a percent of revenue versus other national optical retailers. As a reminder, contact lenses and eye exams each represent $10 billion-plus portions of the $76 billion U.S. optical industry.
Moving on to gross margin. As a reminder, our gross margin accounts for a range of costs, including frames, lenses, optical labs, customer shipping, optometrist salaries, store rent, and the depreciation of store build-outs. Our gross margin also includes stock-based compensation expense for our optometrists and optical lab employees. For comparability, I will be speaking to gross margin, excluding stock-based compensation.
First quarter adjusted gross margin was 55.2%, compared to 58.7% in the year-ago period. The year-over-year decrease was driven by strong growth of eye exams and contact lenses as we evolve into a holistic vision care company and expand into these large segments of the optical industry. As a reminder, eye exams and contacts have lower gross margin profiles than eyeglasses, but over the medium and long term are accretive to gross margin dollars and allow us to serve all of our customers' eye care needs. Expanding our contacts offering is a core part of scaling our holistic vision care offering and a key driver of growing average revenue per customer.
While contact lenses have a lower gross margin percentage compared to our other offerings, their higher purchase frequency and subscription-like purchase cycle are accretive to gross margin dollars. As a reminder, contact lenses represented an estimated $17.8 billion market in 2023 and account for approximately 20% of a typical optical retailer sales. We also experienced continued year-over-year gross margin deleverage in two areas that represent the more fixed portion of our cost of goods, retail occupancy and optometrist salaries, which are directly linked to our expansion into eye care. Our growth in store count has naturally led to an increase in store rent and depreciation from store build-outs.
We also saw downward pressure on gross margin year over year from an increase in overall optometry salaries as we hired optometrists for our new stores and continued the rollout of our professional corporation or PC model. As of the end of Q1 2023, we operated with 120 stores, where we engage directly with an optometrist and, therefore, recognized both revenue from exams and optometrist salaries. This represents a 74% year-over-year increase from 69 employed in PC exam stores at the end of the first quarter last year. Many of our 64 PC model stores are ones where we are converting an existing store with an independent doctor relationship to the PC model.
And therefore, we had already been recognizing a significant portion of product conversion sales at our stores from the independent doctor. We believe this ongoing investment in eye exam capabilities will benefit the business long term as we benefit from greater control over the customer experience, new eye exam revenue, and higher in-store conversion rates. There are a few accretive tailwinds to margin that act to partially offset these diluting effects. First, we continue to scale our highest-priced and highest-gross margin progressives business.
In the first quarter, progressives accounted for approximately 22.9% of our prescription business, which is up from 20.8% a year ago. Secondly, we continue to scale the portion of our prescription glasses orders that we insource at our two owned optical labs in New York and Nevada. We expect our continued scaling of these facilities to result in continued gross margin benefits, along with higher net promoter scores, lower refund rates, and faster turnaround times. Shifting gears to SG&A.
As a reminder, SG&A for our business includes three main components: salary expense covering our headquarters, customer experience, and retail employees; marketing spend, including our home try-on program; and general corporate overhead expenses. Adjusted SG&A excludes noncash costs like stock-based compensation expense. Adjusted SG&A in the first quarter was 87.2 million, or 50.7% of revenue, down 9.4% when compared to Q1 2022 adjusted SG&A of 96.2 million, or 62.8% of revenue. The primary drivers of the decrease in adjusted SG&A as a percentage of revenue were lower marketing costs and benefits from the adjustments to our cost structure we implemented in August of last year.
Marketing spend for the quarter came in at 20.1 million or 11.7% of revenue. This is down from 31.1 million and 20.3% of revenue in the same period last year. Marketing spend in Q1 '23 was 35% lower year over year, which compares to revenue growth of 12.2% year over year. Turning now to adjusted EBITDA.
In the first quarter, we generated adjusted EBITDA of 17.7 million, representing an adjusted EBITDA margin of 10.3%, which compares to adjusted EBITDA of 0.8 million or 0.5% of revenue in the year-ago period. This significant year-over-year improvement underscores our commitment and ability to drive profitable growth, even in a lower-demand environment. Turning now to our balance sheet. We finished the quarter with a strong balance sheet position, reflecting 204.3 million in cash, which we will continue to deploy deliberately to support our growth and operations.
We also have an undrawn credit facility of $100 million other than 4 million for letters of credit that we can upsize to 175 million. Now, to our outlook. At this time, we're maintaining the full year guidance we outlined on our Q4 earnings call on February 28th. For 2023, we still expect net revenue growth of approximately 8% to 10%, representing a revenue range of 645 million to 660 million; adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 7.9%, which equates to adjusted EBITDA of approximately 51.5 million at the midpoint of our top-line guidance range; gross margin in the mid-50s as a percent of revenue; 40 new store openings, bringing our total store count to approximately 240 by year-end.
We are still forecasting stock-based compensation as a percentage of net revenue in 2023 to be roughly 10%, compared with 16% in 2022. Stock-based compensation for both years is above our long-term forecast of low single digits as the result of the multiyear equity grants to our co-CEOs in 2021, the majority of which is performance-based and best based on stock price targets from $47.75 to $103.46. We still anticipate stock-based compensation to normalize to a range of 2% to 4% of net revenue late in 2024. With respect to the second quarter, we're guiding to the following.
Net revenue of 160 million to 162.5 million or revenue growth of approximately 7% to 9%. For Q2, to date, we've observed trailing 28-day retail productivity versus 2022 between 99% and 102%. From a bottom-line perspective, we're guiding to adjusted EBITDA of $11 million to $12.5 million, representing adjusted EBITDA margin of approximately 7% to 8%. As noted on our last call, we expect the quarterly progression of our profitability to be more in line with pre-pandemic trends, with more of our adjusted EBITDA generated in the first half of the year versus 2022, where we generated the majority of our adjusted EBITDA in the second half of the year.
With that, Neil, Dave, and I are pleased to take your questions. Operator, please open the line for Q&A.
Questions & Answers:
Operator
Thank you. [Operator instructions] Our first question comes from Dana Telsey from Telsey Group. Dana, your line is now open.
Dana Telsey -- Telsey Advisory Group -- Analyst
Thank you. Good morning, everyone, and very nice to see the progress. When you're seeing the opportunity with contact lenses, the eye exams, progressives, how do you see -- when you gave the guidance, Steve, on the revenue reaffirmed for the year, guidance for the second quarter, what percentage of the business do you expect progressives and contacts to get to given the improvement this quarter and how do you see the impact on gross margin going forward? And lastly, with the improvement in growth rate above the industry growth rate, do you expect to do more collaborations? How big a part of it was those, the Jimmy Fallon, that seemed to drive sales and traffic? Thank you.
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Hi, Dana. This is Steve. Thanks for the question.
I'll take the first part of the question, and then we'll have Dave and Neil respond to the second part of the question related to collaborations. As it relates to how we think about projecting contacts and progressives for Q2, we haven't given specific guidance around projected business mix for specific product categories. We have reported contacts as a percent of our revenue, progressives as a percent of our prescription glasses units, eye care as a percent of revenue after the fact so it's possible to understand what proportion and what growing proportion of our business these growth drivers account for. So, it's possible to understand the growth rates and the percentages.
We continue to see very positive uptake, both in contact lenses, eye exams, which are relatively newer products to us, as well as from progressive lenses, which we've offered for quite some time but where we've typically seen improvement on a year-over-year basis anywhere in the 1 percentage to 2 percentage zone or 1 point to 2 point zone. And so, I would anticipate to see consistency in our business mix as we continue to report on these numbers and so we can provide color and amplify how excited we are about the strong runway for growth in all of these categories. Progressives account for 44% -- roughly 40% of the market and just 22% of our business. Contact lenses, likewise, a 17-plus billion dollar market and a very small portion of our business.
Eye exams, a $12 billion-plus market and a very small portion of our business. So, we remain excited about the tailwinds that -- from a growth perspective that will accrue to us across these product categories. And so, that's the color that we would provide versus providing specific guidance in Q2 across these product categories.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
And then on the collaboration front, you can expect to continue to see us do thoughtful and interesting collaborations that help elevate and energize the brand. We've always viewed Warby Parker as a lifestyle brand and, you know, being able to have our second collaboration with Jimmy Fallon. The first one was Spinnies, and then the second one was Flippies, these fun, reversible sunglasses. And while this gained a lot of attention and drove excitement, wouldn't characterize it as one that has sort of a meaningful impact on our sales trajectory.
That being said, you'll continue to see us do things to activate and energize the brand. So, this past quarter, we also had a collaboration with A$AP Nast, who's a fashion icon and hip hop artist, part of the A$AP crew. We also had a really exciting spring 2023 launch, and we had a campaign that featured Christina Ricci and Henry Eikenberry and writer Jeremy O. Harris.
So, you'll continue to see us do sort of really fun things to elevate the brand. We also launched a store in New York that we call the Museum of the Blue-Footed Booby, and it is right across the street from the Museum of Natural History on the Upper West Side here in Manhattan. The Blue-Footed Booby is sort of our unofficial mascot and has been sort of a component of the brand and sort of you walk into the store and it's, we believe, sort of the most fun optical store and eyewear store in the world. So, I encourage everyone to come and check it out.
Dana Telsey -- Telsey Advisory Group -- Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Oliver Chen from TD Cowen. Oliver, your line is now open.
Oliver Chen -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst
Hi, Neil, Dave, and Steve. Nice quarter. Wanted to know what were some of the aspects that led to the better-than-expected quarter. Also, as we look at April and May, we're seeing a more cautious environment.
I was curious about what you expect within your guidance for a store productivity and some assumptions there. Second question on the optical market more broadly. What do you think might be the catalyst for reacceleration back to long-term trends? And last and third question, active customer growth. Just given the lapping of the marketing spend, do you expect it to still be low single-digit growth and then reaccelerate after that on the back half? Thanks a lot.
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Sure. Thanks, Oliver. I'll take the first part of the question. In terms of our performance above expectations in the first quarter, it was largely driven by retail productivity coming in moderately higher than we projected, and we were able to maintain e-com declines relatively in line with expectations despite the fact that we pulled back on marketing spend by 35%-plus year over year.
I would point to those as the drivers. We also saw a nice increase in active revenue per customer, up over 8% year over year, which has been part of our growth story for quite some time. We provide new products, additional products, and services to customers, which are either introduced at a larger price or there's a bundling effect where a customer gets an eye exam, buys contact lenses and glasses from us, which -- all of which elevate AOV. As it relates to store activity -- store productivity trends that we've seen quarter to date, the number that we gave as part of our prepared remarks is, quarter to date, we've seen store productivity versus the same period last year in the range of 99% to 102%.
As a reminder, on our Q2 earnings call, we called out the fact that April, we saw store productivity as we recovered out of omicron approach almost 90%. So, we view April as one of our tougher retail comps from last year. And so, we wanted to give color on what we're seeing over the course of the quarter as we're starting to lap that strong April into early May comp. And the numbers we're seeing there again ranged from 90 -- 99% to 102%.
And it's that range that is informing our guidance for Q2.
Dave Gilboa -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
And thanks, Oliver. Just to get your second question about the industry data and what's going to provide catalysts. You know, as we look at category data, it's clear that last year was a really abnormal year for the optical industry, and those trends have largely continued into 2023. So, we have seen some signs of more regular consumer behavior in the category.
FSA spending this past year was a bit more in line with expectations and maybe a sign of more expected consumer behavior in the category. We've also seen higher utilization of vision insurance benefits. But if we learned anything over the last couple of years, it's not to place too much weight on a short-term trend. That said, we do expect that consumers in our category can't delay exams or glasses purchases indefinitely, and we expect that many people who got exams and got glasses in 2021 when there was a lot of activity in the category will cycle back at some point in the future.
On average, people, prior to the pandemic, bought a new pair of glasses every 2.2 years. And we have seen kind of muted activity in the category for well over a year now. So, we're not counting on a major rebound this year, and that's certainly not what Vision Council is projecting. But we are confident in the resilience and the durability of our category and do expect to disproportionately benefit when some of the industry headwinds turn to tailwinds.
And as that relates to kind of active customer growth, this year, we are maintaining a fairly cautious outlook until we see signs of a major rebound. And yeah, I believe that a kind of level of caution is reflected in our guidance for Q2 and for the rest of the year.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
And just to add a little more. This is Neil. You know, on the active customer growth, right, this is not where we've been historically nor where we expect to be in the future. You know, we are seeing more strength in our retail channel.
Retail revenue, up 28% year over year, off of an increase in store count of 21%, with our e-commerce channel down 8%, which we think is quite strong given everything that's been happening both across e-commerce, across all categories in U.S. retail, right? There's been a sort of real adjustment and alignment from the highs of 2020 that seems to continue through most categories, as you probably know better than me. And in particular, if you look at optical, if you look at The Vision Council data, they projected last year that the eyewear market -- the online eyewear market contracted 17% from a sales perspective and 26% from a units perspective. So, we believe that we continue to outperform, right, from both channels perspective.
And then given that our marketing spend, our demand creation spend is down 35% this quarter, but we'll, you know, end up comping positive on the back half of the year, we should see active customer growth and our e-commerce channel sort of accelerate in the back half of the year.
Oliver Chen -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst
Very helpful and nice job on the collabs. Best regards.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Edward Yruma from Piper Sandler. Edward, your line is now open.
Edward Yruma -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Hey, good morning, guys. Thanks for taking the questions. I guess, first, I know in the last call you announced that you were going to have some higher price point, more premium frames. I noticed you've started to roll some of those out.
I guess kind of any early impressions from a sales perspective. And maybe more importantly, given all the moving pieces in the gross margin line, kind of any context as to how much some of these higher price point frames may have helped gross margin? And then I guess, second, on the e-com environment, I know you guys have obviously deliberately pulled back marketing spend, but kind of how would you assess the competitive environment, particularly for kind of the value price point frames? Thanks.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Thanks so much for your question. On some of our higher price point frames and lens options, we've seen a nice uptick, and it's one of the reasons why we're confident in our full year gross margin guidance. As you know, there are some puts and takes as contacts and eye exams sort of increase. But similarly, we continue to drive eyewear sales and higher sort of ASPs for those products, which tend to have higher margins as well.
Dave Gilboa -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
And then on the question around the e-com environment, as Neil mentioned, as we look at category data, there has been a real shift from the pandemic highs of e-commerce shopping in the category back into stores. And if anything, we believe that our e-com business is holding up pretty well against the kind of other sites that are selling glasses online. You know, there certainly are places where, you know, consumers can shop for lower-priced frames. That's always been the case.
But we believe that the quality and the customer experience and the omnichannel offering that we have is unparalleled in the category, and we really haven't seen competitive impact from those other sites.
Edward Yruma -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Brooke Roach from Goldman Sachs. Brooke, your line is now open.
Brooke Roach -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Good morning and thank you for taking our question. As you begin to cycle the profit improvement initiatives from last year, can you speak to the opportunity to improve adjusted EBITDA margin in the back half of the year and then into early 2024? Do we need to see a reacceleration in top-line growth to the long-term algorithm to get back to the pace of 100 basis points to 200 basis points of margin expansion per year now that these initiatives are in the rearview mirror? Thank you.
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Hi, Brooke. This is Steve. Thank you for your question. In terms of the first part of the question, we anticipate the pattern of adjusted EBITDA this year to look more similar to previous years.
So, last year, we generated the majority of our adjusted EBITDA in the back half of the year, in H2, directly attributable to the cost reductions we made to our corporate cost structure, built on top of some of the pullback in marketing spend that we began really in the April-May time frame. As we think about this year, the color that we've given is that we'll generate the majority of our adjusted EBITDA in H1 versus H2, but we plan to be profitable every quarter this year as we add incremental adjusted EBITDA margin this year versus last year to certainly be in line with our guide of 7.9% adjusted EBITDA margins, up from the mid-4s last year. As it relates to continuing to drive adjusted EBITDA margin improvement, we'd certainly like to see top line get back to that 20% growth level. We're confident we'll get back there at some point.
It's unclear when that will actually be. But regardless of the time frame for that, we are committed to maintain our ability to add an incremental 100 basis points to 200 basis points of adjusted EBITDA margin improvement every year. So, I would expect to see that continue beyond this year.
Brooke Roach -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Thanks, Steve. And if I could just ask one follow-up, can you provide some more context on the insurance initiatives that you're implementing in this quarter? What revenue benefit are you anticipating as a result of that? And how will that help the out-of-network insurance patients shop at Warby Parker? Thank you.
Dave Gilboa -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Sure. Hey, Brooke. We're focused on both growing our managed vision care direct integrations and enabling broader usage of insurance benefits, whether we're in or out of network. And we find that as we expand our retail footprint and our network of eye doctors, we become a more attractive partner, both to insurance carriers and large employers.
Last year, we expanded the number of consumers who can use Warby Parker through their in-network insurance by 30%. And we have a pipeline of additional integrations that will go live this year that we'll be able to speak to in subsequent calls. And then we're also focused on making it easier for consumers who are out of network to still use their benefits with us and have been piloting some direct out-of-network integrations that enable customers to only pay their net out-of-pocket costs at checkout and also a simpler eligibility check for customers to understand their benefits. And so, we do find that our customers who use insurance, we tend to see a higher percentage of new customers that are using their insurance benefits with us.
And so, it's a way to both attract new people to Warby Parker and then also enable customers who are already shopping with us to get even more value. And so, we are excited by some of the initiatives that we have in place and really to speak to the impact that those are having later this year.
Brooke Roach -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Thank you very much. I will pass it on.
Operator
Thank you. Our next question comes from Mark Altschwager from Baird. Mark, your line is now open.
Mark Altschwager -- Robert W. Baird and Company -- Analyst
Great. Good morning. Thanks for taking my question. A couple of quick ones for me.
First, Steve, you outlined a number of the puts and takes on gross margin. Do you see any of the factors that impacted the gross margin this quarter changing materially as we progress through the year or is this roughly 55% range a good run rate to think about kind of short to medium term?
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
[Audio gap] question. So, the guidance that we've given for full year gross margin is to be in the mid-50s. And I think, from a modeling perspective, it would be safe to assume relative consistency across quarters going forward. There are various puts and takes which can always change.
The picture i.e., the acceleration of contact lens sales, the acceleration of eye exam sales. We are experimenting with a couple of offers that Neil referenced, which involve incenting people to bundle purchases, to view the purchase of eyeglasses more as a fashion accessory versus a medical device. Depending on the degree to which we see consumer adoption, that could affect the picture. We are also continuing to add capacity to our optical lab network, which we're very excited about as it relates to the gross margin improvement that insourcing versus outsourcing brings to our overall cost structure.
And so, we might see some continued leverage there over the course of the year. But absent any one of those items providing meaningful inflection points, I think it would be a safe assumption to view gross margin as consistent with the number that we reported this quarter. So, in the low-50s -- in the mid-50s.
Mark Altschwager -- Robert W. Baird and Company -- Analyst
Very helpful. Thank you. And then just one other point of clarification. I believe you opened six stores this quarter.
But it looks like that was four on a net basis. I guess, if I have that right, could you give us some additional color on the two stores that you closed in the quarter? And just more generally, targeting 40 for the year, is that gross versus net? And I think it does imply a pretty healthy acceleration in the pace of openings over the course of the year. So, just any more color on your plans there would be helpful. Thank you.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Sure. Thanks so much for the question. The 40 new stores is on a gross basis. The two stores that we closed this quarter are very much sort of in line with our real estate strategy and frankly our philosophy on bricks and mortar in general.
One of the stores that closed, the lease ended, and we didn't renew because the rent was going to increase really substantially. This was an experimental store that was a short-term lease in which the landlord covered the build-out and we were on a percentage rent deal. So, it was an experiment, which we often do. And for us, we view that as sort of low-risk, low-capital investment with a potential for very high rewards.
And it's paid off in a lot of places. In this case, it didn't make sense to continue. The other store that we closed, the landlord was in violation of the lease, namely that there was water and flooding damage that wasn't going to be repaired in a timely manner. But in general, our retail rollout continues to proceed on plan.
And we opened 40 stores last year. We'll open 40 this year. Store cohort performance continues to be consistent and in line with our target, 35% four-wall margins and 20-month paybacks.
Mark Altschwager -- Robert W. Baird and Company -- Analyst
Thanks again.
Operator
Thank you. We have our last question from Mark Mahaney from Evercore. Mark, your line is now open.
Mark Mahaney -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
I'm sorry, can you hear me? Hello?
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Now, we can hear you.
Mark Mahaney -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Two questions, please. Yeah. In an overall environment of super-low -- unemployment levels are record lows. Can you just talk about any challenges you've had in terms of being able to hire for the stores, both for the general people within the store and for the eye exam specialists? And then secondly, the rolling out of eye exam capabilities seems to be such a great unlock for your business in terms of revenue productivity and in terms of gross margins.
As you've done more and more of this, have you figured out learnings that have allowed you to accelerate the build-out, either the retrofit or the rollout of eye exam capabilities within stores? Thank you.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Thanks so much for the question. So, one of the things that we pride ourselves on is the work environment at Warby Parker and invest a lot in our employer brand. We found that we continue to be able to attract and retain great talent. And we've actually seen sort of attrition decline across the company more recently.
So, even though we're in this super low unemployment environment, we are able to staff every part of our business, from corporate to our manufacturing facilities to our stores. Where this low unemployment environment actually impacts us most is that sometimes our next-door neighbors in shopping centers may be poorly staffed and sometimes need to close early. And then we think that that impacts overall traffic to a shopping center, for example. But we're seeing that a little bit less than we did sort of last year and the year before.
We agree that the opportunity to continue to expand our eye care business is really exciting. We -- all of our new stores, we tend to build at least one exam suite if not additional rooms for contact lens insertion and removal training or areas for retinal imaging. And similarly, we continue to sort of go back to some of our existing fleet and see how we can retrofit to add exams. So, for example, this past weekend, I was down in Miami and I was visiting our Wynwood store, and that was a store that we recently added an eye exam.
And our doctor, Dr. Tina Thomas, there was fantastic. I was there before the store opened, and the 10 a.m. sort of patient also arrived right before the store opened.
I mean, it was just a great example of how we can leverage, you know, this eye exam offering to help drive additional business to our existing stores.
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
And it also dovetails with --
Mark Mahaney -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Thank you very much.
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
It also dovetails with some of the commentaries that we've given as it relates to gross margin for stores where we offer eye exams versus non-eye exams. We do see some differences in product mix, which are margin accretive. So, stores that have eye exams have a higher mix of progressive glasses, which are our highest starting price point and highest gross margin products. There's also a higher penetration of photochromic lenses, which we charge more for.
Those are the lenses that go from light to dark in the sun. And there's also a higher penetration of blue light lenses, which help protect the eyes at certain times of the day. And so, in addition to being able to serve the customer and capture the order, because there's a high conversion rate from getting an eye exam to actually making a product purchase, if you look at the basket of what customers actually purchase, there are elements which are quite higher margin and would call out progressives, photochromic, and blue light as just -- three examples of that effect.
Mark Mahaney -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
OK. Thank you, Steve.
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Mark.
Operator
Thank you. I'll now hand the floor back to the management team for closing remarks.
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Just want to thank you all for participating this morning and look forward to speaking with you all on our next earnings call. Thanks so much.
Operator
[Operator signoff]
Duration: 0 minutes
Call participants:
Neil Blumenthal -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Dave Gilboa -- Co-Founder and Co-Chief Executive Officer
Steve Miller -- Senior Vice President, Chief Financial Officer
Dana Telsey -- Telsey Advisory Group -- Analyst
Oliver Chen -- Cowen and Company -- Analyst
Edward Yruma -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Brooke Roach -- Goldman Sachs -- Analyst
Mark Altschwager -- Robert W. Baird and Company -- Analyst
Mark Mahaney -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst