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DATE
Tuesday, July 22, 2025 at 4:30 p.m. ET
CALL PARTICIPANTS
Executive Chairman — Eddie Capel
President and Chief Executive Officer — Eric Clark
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer — Dennis Story
Vice President of Investor Relations — Michael Bauer
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TAKEAWAYS
Total Revenue: $272 million in revenue for Q2 FY2025, up 3% year-over-year, propelled by cloud segment performance.
Cloud Revenue: $100 million in cloud revenue for Q2 FY2025, representing 22% growth for Q2 2025, driving top-line outperformance.
Services Revenue: $129 million in services revenue for Q2 FY2025, down 6% year-over-year, reflecting customer budget constraints and deferred engagements.
Remaining Performance Obligations (RPO): $2.01 billion in RPO for Q2 FY2025, up 26% year-over-year, marking the largest quarter-end value in company history.
Sequential RPO Growth: RPO grew 6% sequentially in Q2 2025, FX was a $29 million tailwind to sequential RPO growth; year-over-year FX added $28 million to RPO.
Contract Duration: Average contract length remains at 5.5 to 6 years, with some clients electing longer ramp timelines under current macro conditions.
Revenue Recognition from RPO: 38% of RPO to be recognized as revenue over the next 24 months.
Adjusted Operating Profit: Adjusted operating profit was $101 million for Q2 FY2025 with a 37.1% adjusted operating margin, up 210 basis points year-over-year on scaling cloud operations.
Adjusted EPS: $1.31 adjusted earnings per share for Q2 FY2025, up 11% (adjusted);GAAP EPS: 93¢, up 9% year-over-year (GAAP).
Operating Cash Flow: $74 million in operating cash flow for Q2 FY2025, year-to-date operating cash flow at $149 million, up 17%.
Deferred Revenue: Deferred revenue was $300 million for Q2 FY2025, an increase of 16% compared to Q2 2024.
Cash and Debt: $231 million in cash as of Q2 2025; no outstanding debt.
Share Repurchases: $50 million in share repurchases for Q2 2025, totaling $150 million year-to-date; Board approved an additional $100 million authorization.
Full-Year Revenue Guidance: Raised to a $1.071 billion–$1.075 billion range; midpoint $1.073 billion, attributed to first-half outperformance.
Adjusted Operating Margin Guidance: Adjusted operating margin guidance midpoint increased to 35% from 33.25% for fiscal year 2025 due to leverage and performance.
Full-Year Adjusted EPS Guidance: Midpoint raised by $0.21 to $4.80; includes a new annual tax rate assumption of 22.5% for FY2025.
Cloud Revenue Guidance: Full-year 2025 cloud revenue midpoint raised to $408.5 million; Q3 expected at $104.5 million, Cloud revenue guidance for Q4 FY2025 is $109 million.
Services Revenue Outlook: Full-year FY2025 services revenue midpoint maintained at $497 million; expects $127 million in Q3 and $120 million in Q4 FY2025.
Maintenance Revenue Guidance: Full-year 2025 maintenance revenue guidance midpoint is $128 million, reflecting a 7% decline for fiscal year 2025 due to cloud migration.
Win Rates: Over 70% win rate against the top five competitors in Q2 FY2025; More than 70% of new cloud bookings were sourced from net new customers in Q2 FY2025.
Go-to-Market Developments: Bob Howell promoted to chief sales officer; expanded hires in sales and leadership across POS and TMS products.
Strategic Partnerships: Expanded partnerships with Google and Shopify, including Google Cloud Marketplace integration influencing the largest Q2 deal.
Manhattan Assist and AgenTic AI: Delivered several new AI-driven capabilities; agent platform and agent foundry set for release later in the year.
Unified Platform Momentum: Over the past five quarters, approximately 80% of Manhattan Active Transportation Management (MATM) customers also own Manhattan Active Warehouse Management (MAWM).
Cloud Migration: Approximately 20% of on-premise customers have begun converting to cloud solutions, with ongoing conversion pipeline.
Tax Rate and Legislation Impact: Adjusted annual tax rate rising to 22.5% for FY2025 due to accelerated R&D cost deductions.
SUMMARY
Manhattan Associates, Inc.(MANH 11.34%) raised full-year 2025 guidance for revenue, adjusted operating margin, and both adjusted and GAAP EPS, citing first-half outperformance and sustained cloud momentum. Management reported 26% growth in RPO, with over 70% of new cloud bookings from net new customers. Strategic go-to-market investments included leadership changes, expanded hiring, and new partnerships influencing key deals, notably through Google Cloud Marketplace and Shopify App Store integration. The company previewed innovation in AI-enabled automation, with agent-based enhancements planned for release and expanded customer co-creation efforts underway. Management highlighted a disciplined, conservative approach to services guidance, conversion targeting, and readiness for major upcoming contract renewals.
President and Chief Executive Officer Clark stated, "Our last three bookings quarters have been our best three bookings quarters ever."
Executive Vice President, Chief Financial Officer Story explained, "we expect 38% of RPO to be recognized as revenue over the next 24 months."
On cloud migration, Clark noted, "Roughly 20% of our on-prem customers have started that conversion to the cloud."
Clark cited that expanded alliance "removes friction and enables customers to more easily procure, deploy, and manage our industry-leading solutions," identifying immediate pipeline impact.
Story clarified that, "Year to date, our operating cash flow is up 17% to $149 million."
INDUSTRY GLOSSARY
RPO (Remaining Performance Obligations): Contracted revenue backlog—committed but not yet recognized as revenue, often extending across multiple periods.
MATM (Manhattan Active Transportation Management): Company’s cloud-native transportation management system for end-to-end supply chain orchestration.
MAWM (Manhattan Active Warehouse Management): Cloud-based warehouse management platform offering order fulfillment and inventory control.
MAO (Manhattan Active Order Management): Enterprise-level order management solution within the Manhattan Active portfolio.
POS (Point of Sale): Platform segment relating to transaction systems at retail endpoints.
TMS (Transportation Management System): Software platform for planning, executing, and optimizing physical movement of goods.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Michael Bauer: Thank you, Julian, and good afternoon, everyone. Welcome to Manhattan Associates 2025 second quarter earnings call. I will review our cautionary language and then turn the call over to our Executive Chairman, Eddie Capel, for some brief opening commentary before he hands it off to our president and chief executive officer, Eric Clark. During this call, including the Q&A session, we may make forward-looking statements regarding future events, or Manhattan Associates' future financial performance. We caution you that these forward-looking statements involve risks and uncertainties, are not guarantees of future performance, and actual results may differ materially from the projections contained in our forward-looking statements.
I refer you to Manhattan Associates SEC reports for important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in our projections, particularly our annual report on Form 10-Ks for fiscal year 2024 and the risk factor discussion in that report and any risk factor updates we provide in our subsequent Form 10-Qs. Please note the turbulent global macro environment could impact our performance and cause actual results to differ materially from our projections. We are under no obligation to update these statements. In addition, our comments include certain non-GAAP financial measures to provide additional information to investors. We have reconciled all non-GAAP measures to the related GAAP measures in accordance with SEC rules.
You'll find reconciliation schedules in the Form 8-Ks we filed with the SEC earlier today and on our website at mnh.com. Now I'll turn the call over to Eddie.
Eddie Capel: Thanks, Mike, and good afternoon, everyone. It's my pleasure one more time to kick things off and welcome everyone to today's call. Now before we get to the real substance of the update though, I'd like to commend Eric on his first 160 days as CEO. The transition really couldn't have been smoother. We've had a very successful Momentum conference a couple of months ago. You're gonna hear about excellent Q2 performance and execution in just a moment. And Eric is making meaningful and positive impact to our company across the board. Manhattan's fundamentals continue to be strong, and as always, we're innovating at pace driving success for our customers, employees, and shareholders.
And with this in mind, the board and I plan for me to transition away from all of my remaining executive management responsibilities during the balance of 2025. So that beginning on 01/01/2026, my title and role at Manhattan will be chairman of the board. I continue, as you would expect, to be as excited as ever about Manhattan's future and the opportunity in front of us. And I look forward to supporting Eric and our global teams in any possible way that I can. So with that, over to Eric.
Eric Clark: Great. Thank you, Eddie. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us as we review our record second quarter results and discuss our increased full-year 2025 outlook, and briefly recap some of the market-leading innovation that we announced at our customer conference just a couple of months ago. Our Q2 results were better than expected as 22% cloud revenue growth drove top-line outperformance and earnings leverage. And while the global macro environment remains volatile, for consecutive quarters, our services revenue has slightly outperformed expectations. This execution is encouraging, however, given the inherent flexibility of time and materials contracts, coupled with the ongoing tariff and general market uncertainty, we remain cautious on our services revenue growth.
Importantly, our business fundamentals are solid, and we remain optimistic about our long-term opportunity. Manhattan's platform is superior, and our product portfolio offers best-in-class functionality across the supply chain commerce ecosystem. This is driving a solid pipeline and providing our sales team with numerous opportunities to drive growth. Those opportunities include adding new customers, cross-selling our growing unified product portfolio, and converting our on-premise customers to the cloud. All of these sales channels contributed to RPO increasing 20% year over year and surpassing the $2 billion milestone at the end of the quarter.
Win rates against our top five competitors in the quarter were consistent at over 70% and like Q1, we once again experienced strength from new customers, as more than 70% of our new cloud bookings were generated from net new logos. With new logos representing approximately 35% of our current pipeline, we anticipate bookings from net new logos to revert back to the standard one-third of our bookings over time. From a vertical perspective, our end markets are diverse, and we have healthy established footprints across numerous subsectors, including retail, grocery, food distribution, life sciences, industrial, technology, airlines, third-party logistics, and more.
For example, Q2 deals included a global logistics and supply chain company that became a new logo with MAWM and MAO, a grocery wholesaler that became a new logo with MAWM, a global producer, wholesaler, and retailer of luxury goods that converted from on-prem to MAWM, a global beverage and snack provider that became a new logo MAO, a global automated warehouse services company that became a new logo with MAO and MATM. And finally, a regional healthcare system that became a new logo with Manhattan Active Supply Chain Planning and Manhattan Active Scale. As well as a number of others that we closed during the quarter.
And while the timing of large deals and the mix of bookings will vary on a quarterly basis, we believe our bookings breadth from both new and existing customers over a broad set of industries and across our full product portfolio exemplifies our multiple opportunities for sustainable long-term growth. To accelerate our sales velocity and drive even further share gains within our large addressable market, we're strategically increasing our investment in sales and marketing. So I want to share several updates since our last call. First, we promoted Bob Howell to chief sales officer. Bob has been a sales leader at Manhattan for nearly twenty years and has over twenty-five years of supply chain experience.
Bob's knowledge, leadership, and strong execution leading our America sales organization makes him ideal for this expanded role. Look forward to Bob bringing his proven disciplined approach to our entire global sales team. Second, we've hired several new sales leaders on the team. So this includes a new strategic sales leader to facilitate demand creation as well as new sales leaders for both POS and TMS. These are two large markets where we have industry-leading solutions and a tremendous runway for market share gains. Third, we've added and will continue to add more feet on the street. This includes individual sales talent and product specialists.
Since our last earnings call, we've hired more sales talent than in any quarter in the past ten years. And fourth, we've expanded key go-to-market partnerships with Google and Shopify. Announced in May at our user conference, Manhattan solutions are now available on Google Cloud Marketplace. This expanded alliance removes friction and enables customers to more easily procure, deploy, and manage our industry-leading solutions. This sales channel has already hit the ground running. In fact, our largest deal in Q2 was influenced by Google Cloud Marketplace. And we have a growing pipeline of Google Marketplace deals. We're also excited about our expanded partnership with Shopify.
The connector app to Manhattan Active Order Management is now available in the Shopify App Store. Several enterprise-class retailers are live on the app, as we partner with Shopify to deliver a leading end-to-end commerce solution. We believe this deeper partnership will drive quicker adoption and deployments of our OMS and POS solutions. Now let's turn to some brief updates on our products. First, I'd like to provide an update on AgenTic AI. Earlier this year at Momentum, we provided some exciting updates on our existing AI capabilities in Manhattan Assist, and Manhattan Active Maven. And we also announced new capabilities in our forthcoming agent platform.
So starting with Manhattan Assist, we've now serviced hundreds of thousands of inquiries from customers across the globe spanning all Manhattan active platform applications. For multiple quarters, customers have been receiving high-quality responses to questions regarding application capabilities. More importantly, Manhattan Assist is providing detailed guidance on how to best configure applications like warehouse transportation and order management to optimal business outcomes. More recently, we've added the ability for customers to upload their own operational documentation and for Manhattan Assist, to provide answers which reflect each customer's operational preferences. Customers are uploading content including training documents, process flows, and annotated screenshots. Armed with this additional information, assist now enables associates to ask questions about customer-specific distribution centers or store operations.
We believe this set of new capabilities expands the user pool for assist and commensurately expands the value it creates across our customers each day. But we didn't stop there. At Momentum, we also announced our next big step forward with AgenTic AI, Starting This Fall, Each Manhattan active platform application will include purpose-built agents for each app's respective roles and personas. These agents will intelligently automate and optimize processes allowing associates to be faster and far more effective. For example, our labor optimization agent will recommend real-time reassignment of associates in the DC based on upcoming workload historical productivity at the associate level.
For years, DC managers have found it challenging to dynamically balance department-level capacity with fulfillment demand, and we think AgenTic AI offers a unique path forward for finally solving this difficult problem. And in the store, associates can receive detailed selling guidance in real-time, When a store associate is actively selling, our store selling agent will provide personalized selling guidance based on the customer's omnichannel transaction history and the items they're purchasing at that moment. And in between customer visits, the agent will provide selling insights to store associates, including highlighting what items or styles are currently selling well either online or in other stores in their area.
Right now, we're actively collaborating with store operations leaders from across our point of sale customer base to hone these use cases in advance of our release later this year. But I believe the most exciting part of our AI story is the agent foundry. In addition to these out-of-the-box agents within each application, Manhattan ActiveAgent Foundry enables our customers to build their own agents within our platform. Foundry will provide customers the freedom to define the scope and of the agents they want their associates to use. Customers can either start with an existing Manhattan agent and provide tweaks of their own, or they can create an agent completely from scratch using our library of APIs.
And finally, Foundry also provides the ability to interact with other agents including agents outside of the Manhattan Active platform through our native support of both agent-to-agent and model context protocol. The excitement we heard from our customers after our AI announcements at Momentum was overwhelming, and we're excited to get these base agents and agent foundry into the hands of our customers later this year. Now on a different note, I'm happy to share that we continue to see exceptional cross-sell results when it comes to our unified product platform. Our functional and technical unification message continues to resonate with customers of all sizes across geographies and across industries.
Over the past five quarters, roughly 80% of our customers that bought MATM also bought or had previously purchased MAWM. So our customers are truly experiencing the value of unification. The cross-sell results that we've seen since launching Manhattan Active Supply Chain execution have far exceeded what we were able to achieve with our prior platform. And we continue to double down on this investment strategy with an engineering team focused solely on building unified functional advantages. We also recently launched a product council dedicated to serving our unified customers because we know that the best way to innovate is to co-create alongside the world-class supply chain practitioners in our customer base. So that concludes my business update.
Next, Dennis will provide you with an update on our financial performance and outlook. And then I'll close our prepared remarks with a brief summary before we move to Q&A. So Dennis, take it away.
Dennis Story: Okay. Thanks, Eric. Our Manhattan global teams continue to execute well in a challenging environment. The quarter, we delivered a better than expected financial performance on the top and bottom lines. This includes solid results across RPO bookings, cloud revenue growth, gross and operating margin expansion, as well as free cash flow generation. FX volatility persists. In Q2, it was a one-point tailwind to year-over-year total revenue growth, but did not have a material impact on first-half revenue growth. FX was also a $29 million tailwind to sequential RPO growth and a $28 million tailwind to year-over-year RPO growth.
Now turning to our Q2 results, which were better than expected regardless of FX movements, our growth rates are reported on a year-over-year basis unless otherwise stated. For the quarter, total revenue was $272 million, up 3%. Cloud revenue increased 22% to $100 million and services revenue declined 6% to $129 million. Both were a bit better than expected. As previously discussed, the year-over-year decline in services revenue reflects customer budgetary constraints, that shifted services work to future periods. As Eric highlighted, given the uncertain macro environment, and inherent flexibility of time and material contracts, we remain cautious on our services revenue growth.
We ended Q2 with RPO of $2.01 billion, up 26% compared to the prior year and 6% sequentially. The solid Q2 performance was driven by strength in new customers and a healthy contribution from existing customers. Our average contract duration remains at 5.5 to 6 years. Like Q1, some customers are electing longer ramp timelines. While the full contract is non-cancelable, we believe the current macro environment has resulted in some customers taking a more conservative approach to the implementation timeline of their contracts. Accordingly, we expect 38% of RPO to be recognized as revenue over the next 24 months.
As we've previously stated, our teams are focused on accelerating the adoption of our products and our contracts always allow customers to amend their timeline for quicker deployments but not slower ones. Adjusted operating profit was $101 million with an adjusted operating margin of 37.1%. This is up 210 basis points year over year. Our performance was driven by strong cloud revenue growth combined with operating leverage as our cloud business continues to scale. Turning to earnings per share, we delivered Q2 adjusted earnings per share of $1.31 up 11% and GAAP earnings per share of 93¢, up 9%. Moving to cash. Operating cash flow increased 1% to a solid $74 million.
Note, our Q2 growth rate was adversely impacted by strong cash collections in the year-ago period. This resulted in a 26% free cash flow margin and a 38% adjusted EBITDA margin with the difference due to the cash taxes paid in the quarter. Year to date, our operating cash flow is up 17% to $149 million. Regarding the balance sheet, deferred revenue increased 16% to $300 million. We ended the quarter with $231 million in cash and zero debt. In the quarter, we leveraged our strong cash position and invested $50 million in share repurchase resulting in a $150 million in buybacks year to date. Additionally, our board has approved the replenishment of our $100 million share repurchase authority.
Now on to our updated 2025 guidance. Our long-term and long-standing financial objective is to deliver sustainable double-digit top-line growth and top quartile operating margins benchmarked against enterprise software comps. These are drivers to our best-in-class return on invested capital as we maintain a balanced investment approach to growth and profitability. As noted on prior earnings calls, our goal is to update our RPO outlook on an annual basis. Year to date FX has been about a $42 million tailwind to RPO and removing this impact, we are entering the second half of the year tracking to the high end of our guidance.
Additionally, as previously discussed, our bookings performance is impacted by the number and relative value of large deals we close in any quarter which can potentially cause lumpiness or nonlinear bookings throughout the year. As discussed earlier on this call, the macro environment remains uncertain. While clarity on external variables remains limited, given our strong first-half performance and second-half visibility, we are raising our full-year total revenue operating margin, and EPS outlooks. This guidance is also provided in our earnings release. And regarding FX, it is about a $4 million tailwind to second-half revenue from guidance we provided in late April. With that, for RPO, we continue to target $2.11 billion to $2.15 billion excluding FX movements.
For total revenue, we expect $1.071 billion to $1.075 billion with a $1.073 billion midpoint comparing favorably to our prior outlook due to our first-half outperformance. For Q3, we continue to target total revenue of $270 million to $272 million accounting for retail peak seasonality. For Q4, we continue to target a midpoint of $267 million. For adjusted operating margin, we are increasing the midpoint to 35% from our prior midpoint of 33.25%. At the midpoint, we are targeting Q3 adjusted operating margin of 35% and accounting for retail peak seasonality about 33.2% in Q4. Our full-year adjusted earnings per share at the midpoint is increasing by $0.21 to $4.8 up from our prior midpoint of $4.59.
And includes our annual tax rate increasing to 22.5% up from 21%. Which represents an $08 headwind to the second half of the year. The increase in our tax rate is related to an increase in tax reserves caused by the acceleration of our domestic R&D cost deductions under the July 4 US tax law change. As such, this change will also lower our cash taxes paid and likely benefit operating cash flow by approximately $30 million in 02/2025. On a quarterly basis, we are targeting a Q3 tax rate of 25% and an earnings per share of $1.17 and accounting for retail peak seasonality and a tax rate of 22.5% A $1.13 in Q4.
For GAAP EPS, our range is increasing to $3.23 to $3.31. For Q3, we are targeting GAAP EPS of $0.77. Here are some additional details on our 2025 outlook. For full-year 2025 on our first-half outperformance, our cloud revenue midpoint up to $408.5 million on a quarterly basis we continue to assume a $104.5 million in Q3 and $109 million in Q4. For services, we continue to expect a midpoint of $497 million on a quarterly basis this assumes $127 million in Q3 and accounting for retail peak seasonality A $120 million in Q4. For maintenance, our midpoint increases to a $128 million or a 7% decline on attrition to the cloud.
On a quarterly basis, we expect Q3 thirty-two million and Q4 $29 million. And finally, we expect our diluted share count to be 61.3 million shares which assumes no buyback activity. In summary, a solid Q2 performance by the Manhattan global team. Thank you and back to Eric for some closing remarks.
Eric Clark: Great. Thank you, Dennis. We're really pleased with our better than expected second quarter and first-half results. As we have stated, the global macro environment remains challenging. However, we're optimistic about our business fundamentals and our growth opportunity. We believe our industry-leading unified cloud platform positions us as the clear choice for modern supply chain commerce solutions. So thank you to everyone for joining the call, and thank you to the Manhattan team for their dedication and execution. And that concludes our prepared remarks. And we'd be happy to take questions.
Operator: Thank you. We will now be conducting a question and answer session. A question, please press 1 on your telephone keypad. A confirmation tone will indicate that your line is in. And our first question comes from the line of Terry Tillman with Tru Securities.
Terry Tillman: Yes. Thanks for taking my questions and good afternoon, Eddie, Eric, Dennis, and Mike. Nice to see these results, so good job on that. Two questions. First question is on supply chain unification. It resonated at the Momentum event that I attended. I think you all showed a bunch of logos in terms of combined TM and WM transactions. I mean, maybe easier said than done, but is there anything you can programmatically kinda now do to even put more kinda you know, gas on the fire here in terms of whether it's tuning the products better together. Is it go-to-market investments? Maybe AI fuses them better together.
Just what can you do on your own your controllables to even drive more of these unification deals? And then I had a follow-up.
Eric Clark: Okay. Yeah. Great. Thank you, Terry. Love the question. You know, as I mentioned in prepared remarks, we're truly doubling down on our investment in unification. And we're doing that in several ways. So we have created an engineering team that's focused solely on building these unified functional advantages. So we want to make that even bigger and more clear of why it makes sense to leverage our unified platform. We've also engaged with our customers by creating this product council that's dedicated to serving these unified customers to really find out you know, directly from them what they're looking for, what they need, and co-innovate and co-create. Yeah.
And then sales and awareness is a big part of that as well. I think one of the common themes that I heard at Momentum this year, because you're right. We talked a lot about unification, but our customers also talked a lot about unification. And one of the themes was that, you know, customers would tell me a year ago at Momentum, that unification was a compelling strategy, customers believed in it, people were starting to lean in. But this year at Momentum, it came to life. And there were customers on stage telling their stories of how it increased efficiency, how it increased ROI, how it created advantages for them. So we're really seeing our customers buying in.
And also to your point, yeah, I think Manhattan Active Warehouse Management and Transportation Management are probably leading the way, and we've more than doubled our unification logos in that area from, you know, year over year. But we're also seeing lots of unification logos, and I mentioned some of them in my opening remarks. Remarks that are, you know, unified leveraging MAO and supply chain planning and POS. So, great optimism and we're continuing to lean in and invest here around unification.
Terry Tillman: That's great. Thanks, Eric, for that. And my follow-up question is on cloud subscription revenue. It picked up a bit in terms of the growth rate compared to the first quarter, so it was nice to see. It does look like, you know, you have this large balance of RPO. I guess that supports, you know, going forward visibility. But I would just love an update on confidence level and sustained 20% growth beyond the next quarter or two. Just anything you could share on yeah, that subscription revenue visibility. Thank you.
Eric Clark: Yeah. So, you know, when we originally provided the multiyear metric of the sustained multiyear 20% growth, we said we weren't going to update that metric every quarter. But I can tell you, we do remain confident. And you know, the reasons why we remain confident, we've got a large booked business in our like you mentioned, and that gives us good visibility, particularly good visibility in know, 20 plus percent growth. The renewal cycle. And that really starts to pick up pace next year, particularly with our Manhattan Active Warehouse Management. And if you walk through the mechanics of that, you know, you think about as the contract progresses, the dollars move from RPO to subscription revenue.
And by the end of the contract, there's no RPO left. And then when we renew, it renews that RPO and refreshes that RPO. But it also does that at a higher level for a number of reasons. Number one, know, we've ramped that customer through the first, you know, x number of years of the So we've ramped up DCs and users. So we're now gonna be renewing at a run rate that's much higher. We've also got the opportunity to cross-sell when we're when we renew. So when those customers are gonna be renewing in '26, when they bought warehouse management, we didn't have transportation management or supply chain management or AI agents.
So all of those things are opportunities for cross-sell. Of course, there's also the opportunity for price increases in some cases, and all of this will drive higher RPO and higher subscription revenue. So and then add to that the fact that, know, as we've mentioned in previous calls, we do have customers that are maybe taking a conservative view of their deployment cycles and are rolling out a little bit slower. We are actively working with those customers to find opportunities for them to move faster. And as they move faster, that grows our subscription revenue faster as well.
So we think we've got lots of levers to pull to be proactive and work with our customers to drive this and continue the success.
Terry Tillman: That's great. Thanks.
Eric Clark: Thank you.
Operator: And our next question comes from the line of Joe Vruwink with Baird. Please proceed with your question.
Joe Vruwink: Hi, great. Thanks for taking my questions. Eric, just four different go-to-market investment areas you walked through. I appreciate some of these take time to become productive. And revenue enhancing, but maybe you could go into a bit more just qualitative detail on what you think is possible through, like, the enhanced specialists and new hires and, quantitatively, if you have to put a number on it, you know, understand, given Terry's question, 20% growth in cloud subs that was intended to be a multiyear target. But do you really think that some of these go-to-market investments pay off where thinking about a number beyond the 20% level. Yeah. Thank you for the question. Yeah.
As I mentioned, we're not making changes to that long-term projection, but we are making a lot of changes to what we're doing in sales and go-to-market. And I think these are low-risk changes that can have, you know, relatively quick impact, you know, some quicker than others. You talk about, you know, Bob Howell, who I mentioned is taking over chief sales officer. He's been here twenty years. He's worked closely on a lot of the big deals that we've done in Europe and APAC already. Worked closely with those teams.
So this gives him the opportunity to take some of the things that Bob and his sales team in The Americas have really perfected in terms of specialization, sales diligence, etcetera, and leverage that more globally. So some of the things that we're doing really well in The Americas, we can tap into in other parts of the world. And I think you know, very low risk and can have a quick return. I think some of the things that we're doing with partnerships, with Google, with Shopify, as I mentioned, we're already seeing returns. The product specialization I mentioned we've got new leaders for POS and TMS since the last time we had this call.
You know, those guys are coming up to speed quickly. Obviously, they been in this market. They know the business. They know Manhattan. As a competitor, and now they're learning us as a company that they're working for. But the relationships that they have in the market will be valuable, and they will help us to increase our pipelines very quickly. And I'm confident that the specialized teams that they're building around them will give us the ability to enter new markets. I think one of the things that we've been pretty clear about is we know that we've got market-leading products in POS and TMS. But we probably don't have the market awareness that we want in those spaces.
And I think those guys that we brought in can help us address that very, very quickly. So, yeah, I think there are several things that we're doing that can have a material impact. Certainly next year. You know, some of these things, when you look from a revenue perspective, it's difficult to impact significantly revenue in the second half from a product standpoint. But all of these things should be able to give us a good impact for next year.
Joe Vruwink: Okay. That's great color. Thank you. Wanted to ask about the RTO bookings much better this quarter than last quarter. I'm curious if you can maybe parcel out how much is customers just acclimating to the macro versus you know, Manhattan, works of pipeline, you know, sometimes for a while, and opportunities come together in a period. Do you think it was just the pipeline opportunities you had going into this period that was conducive to better RPO activity? Well, I think a big part of it was you know, just very solid execution by our sales team.
But from a point of view, I think some of the uncertainty has abated, but think also customers are adapting to moving forward with some uncertainty. And you know, just like, just like we are doing, you know, we're through the uncertainty and controlling what we can, and I think our customers are doing that as well. And the pipeline that we went into Q2 was solid, and we continue to see solid pipeline in the second half. You know, one of the interesting things we talk about the tough macro that we've been in for a while now. Our last three bookings quarters have been our best three bookings quarters ever.
So and you can argue that all three of those quarters were during you know, at least a changing, if not a challenging macro. So I think our team continues to execute well, and we've got a product that the market wants, and demand is strong.
Joe Vruwink: Great. Thank you very much.
Eric Clark: Yeah. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Brian Peterson with Raymond James. Please proceed with your question.
Brian Peterson: Thanks, gentlemen, and congrats on the strong quarter. So I wanted to hit on maintenance. That was a little bit higher than I had expected this quarter. Are you seeing some of your existing on-premise customers kind of renew for longer? Can we get an update on where we stand on the status of that on-premise to cloud migration for WMS?
Eric Clark: Yeah. So bottom line, you know, we've always taken the approach that our customers are going to convert to cloud when they're ready. And this is the second quarter in a row where we've had really strong bookings from new logo. And ultimately, in the long run, that's gonna drive more growth opportunity because that creates more opportunity for cross-sell. That being said, we are continuing to look at our conversion opportunities and conversion pipelines. And I do see that as an area that we can get more aggressive and not only create more cloud subscription revenue, but also create more services revenue. So conversions is an area that we will continue to focus on.
Now from a percentage standpoint, not a significant change from what we talked about a quarter ago. Roughly 20% of our on-prem customers have started that conversion to the cloud. When I walk through kind of some samples of our new logos and conversions that we closed in Q2. We do continue to close we still have a lot of conversions in the pipeline to close over the next several years.
Brian Peterson: Thanks, Eric. And maybe just a follow-up. I know ERP migration has gotten a lot of talk kind of industry-wide. As you see that strength in net new, is that a big factor in what's driving new customers to Manhattan or maybe some commonality on what you're seeing on the net new side? Thanks, guys.
Eric Clark: Yep. Yep. So the ERP continues to be a tailwind for us, right? As people are making decisions on ERP and looking at what some of the ERP players have to offer and comparing that to what we have to offer, that you know, the change is creating the change that they have to do in ERP is creating an opportunity for them to do a change in supply chain as well. So that's absolutely creating pipeline for us. And I think the amount of pipeline and what that's driving has been consistent over the past several quarters, and we continue to see pipeline created that way.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Dylan Becker with William Blair. Please proceed with your question.
Dylan Becker: Hey, gentlemen. Congrats here. Appreciate it. Maybe, Eric, sticking on one of those prior topics. Around the idea of conversion momentum, but also on the new logo side. I wonder if you could contextualize some of the efficiency gains you're seeing around kind of delivery and implementation, what you can do to make that process easier and faster, and maybe if that is a TAM unlock in and of itself, as it's kind of historically been viewed as a heavy implementation if that allows you to maybe more down market into tier two and what that TAM unlock could potentially look like.
Eric Clark: Yeah. Great question. And in fact, this is something that we talked about at Momentum as well. The team is having success leveraging automation and AI to reduce implementation timelines, to reduce the number of extensions required, to, you know, reduce the number of hours to create an extension. So there's, you know, example after example of where we're reducing timelines and reducing cost and deployment. So that absolutely makes our TAM bigger.
And that's one of the things that we're one of the messages that we're taking to market right now as well as we can reduce the speed or increase the speed and reduce the complexity it increases our TAM, and it also can be another way to encourage customers to do those migration and convert from on-prem to the cloud. So those are messages that we're taking to market right now, and I think they're being received very well. And by the way, at Momentum, our customers were all also happy to hear that with that speed and reducing complexity, it gets them to their ROI faster, which is a very important message for them.
Dylan Becker: Very much so. Yep. Perfect. Okay. Thank you. And then we've talked about kind of the pace and productivity, kind of the expectations on sales hiring, and where you think about kind of segmenting that out. But if we were to kind of step back and contemplate the renewal cycle in fiscal twenty-six, kind of having come on board now, hundred and fifty, hundred and sixty days, Could you maybe draw any parallels in your prior experiences of how you're kind of positioning and viewing navigating that renewal opportunity and what that can kind of contextualize from a potential upsell, obviously, unification cross-selling dynamic as well? Thank you.
Eric Clark: Yes, definitely. So it's not too dissimilar from the cycle that we were on when I joined ServiceNow, when ServiceNow was just over $1 billion and we were going through significant renewal cycles. And at the same time, we were introducing new products and doing cross-sell and upsell when we did those renewals. So that will be a big focus for us in the second half of this year, and that's a big part of what Bob Howell and his team are gonna be putting together is that global structure that we will use to make sure that we are maximizing the opportunity at renewal and not just renewing, but driving growth within those customers as well.
Dylan Becker: Great. Thanks, Eric. Appreciate it.
Operator: And our next question comes from the line of George Kurosawa with Citi. Proceed with your question.
George Kurosawa: Hey, thanks for taking the questions. Maybe as it relates to the macro backdrop, if you could talk about kind of linearity in the quarter, did things improve as the quarter progressed? Any comments on how things are trending so far into July?
Eric Clark: I wouldn't say there was anything material to note in terms of things improving throughout the quarter. Or even in July. Typically, in our business, Q3 has been seasonally a weaker quarter and Q3 seasonally a stronger quarter. We'll see if that plays out. But in terms of the macro nothing meaningful.
George Kurosawa: Okay. That's helpful. And then on this 2026, '27 renewal cycle that you're gearing up for, Anything you can help us with in terms of you know, when you're looking at the timelines for when we should expect those to really start to kick in? You have kind of the big book of business coming back to the table? And how are you thinking about success relative to renewal cycles you've seen in the past?
Eric Clark: Yeah. So you know, it's not gonna hit in one big wave all of a sudden. It hits it can get a little bit bigger every quarter. So it can sneak up on you if you're not prepared for it, and why we are, you know, making a very effort to be prepared for it and build the team, build the plan, build the structure all around it so that we can measure it very well. And in fact, we're already measuring it eighteen months out. You know, we're looking at the next eighteen months, what the renewals are coming in, making sure that we're preparing and making sure that we can have the right cross-sell conversations in advance.
So they can have their budgets ready and we can maximize this opportunity.
George Kurosawa: Great. Thanks for taking the questions.
Operator: Thank you. Our next question comes from the line of Mark Schappel with Loop Capital Markets. Please proceed with your question.
Mark Schappel: Hi, thank you for taking my question and nice job on RPO print. Eric, question for you. Given the things kind of seem to have, be settling down a little bit since Liberation Day, What's your observation around or sentiment around CIOs moving forward with, say, large WMS or TMS upgrades or expansions? And then also, since Liberation Day, are you seeing any of these initiatives kind of being crowded out by other priorities?
Eric Clark: Well, I think one thing is very clear that Liberation Day was just one more reason for CIOs and boards to recognize that this is mission-critical software. And you know, what we are seeing is you know, while some of the uncertainty is maybe getting more clear and some of the uncertainty is getting more common, people are figuring out how to work around the uncertainty. We're seeing that the most forward-leaning companies are not holding back on investing in supply chain. They recognize this as a differentiator. And they recognize it as something that they need to, you know, look for strategic advantages. So we're not seeing large customers use this as a place to save money. Great. Thanks.
That being said, I'll continue to use the same caution that when it comes to rollout cycles, you know, that's where they have you know, a little bit more flexibility in how quickly they wanna spend and how quickly they wanna deploy.
Mark Schappel: Great. Thank you. And then you know, I appreciate your earlier comments on your on the go-to-market investments you're making. On the marketing front or market awareness front, what can we expect on that front for the balance of the year?
Eric Clark: Yeah. You know, we're in a period of change right now. So I think maybe a quarter for now, and we can give you a bigger update on what that's gonna look like. But we have an open search for a chief marketing officer and you know, we've made it clear that we wanna invest. We wanna, you know, change our awareness and presence in the market. And, you know, we're taking the steps to make sure that we do that.
Mark Schappel: Thank you. That's all for me.
Operator: Thank you. And our next question comes from the line of Chris Quintero with Morgan Stanley. Please proceed with your question.
Chris Quintero: Hey, Eric. Hey, Dennis. Great to be on the call here with you all. Thanks for taking the questions. Based on the go-to-market changes here, just curious kind of how far along are we on those? How much more is left? And when you think about the new sales reps that you're hiring, what's the kind of background and profile? And is that different from the historical sales rep that you all have hired?
Eric Clark: Yeah. So in terms of how far along, we're just getting started. I mentioned a lot of these hires were in the past quarter since the last time we did this earnings call. Backgrounds, they're coming from our competitors in many cases. And they're coming from the competitors that we're often routinely beating, and they wanna come be a part of Manhattan. So, you know, this group of people that we hired has experience across Blue Yonder and Oracle, Mad Mobile, Walmart, you know, and just about every competitor you know, we're bringing in people that understand those businesses and can help us build a better product and create more market awareness around our product.
Chris Quintero: Got it. That's helpful, Eric. And then I want to follow-up on services. Really nice to see that outperformance in the quarter. The full-year guide stayed unchanged. So just curious, any change on how you're thinking about the full year or just staying conservative?
Eric Clark: Yes. We're staying conservative. Again, that's the part of our business that customers have a lot of flexibility. It's time and material contracts. And if they want to put their foot on the throttle and really go fast, we can help them do that. But if they want to slow down, we do that with them as well. So we're just taking a conservative approach, and you know, but we're pleased with where we are at this point in the year.
Chris Quintero: Excellent. Thank you.
Operator: With that, there are no further questions at this time. I'd like to turn the call back to Eric Clark for closing remarks.
Eric Clark: Yes. Thanks very much. Appreciate you joining and appreciate all the questions. Bottom line, we're pleased. We had a very solid quarter and we did better than expected and had great new logo performance and great margin expansion. I'm personally very excited about the go-to-market changes. I'm excited about what Bob can bring to the global team. And, you know, also excited to see the impact that Agintiq AI will have on our business in the second half and beyond.
Operator: Great. Thank you. And, everyone, this does conclude today's teleconference. We thank you for your participation. You may disconnect your lines at this time.