Snowflake (SNOW -0.86%)
Q3 2024 Earnings Call
Nov 29, 2023, 5:00 p.m. ET
Contents:
- Prepared Remarks
- Questions and Answers
- Call Participants
Prepared Remarks:
Operator
Good afternoon. Thank you for attending today's Q3 FY 2024 Snowflake earnings conference call. My name is Hannah, and I will be your moderator for today's call. All lines will be muted during the presentation portion of the call with an opportunity for questions and answers at the end.
[Operator instructions] I would now like to pass the conference over to our host, Jimmy Sexton, head of investor relations at Snowflake. You may go ahead.
Jimmy Sexton -- Head of Investor Relations
Good afternoon and thank you for joining us on Snowflake's Q3 fiscal 2024 earnings call. With me in Bozeman, Montana are Frank Slootman, our chairman and chief executive officer; Mike Scarpelli, our chief financial officer; and Christian Kleinerman, our senior vice president of product, who will join us for the Q&A session. During today's call, we will review our financial results for the third-quarter fiscal 2024 and discuss our guidance for the fourth quarter and full-year fiscal 2024. During today's call, we will make forward-looking statements, including statements related to the expected performance of our business, future financial results, strategy, products and features, long-term growth, our stock repurchase program, and overall future prospects.
These statements are subject to risks and uncertainties, which could cause them to differ materially from actual results. Information concerning those risks is available in our earnings press release distributed after market close today and in our SEC filings, including our most recently filed Form 10-Q for the fiscal quarter ended July 31st, 2023, and the Form 10-Q for the quarter ended October 31st, 2023, that we will file with the SEC. We caution you to not place undue reliance on forward-looking statements and undertake no duty or obligation to update any forward-looking statements as a result of new information, future events, or changes in our expectations. We'd also like to point out that, on today's call, we will report both GAAP and non-GAAP results. We use these non-GAAP financial measures internally for financial and operational decision-making purposes and as a means to evaluate period-to-period comparisons.
Non-GAAP financial measures are presented in addition to, and not as a substitute for, financial measures calculated in accordance with GAAP. To see the reconciliations of these non-GAAP financial measures, please refer to our earnings press release distributed earlier today and our investor presentation, which are posted at investors.snowflake.com. A replay of today's call will also be posted on the website. With that, I would now like to turn the call over to Frank.
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Jimmy. Welcome and good afternoon. Q3 product revenue grew 34% year over year to reach 698 million. Non-GAAP adjusted free cash flow was 111 million, representing 70% year-over-year growth.
Results reflect strong execution in a broadly stabilizing macro environment. While Snowflake's global revenue mix is highly diverse in terms of industries and geographies, the company derives an ever-larger revenue share from mainstream enterprises and institutions. This, as compared to a newer crowd of digital natives who have made up many of Snowflake's early adopters. We added 35 $1 million-plus customers during the quarter.
Nine of our top 10 customers grew sequentially. Generative AI is at the forefront of customer conversations, which in turn drives renewed emphasis on data strategy in preparation of these new technologies. We said it many times: There's no AI strategy without a data strategy. The intelligence we're all aiming for resides in the data, hence the quality of that underpinning is critical. Meanwhile, Snowflake has announced and showcase a plethora of new technologies that let customers mobilize AI. We've introduced Snowflake Cortex to leverage AI and machine learning on Snowflake.
Cortex is a managed service for inferencing large language models. This opens up direct access to models and specialized operations like translation, sentiment, and vector functions. Business analysts and data engineers can now use AI functionality without the fractured, highly technical challenges of the AI landscape. Last summer, we introduced Snowpark Container Services, which also serves as the second pillar of our AI enablement strategy. Developers can access any language, any library, and flexible hardware inside the governance boundary of Snowflake. More than 70 customers are already using Container Services in preview, with many more waiting in line.
Snowflake makes the common AI use cases easy and the advanced use cases possible. We're well positioned for AI based on the scale and scope of our data cloud programmability and governance framework. There are hurdles challenging enterprise adoption of AI and ML. The first is broad access to quality data. Snowflake addresses this challenge through its data-sharing architecture; 28% of all our customers share data, up from 22% a year ago; and 73% of our $1 million-plus customers are data sharing, up from 67% a year ago.
AI models can only be as smart as the data they are trained on. Security and governance present another challenge for enterprise adoption of AI, and now, Snowflake Horizon offers a unified security and governance solution built for AI. Horizon strictly and consistently enforces user privileges on data across use cases, including large language model applications, traditional ML models, and ad hoc queries. As part of Horizon, we introduced Universal Search, which enables customers to search the data cloud.
Customers can now discover data and metadata that exist across their accounts and in the Snowflake marketplace. Snowflake continues to win new workloads outside of its traditional scope. Snowpark consumption grew 47% quarter over quarter. Consumption in October was up over 500% since last year.
Over 30% of customers use Snowflake to process unstructured data in October. Consumption of unstructured data was up 17x year over year. Our newest streaming capability, Dynamic Tables, entered public preview earlier this year. Approximately 1,500 customers are using the feature and additional -- initial adoption is outpacing expectations. We have a number of major new capabilities becoming broadly available in Q4.
Our native apps framework will go GA; Unistore for transaction processing; Snowpark Container Services and Apache Iceberg Tables will all enter public preview. These products unlock substantial new workload expansion opportunities. We have campaigned globally to expand our audience. This fall, our Data Cloud World Tour traveled to 26 cities worldwide. In-person attendance at these events reached 23,000, nearly double from last year.
Next up is our BUILD Developer Conference in early December, where we anticipate 35,000 registrations. BUILD is focused on building apps, data pipelines, and AI/ML workflows. We hope to see you there. So, with that, I will turn the call over to Mike.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Frank. In Q3, we saw strong consumption from a broad base of customers. Outperformance was evenly split between large and small accounts. Our largest customers stabilized as expected.
Migrations drove growth in Q3. Our two fastest-growing customers were both migrating workloads from a legacy vendor. One of these accounts is in their second year on the platform; the other in their eighth year on the platform. We added four customers with more than 5 million and two customers with more than 10 million in trailing 12-month product revenue in the quarter. Growth in September exceeded expectations.
For three weeks, consumption grew faster than any other period in the past two years. Consumption continued to grow in the month of October. Q3 represented a strong quarter for bookings execution. Remaining performance obligations grew 23% year over year to $3.7 billion.
Of the 3.7 billion in RPO, we expect 57% to be recognized as revenue in the next 12 months. APJ and SMB drove growth in net new bookings. We are making significant progress in delivering margin expansion. Non-GAAP product gross margin of 78% was up approximately 300 basis points year over year. Improved terms from the cloud service providers have contributed to margin expansion.
We also benefit from increasing consumption of higher-priced editions of Snowflake. In Q3, price per credit increased 4% year over year. Non-GAAP operating margin of 10% was ahead of expectations. Operating margin benefited from revenue outperformance and increased hiring scrutiny. Non-GAAP adjusted free cash flow margin was 15%, benefiting from favorable timing of collections.
We ended the quarter with 4.5 billion in cash, cash equivalents, and short-term and long-term investments. Our strong cash position allows us to opportunistically repurchase shares. In Q3, we used $400 million to repurchase 2.6 million shares. Year to date, we have used 592 million to repurchase 4 million shares at an average price of $147.50.
Now, let's turn to guidance. For the fourth quarter, we expect product revenue between 716 million and 721 million, representing year-over-year growth between 29% and 30%. We are increasing our full-year guidance to approximately $2.65 billion, representing 37% year-over-year growth. Consumption trends have improved. We are seeing stability in customer expansion patterns.
Our guidance is based on observed patterns and assumes continued stability of consumption. For the fourth quarter, we expect operating margin of 4% and 360 million diluted weighted average shares outstanding. For the full year, we are increasing our non-GAAP product gross margin guidance. We now expect non-GAAP product gross margin of 77%.
We still expect a product gross margin headwind in the fourth quarter associated with new products. We are increasing our fiscal 2024 non-GAAP operating margin guidance. We now expect non-GAAP operating margin of 7%. We are increasing our fiscal 2024 non-GAAP adjusted free cash flow margin.
We now expect non-GAAP adjusted free cash flow margin of 27%. For the full year, we expect diluted weighted average shares outstanding of 361 million. We are on track to add more than 1,000 employees this year inclusive of M&A. With that, operator, you can now open up the line for questions.
Questions & Answers:
Operator
Absolutely. [Operator instructions] Our first question is from the line of Mark Murphy with J.P. Morgan. Please proceed.
Mark Murphy -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst
Thank you so much. I love the 11-minute earnings call and congrats on -- on a fantastic result. So, Frank, we are hearing broadly that conversations are starting with generative AI, and they're stopping at data because they find their data estates aren't in good enough shape. Are you sensing more tangible uplift there around that concept, that Snowflake might be on the front edge of AI projects and perhaps seeing that spillover into customer conversations or, you know, drive more pipeline for some of your other products like Snowpipes and Snowpark and Data Sharing?
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Generally speaking, yes. You know, one of the interesting things is that, you know, customers are now getting preoccupied with their data estates because they have to get them into shape where they can productively, you know, take advantage of their newer technologies which we are now also showcasing and delivering where they can just turn it on and, you know, have -- have well governed, you know, frameworks to run them, you know, with all the things that they're used to from Snowflake. So, it's definitely true that -- that the -- the frenzy and the high degree of interest in AI as a -- as a knock-on effect on the interest in data strategy data platforms, that people are also not just looking at the quality of their data and the optimization and organization curation of data, but also what kind of data they need to be able to have access to. So, people are taking a much broader view of their data estates as well in terms of what's in it and what should be in it.
Mark Murphy -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst
Thank you very much.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Murphy. Our next question is from Keith Weiss with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed.
Unknown speaker -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Great. Thank you. [Inaudible] on for Keith. Maybe just start off with a quick question on sort of -- you mentioned several times in the call the stabilization that you are seeing within your -- within your growth, and we've obviously heard that from sort of your hyperscaler peers as well. When you're looking at on account level, could you give us sort of an idea, like, how much of the stabilization is coming from cost optimization, scrutiny alleviating, versus sort of existing customers who slow work migrations, leaning in more -- versus customers leaning more into new product? Is there any way that you can kind of give us more color what -- what parts are playing out already and which are yet to come maybe into the next year?
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, Keith, one of the key strengths -- this is Frank -- what I mentioned is that our customer base has evolved, you know, in recent years to include much larger enterprises and institutions, you know, who are typically not prone to overconsumption and unbridled expansion that they then later have to reset and rationalize. You know, because of that, the exposure to these drastic resets and optimizations that we saw earlier in the year is getting less and less with each incremental quarter. Secondly, you know, people have really driven themselves through these processes and rationalized themselves and are now in a good place to move forward. You can only optimize and rationalize so much at some point.
You know, it's diminishing returns, people get tired of that. They're moving on to things that are -- that are now new and interesting, you know, namely, you know, preparing for -- for enabling AI and ML technologies.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I'll add to that, too, that why we see that stabilization is nine out of our top 10 customers all grew quarterly sequentially. And the other point I'll make is we are seeing a shift, as Frank mentioned. Our biggest customers are mature enterprises, we're seeing now. And mature enterprises have always scrutinized costs.
They always will. And so, there's nothing new there, and that will continue, and that's just the way anyone should run a business.
Unknown speaker -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Got it. That's helpful. And then, maybe one quick question on your sales and marketing headcount. Obviously, we noticed it's basically flat quarter over quarter this quarter, but then again, it's only sort of one number.
Can you shed some light in terms of, like, what regions are you maybe leaning more into versus getting more efficiencies or any sort of areas that you're investing in still? Because obviously, your growth seems pretty healthy, so just some color on where you're investing versus not would be helpful.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, so first of all, in general, with sales and marketing heads, most of those typically are added right at the end of Q4 or even more so at the beginning of Q1 so people can get involved in our sales kickoff. And what I would say is we are continuing to invest very heavily in our sales and marketing function, in particular in Europe. We talked about six months ago or so, we had a new leader there. We have been changing out some people and investing, and we're continuing to, and we will continue to, prune underperformers globally and invest more in the right people as we go forward. And APJ is another one that we continue to invest in.
Unknown speaker -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Excellent. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Weiss. Our next question is from the line of Raimo Lenschow with Barclays. You may proceed.
Raimo Lenschow -- Barclays -- Analyst
Thank you. Congrats from me as well. Guys, you have, like, a crazy amount of new exciting products coming out. How do you think about the sales setup here now going forward because you're going to be able to address lots of different areas from, like, classic data to kind of more AI? Does that mean your sales approach needs to change from here going forward? And it doesn't sound like you are going to have this crazy sales force expansion here.
Like, how are you going to do that going forward and ensure that all these new products are actually finding the market? Thank you.
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, there's actually -- that's actually an excellent, you know, observation. You know, we have historically had sort of one dominant selling motion that we sort of deployed everywhere and anywhere. It has served us well. But as you correctly observe, you know, the market has really changed.
You know, you go back to 2015, you know, Snowflake, you know, really swam in swim lanes that were very narrowly defined and very well understood. You know, now we're in a mega-market, right? These are very very broad-based platforms that are -- that are incredibly capable in many directions. And we've been working very hard, you know, as you've seen in recent years, in delivering just an absolute ton of capabilities to enable these platforms and all these different directions. I mean our drive toward, you know, applications, the whole programmability, you know, framework, the onslaught of -- of AI and ML capabilities, all of that is coming to fruition. Now, we have had a ton of irons in the fire and they're now all -- they're now all getting hot. So, from a sales, you know, standpoint, you know, we have much more specialization, you know, happening. And that is going to literally going all over the world because it's impossible for a single person to be -- to be expert in all these technologies and all these disciplines.
So, we're going to have people that have general purpose, you know, capability, sort of core skills, if you will, and then we will have teams of specialists that will augment these groups, you know, wherever they're needed. So, our basic selling motions and how they are supported will evolve, you know, rapidly in the coming year.
Raimo Lenschow -- Barclays -- Analyst
Hmm. OK, perfect. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Lenschow. Our next question is from the line of Kirk Materne with Evercore ISI. Please proceed.
Kirk Materne -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Yeah, thanks very much, and congrats on the quarter. I guess, Mike, could you just talk about the impact that some of these newer unstructured data workloads are having on consumption at all? Meaning, I assume it's still a very very small part of overall consumption when you look at it, but is that helping with the stabilization? Can they turn into sort of catalysts for acceleration as we get into '24? Anything you do sort of dimensionally the impact that has as we think out to next year? Thanks.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Well, they're definitely helping with stabilization. I can't quantify exactly what unstructured is doing. But it's not just that. It's also -- we're starting to see the effects more of Snowpark.
That's doing very well for us right now. Some of the new things we're already seeing very early uptick in streaming and dynamic tables. We really, I would say -- Streamlit is built into our forecast for next year. The other products, because they're new, we really don't build much in for that because we need history before we can do that. And clearly, we think a lot of these new products that are just going into public preview now and GA next year will be a catalyst for growth for us in 2025.
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
One follow-on, Kirk, Document AI is -- is a technology that, you know, we've been working on for quite a while, and it really was on the basis of an acquisition we did over a year ago. That is now going into -- into preview, and it is incredibly popular out there. And what Document AI does returns an unstructured document into a semi-structured document so it can become a full participant in analytical processing. There is a ton of interest in that. And so, that really brings the entire estate of unstructured data, which is 80% of the world's data, into the analytical sphere.
So, we do expect that to become very important. And especially, you know, because AI and LLMs are so heavily focused on unstructured data, textual data, at least today, you know this, this will -- this will be something that will be a driver in our business.
Kirk Materne -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Thanks. And, Mike, can you give us an update on where the federal sort of opportunity stands? I know you guys were waiting to hear back on FedRAMP. Any update on that? Thanks.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
You know, federal is a huge opportunity, and I would say it's upside for us because it's such a small piece. But we should have our FedRAMP High authorization literally any day. I actually thought I might have had it today. So, stay tuned.
You'll see an announcement on that very soon.
Kirk Materne -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Thanks. Appreciate it.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Materne. Our next question is from the line of Brad Reback with Stifel. You may proceed.
Brad Reback -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Great. Thanks very much. Just a quick technical question. With Graviton 4 now being announced by Amazon, should we think of any potential headwinds there?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Well, as we told you before, every year, we count on a 5% headwind associated with software, hardware improvements. Graviton 4 was just announced recently. We really have not tested that, and not all hardware improvements benefit our software. We expect there will be some, but we just don't know.
It's too early. Stay tuned and we'll update you when we have more information.
Brad Reback -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Great. Thanks very much.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Reback. Our next question is from the line of Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research. Please proceed.
Ethan Bruck -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst
Hey, guys, this is Ethan Bruck on for Alex. Congrats on the nice quarter. My question is, if you're assuming that consumption trends persist through 4Q, and that's how you're guiding, I guess what would be the biggest puts and takes to accelerate growth next year? In the same vein, when we think about NRR, just given the stabilizing consumption trends, I guess directionally, when should we think about -- when we expect to have stabilized trough, and around, like, what level would you expect?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
So, I'll start with -- I'm not going to guide to NRR. I do see it stabilizing. It could dip a little bit more. I do expect, over time, NRR, as we've said, will converge with our revenue growth at the size we're at.
And clearly, the biggest puts and takes for next year is going to be the -- to continue to see the stabilization we have -- we're seeing right now and what the impact of a lot of our new initiatives are going to be next year. And it's just too early to tell right now and to -- to guide to that. So, stay tuned for our February call when we give guidance for next year.
Ethan Bruck -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst
Great. Thank you very much. Congrats again.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Zukin. Our next question is from the line of Brent Thill with Jefferies. You may proceed.
Brent Thill -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Thanks. Mike, I think you mentioned there is a higher utilization on the higher tiers that you're offering. Can you just extrapolate what you're seeing there?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Well, typically, large enterprises are the ones using our business-critical Mbps, and those guys are becoming bigger and bigger customers. And as a result, we do see more of our revenue being derived from these very large companies who are using our higher SKU, which has higher margin for us. And that's what we're seeing there.
Brent Thill -- Jefferies -- Analyst
OK. And quickly for Frank, when you think about just the overall AI impact, do you feel that this is a bigger tailwind in the back half of '24? Do you think you'll see it coming in early '24? How are your -- your thought process in terms of adoption in this wave helping -- helping you? When does that impact hit from a monetization perspective?
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You know, there's going to be, you know, a lot of nuances to, you know, how AI is going to unfold and translate itself into the effects onto our business. It's not just like turning on the switch and, all of a sudden you see, you know, incremental consumption, you know, happening, you know. So, as we said during the prepared remarks, you know, we're already seeing that the interest in AI is also driving interest in the data strategy, which then has a knock-on effect on consumption. It's also the expansion of the -- of the data universe that people are bringing in the quality of the data initiatives. You know, all of that is going to bring incremental workload utilization to Snowflake even though you would normally not necessarily characterize that, you know, as AI.
But these are things that are going to enable AI that might well be that a ton of the workload of AI Is actually the proverbial iceberg or only the tip of it that's sticking above the water is really AI. But everything that has to happen to support us is happening below the surface, and then we're going to be a huge beneficiary of that. We think that Snowflake is super well-prepared because our data estates are in a very very advanced state because our customers have spent years and years and years and, in some cases, literally, decades, you know, from -- from prior legacy platforms to building these estates and curating the data and organizing and optimizing for the data to be completely trusted and sanctioned in their environments. And that is a huge value when you start tackling AI and ML models.
Brent Thill -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Thill. Our next question is from the line of Patrick Colville with Scotiabank. You may proceed.
Patrick Colville -- Scotiabank -- Analyst
All right. Thank you so much for taking my question. In your prepared remarks, you talked a very strong consumption in September. Consumption continued to grow in October. We're now 29 days through November.
Can you just talk about trends, thus far, this month?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
What I would say is trends are good, but you have to remember, it also has a big holiday in the U.S. and the week of Thanksgiving is typically a slow week. With that said, I'm happy with the consumption we're seeing, and that's reflected in our guidance.
Patrick Colville -- Scotiabank -- Analyst
Perfect. Thank you so much.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Colville. Our next question is from the line of Tyler Radke with Citi. You may proceed.
Tyler Radke -- Citi -- Analyst
Hi, good afternoon. Thanks for taking the question. Wanted to ask you about Container Services. So, it sounds like you're seeing some good early momentum there, more than 70 customers, and in private preview.
I'm curious how many of those are actually deploying large language models directly on their Snowflake data. And, you know, for those customers that are doing that, what type of uplift -- or how you kind of characterize that consumption when -- when they do that? Thank you.
Christian Kleinerman -- Senior Vice President, Product
Yeah, hi. This is Christian. Yeah, we have seen a variety of use cases, but a good number of those private-preview customers are leveraging GPU instances in Snowflake Container Services for use of large language models. So, for sure, it's a -- it's a meaningful part of the early adoption use cases, and we've got lots of encouragement and excitement to continue the rollout of the preview.
Tyler Radke -- Citi -- Analyst
Great, and just a question on go to market. So, I think earlier this year, you talked about some execution issues. And it seems like that's been partially resolved to get good results in APAC. I guess, do you feel like you have all the right key sales leaders in place at this point, or are there still, you know, some roles you're looking for? And I guess, ultimately, do you feel like you've turned the corner on those -- those execution issues as well?
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, this is Frank. Look, you know, in a global sales organization that we're running, you know, and we're running, you know, all the way from an on-demand, you know, selling motion that's unattended, if you will, by salespeople to an SMB, to an ISV, to mid-range, large, and then, the extremely large customers, you know, it's always a working process. There's always opportunity for -- for improvements. That's been true, you know, for -- for as long as I've been here. That said, you know, I feel we're getting incrementally better, stronger, deeper, you know, in terms of our ability to sell.
You know, we're becoming much more consistent and more and more productive every day. So, a lot of stability and a lot of -- a lot of progress, but this is something that's never over. Anybody who's been in this business, you know, knows how this work. It's a very dynamic mix of things. But, you know, on the whole, you know, we have -- as a company at a $3 billion, or something of that order of magnitude, run rate. We lean hard on our organization, you know, to show up and deliver those results, you know, every quarter.
So, it's becoming, you know, a formidable enterprise in terms of our go-to-market capabilities.
Tyler Radke -- Citi -- Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Radke. Our next question is from the line of Brent Bracelin with Piper Sandler. You may proceed.
Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Thank you and good afternoon. Frank, we'll start with you here. I think, last quarter, unstructured data was mentioned twice. You've called it out here more than a dozen times.
You talked about October trends being up, I think 17x increase year over year. How much of a game-changer is this, particularly as we think about Document AI and Snowpark containers coming out next year? Clearly a focus here. It certainly hasn't been an area you supported in the past but feels like there's a sea change movement here. How much of a game-changer is unstructured data support relative to the growth opportunity going forward? Thanks.
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, look, you know, unstructured data, as I said earlier, you know, is the majority of the world's data. And until relatively recently, it's been, you know, borderline unusable for analytical purposes because it is unstructured and you can't reference it in analytical workloads. It's ironic that both through the onslaught of large language models that is also extraordinarily capable of dealing with textual data as well as things such as Document AI that Snowflake developed and is bringing to the market, that this data is going to become a full participant in these types of workloads. It's super exciting because it's going to really enrich and really unlock insights and outcomes and all of that that we haven't had before. So, this is -- this is -- this is going to be a driver of our world, as we know it, in terms of this type of computing, you know.
Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Helpful. And then, Mike, if I look at average consumption revenue per customer, those metrics improved on a growth perspective slightly year over year for the first time in over a year. What are the -- the driving factors there? How much of this is just the optimization headwinds now starting to ease versus net new workloads coming onto the platform? Thanks.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Well, what I would say, and I'll repeat what I've said at numerous times to investors, optimizations are part of our life. They've been happening at Snowflake from day one. They will continue to happen. Nothing is new with optimizations.
I don't see any big ones happening now, but that's not to say they won't happen in the future because history has shown they happen all the time. Most of the growth that we're seeing within our customers is -- we talked about two of our biggest growth customers was on-prem legacy migrations into Snowflake. So, there's initial migrations, but we're also seeing new workload expansion within existing customers as well, too. So, it's -- there's no one thing that's driving it; it's just general consumption we're seeing. And I will say Snowpark is starting to kick in for us. Still not 10% of our revenue.
That's a long ways to get to get there, but it's still meaningful for us.
Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Great to hear. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Bracelin. Our next question is from the line of Derrick Wood with TD Cowen. You may proceed.
Derrick Wood -- TD Cowen -- Analyst
Great. Thanks. I guess I wanted to dovetail off of that on-premise legacy migrations. And I guess for Frank, I mean when we saw the macro hit, I think it did cause a slowdown in customers looking to replatform from on-prem to cloud.
Just curious, I mean, I know you guys are kind of highlighting consumption trends improving here, but wondering what you're seeing in the pipeline for new Global 2000 accounts and if you're seeing legacy replatforming initiatives start to kick back up now that the macro environment has gotten a little bit more stable.
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, you know, I mean there's no doubt that -- that legacy replatforming is sort of the hard core of our business. And, you know, almost surprisingly, there is just an enormous amount of workloads still sitting, you know, on-premise that is still waiting to get migrated to the cloud. So, I expect this to continue for a very long period of time. But what makes it very important, you know, once -- once you get those data estates into the cloud, you know, our new architectures and our new technologies are now enabling, you know, opportunities that people haven't had before. And so, that drives workload expansion.
So, it's not just like, OK, you know, we're going to -- we're going to be doing in the cloud what we used to be doing on-premise. And that's the foundation of the business. It is definitely foundational that the opportunity is really, you know, what grows from that. That's been the Snowflake story from -- from day one because of what's now possible. You know, we don't have the capacity constraints that people can run, you know, unlimited numbers of workloads. So, now, with all the new technologies in terms of programmability and AI and ML, the sky's the limit.
I mean, in our conversation with customers, I always tell them -- I say is that your problem is no longer the technology; your problem is your imagination and your budget, right? Not that those are easy things, but technology is not holding us back anymore; it's our ability to harness that technology, and then, of course, you have to pay for it as well.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I'll just add to that, Derrick, too. On your question about Global 2000, yeah, we added two Global 2000 last quarter. And, you know, as I've said many times before, selling into a Gobal 2000 as a campaign, it's a one to two, sometimes three-year sales cycle. With that said, we have a number of Global 2000 in our pipeline for Q4.
And what I also want to say, too, is not every Global 2000 starts with an on-prem migration. Many of them start with a first-gen cloud solution they had purchased to migrate to Snowflake. Yes, almost all of them have a on-prem estate, but that doesn't always happen at first. It really varies by customer.
But with that said, we still see a lot of on-prem migration to be done over the coming years, and it's going to be for many many years.
Derrick Wood -- TD Cowen -- Analyst
Got it. And, Mike, a follow-on for you, really around RPO. And, you know, we've heard of more companies looking to take a pay-as-you-go approach. So, can you speak to what extent customers are shifting to that approach and versus, you know, annual or multiyear commits and how that may play into your RPO growth trends looking forward?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
No, you know, I don't see that that much. The only time you see pay as you go are ones that -- who had signed a three-year contract, and then they run out of capacity and then they just pay as they go. Actually, one of our top 10 customers is like that. They have until April to continue before they have to do another contract if they want to get the same pricing that they have.
I actually expect Q4 is going to be a pretty significant bookings quarter with a number of renewals that are up or customers are going to do something. And we continue to push for three-year contracts with our customers. You know, payment terms, I do expect, though, that is one of the things I'd rather give up on payment terms and discount the price per credit. And that's really, I've said all along, I anticipate longer-term customers will want to do more monthly in arrears, payment terms, and that is available to customers. It all comes down to what price you want to pay per credit.
And, to date, most people want the lower price per credit and are willing to pay annually in advance.
Derrick Wood -- TD Cowen -- Analyst
Helpful. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Wood. Our next question is from the line of Joel Fishbein with Truist. You may proceed.
Joel Fishbein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Thanks for my question and congrats on the great quarter. I guess, Frank, this is for you. At the Snowflake Summit, you announced the expanded partnership with Microsoft. And I'm just curious how that partnership is going.
And you also announced some joint product integrations, so I'd love to get an update how that's going and how you feel about that going forward.
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
This is Frank. Yeah, we actually saw quite a bit of energy coming from the Azure platform this quarter. The things that we worked on in the renewed relationship with Microsoft is really much better alignment, you know, in the field from a compensation standpoint that is just super super important in our world. And we're seeing the effects of that and the Microsoft platform really up-ticked during the quarter. I don't know the exact numbers at hand, but it was -- it -- it measurably ticked up.
So, we're encouraged by the behavior we're seeing in the field, and we were encouraged in -- in the overall sentiment that's developing in the field. So, it's definitely, you know, healthier than the relationship with Microsoft has been, historically. So, we're pleased and optimistic about it.
Joel Fishbein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Thanks. Any milestones we can be looking for there, from the partnership?
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Not really, from what you know.
Joel Fishbein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Thanks.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Fishbein. Our next question is from the line of Mike Cikos with -- Mike Cikos, please proceed.
Mike Cikos -- Needham and Company -- Analyst
Hey, thank you for getting me on here. And good to hear some of the earlier comments around Snowpark, which is consistent with some of the growing momentum we've heard with some of our checks. I think the question is probably more for maybe Mike or Christian. But is there enough empirical data or a sizable enough customer base yet for Snowpark to start talking about how these Snowpark customers -- I guess what adoption of Snowpark does for consumption versus non-Snowpark customers, or maybe how we should think about usage building over time as Snowpark becomes a larger part of those customers workflows.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
You know, I think it's still too early to tell. I will say we have one customer doing a significant migration which will increase their consumption on Snowflake to roughly 1.5 million a year. And there are a number of those that we've identified in POCs, but we haven't done the migrations. I see that one customer going into production right now, which by the way, has saved them significantly on their legacy vendor. So, clearly, there, with some customers, it's quite meaningful.
The consumption we're starting to see, and we expect that trend will continue into next year.
Mike Cikos -- Needham and Company -- Analyst
Understood. Thanks for calling that, Mike.
Operator
Thank you Mr. Cikos. Our next question is from Patrick Walravens with JMP. You may proceed.
Owen Hobbs -- JMP Securities -- Analyst
Hi, this is Owen Hobbs on for Pat. Thanks for taking the question and congrats on the strong quarter. So, starting off, I guess, how much consumption comes from the different hyperscalers? Is there one that kind of -- is it split evenly between the three, or does one kind of have them more the majority of compute share there?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
No. AWS, by far, is our biggest, followed by Azure, and then GCP. GCP is up to 3% right now. Microsoft Azure is the fastest-growing one, but AWS is still 76% of our business with Microsoft being 21.
As I said, GCP is 3%. I will tell you one of the reasons why GCP is not as big is it's just so much more expensive for our customers to operate in GCP than it is in AWS and Azure. And as a result, our salespeople are really not inclined to do much in GCP.
Owen Hobbs -- JMP Securities -- Analyst
Thank you. And then, going bigger picture, maybe this is a question for Christian as well. How has the role of the data scientists you serve kind of changed as we move through the era of big data and machine learning and now into AI? And I guess where do you see that going in the future?
Christian Kleinerman -- Senior Vice President, Product
Now, we see actual interest on -- on both the traditional data science and ML platform. And we had a number of announcements at Snowflake Summit for those types of use cases. But we obviously see lots of interest on generative AI and large language models where we have also expanded Snowflake's capability to do both hosting via Snowflake Container Services but more seamless inferencing via the new Snowflake Cortex. So, we see strong demand from our broad customer base for both types of use cases.
Owen Hobbs -- JMP Securities -- Analyst
Great. Thanks so much.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Walravens. Our next question is from the line of Gregg Moskowitz with Mizuho. You may proceed.
Gregg Moskowitz -- Mizuho Securities -- Analyst
All right, thank you very much. Frank, since you speak with a lot of large company execs, I'm curious to hear any thoughts you have on IT budgets next year, as well as whether there will be incremental budget dollars approved for AI in calendar '24, or if AI spend will primarily or maybe even entirely come from other areas of IT.
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
You know, I don't even hear the words AI and budget in the same sentence. You know, in other words, they're going to make resources available to enable it. What, if anything, is holding it back is really, you know, understanding, you know, how to do it. You know, it takes time and took, you know, to mature and evolve deployment architectures, you know, where everybody involved is fully confident and comfortable that these are the right ways to do it.
So, you see a lot of, you know, benchmark and compare and contrast experimentation, testing all these kinds of things. And they're going to go through many many iterations of that. We will as well. And I think the field will become very proliferated, you know, with large foundational models and many many many, you know, sub-sector, specialized models that are very very very deep but also very very narrow in purpose. So, it's going to become an enormous field. I will tell you that when you talk to the -- to the -- to the C-suite in large enterprises, people are -- are looking for a reset of economics, you know, like, for example, in contact centers, pricing optimizations, supply chain management.
I mean, really very very big impact opportunities. These are not sort of marginal incremental things, and that -- that has the attention. You know, data, you know, has -- has always had that -- that promise, but it's really on steroids now, you know, under the influence of -- of the newer technologies that we're all excited about.
Gregg Moskowitz -- Mizuho Securities -- Analyst
Very helpful. Thanks. And then, for Mike, really encouraging, of course, to hear that, for three weeks, consumption grew faster than any other period over the past two years. Over which three weeks, though, did you see that particularly strong consumption, was that post-Labor Day, or did it span a different time period?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
It's post-Labor Day.
Gregg Moskowitz -- Mizuho Securities -- Analyst
All right, perfect. Thank you.
Operator
Thank you, Mr. Moskowitz. Our last question is from the line of Will Power with Baird. You may proceed.
Will Power -- Baird -- Analyst
OK, great. Thanks. You know, Mike, you referenced that nine in your top 10 customers, you know, it sounds like, grew nicely, you know, quarter over quarter. I guess I wonder, were there any common use cases or products or, you know, common threads kind of driving that? Any other color behind the strength there?
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
No, these are just all very large customers with massive data estates that continue to -- one was doing a big migration, but the others are just continuing to move workloads to stuff like...
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Very industry-specific as well.
Will Power -- Baird -- Analyst
OK, and maybe just a quick question, you know, on product gross margins. The last couple of quarters, you're kind of already at your longer-term, you know, target, I think. It sounds like there may be a couple of headwinds there in Q4. But, you know, is this kind of the general level to expect, you know, going forward? And maybe any color on kind of the upside surprise, I guess, if you will. Again, it seems like you've gotten there faster than you might have expected.
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I don't really see a lot of upside in our long-term guidance, and for a number of reasons. The big headwind that we're seeing this quarter to our margin is, with all these new products that are going into public preview, we have to start to amortize the cost associated with the software development costs that we're required to capitalize under GAAP that are now going to start to be amortized. On top of that, in particular, something like Unistore, or a lot of times when we introduce new products. Many times, we actually have negative contribution margins until it takes us usually up to a half a year to nine months to actually fine-tune the software to get the -- to take costs out of operating those new features. And so, we just have so many new products that are coming out this quarter that that is going to have a headwind on the margin.
Will Power -- Baird -- Analyst
That's helpful. Thank you.
Operator
[Operator signoff]
Duration: 0 minutes
Call participants:
Jimmy Sexton -- Head of Investor Relations
Frank Slootman -- Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Mike Scarpelli -- Chief Financial Officer
Mark Murphy -- J.P. Morgan -- Analyst
Unknown speaker -- Morgan Stanley -- Analyst
Raimo Lenschow -- Barclays -- Analyst
Kirk Materne -- Evercore ISI -- Analyst
Brad Reback -- Stifel Financial Corp. -- Analyst
Ethan Bruck -- Wolfe Research -- Analyst
Brent Thill -- Jefferies -- Analyst
Patrick Colville -- Scotiabank -- Analyst
Tyler Radke -- Citi -- Analyst
Christian Kleinerman -- Senior Vice President, Product
Brent Bracelin -- Piper Sandler -- Analyst
Derrick Wood -- TD Cowen -- Analyst
Joel Fishbein -- Truist Securities -- Analyst
Mike Cikos -- Needham and Company -- Analyst
Owen Hobbs -- JMP Securities -- Analyst
Gregg Moskowitz -- Mizuho Securities -- Analyst
Will Power -- Baird -- Analyst