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Date

Thursday, March 12, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET

Call participants

  • Chief Executive Officer & Chair of the Board — Shantanu Narayen
  • President, Digital Media — David Wadhwani
  • President, Digital Experience — Anil Chakravarthy
  • Executive Vice President & Chief Financial Officer — Daniel Durn
  • Vice President, Investor Relations — Douglas Clark

Takeaways

  • Leadership transition -- Shantanu Narayen announced he will transition from CEO, with the Board and Frank Calderoni leading the search for his successor and Narayen remaining as Chair of the Board.
  • Revenue -- $6.40 billion, rising 12% as reported and 11% in constant currency; record for fiscal Q1 performance.
  • GAAP EPS -- $4.60, growing 11% year over year; Non-GAAP EPS -- $6.06, growing 19% year over year, both outpacing revenue growth.
  • Operating margins -- GAAP operating margin of 37.8% and non-GAAP operating margin of 47.4% reported for the quarter.
  • ARR (Annualized Recurring Revenue) -- Total ending ARR reached $26.06 billion, up 10.9% year over year.
  • Customer group subscription revenue -- $6.17 billion, up 13% year over year (12% in constant currency).
  • RPO (Remaining Performance Obligations) -- $22.22 billion at quarter-end, up 13% year over year; cRPO (current RPO) increased by 12% as reported and by 11% in constant currency.
  • Cash flow -- Cash flows from operations reached a fiscal Q1 record of $2.96 billion.
  • Share repurchases -- 8.1 million shares repurchased during the quarter, with $3.89 billion remaining of the $25 billion authorization.
  • AI-first offerings ARR -- ARR from AI-first offerings more than tripled year over year for the quarter.
  • MAU (Monthly Active Users) -- Across Creative Cloud, Acrobat, Express, and Firefly, monthly active users exceeded 850 million, increasing 17% year over year.
  • Creative freemium MAU -- Exceeded 80 million, up 50% year over year, including usage on web and mobile for Firefly, Express, Premiere, Photoshop, and Lightroom.
  • Acrobat and Express MAU -- Both grew approximately 20% year over year; Express adoption spans 99% of Fortune 500 companies.
  • Firefly metrics -- Quarter over quarter, Firefly subscription and credit pack ending ARR grew 75%; generative credit consumption rose 45%; video generative actions grew 8x and audio generative actions doubled, both year over year. Firefly Enterprise new customer acquisition rose 50% year over year.
  • AEP and apps -- Subscription revenue increased over 30% year over year; scale now includes over 35 trillion segment evaluations and 70 billion profile activations per day.
  • GenStudio ending ARR -- Adobe GenStudio family ending ARR grew over 30% year over year, reflecting broader enterprise demand for content supply chain solutions.
  • Acrobat AI Assistant and enterprise demand -- Acrobat AI Assistant ARR rose approximately 3x year over year; upgrades to Acrobat Studio showing strong momentum, particularly among enterprise renewals.
  • Partnerships and distribution -- New integrations and partnerships, including with Airtel India and major AI/cloud platforms, broadened Adobe’s distribution and user base.
  • Stock business -- Traditional stand-alone stock business experienced a steeper-than-expected decline; it is approximately a $450 million annual business.
  • Guidance for fiscal Q2 -- Revenue targeted at $6.43 billion to $6.48 billion; GAAP EPS projected at $4.35 to $4.40 and non-GAAP EPS at $5.80 to $5.85; non-GAAP operating margin around 44.5%.
  • Semrush acquisition -- Pending acquisition of Semrush (NYSE: SEMR) not included in fiscal Q2 or fiscal year 2026 guidance, expected to close in fiscal Q2 subject to regulatory approval.
  • Super Bowl metrics -- Adobe-enabled experiences during the 2026 Super Bowl peaked at more than 8 billion analytics server hits, 21 million concurrent viewers, and 216 million e-mails delivered.
  • Enterprise customer wins -- Notable new customers in fiscal Q1 included Centene (NYSE: CNC), Danske Bank (CPH: DANSKE), Deutsche Bank (ETR: DBK), Heineken (AMS: HEIA), HP (NYSE: HPQ), MongoDB (NASDAQ: MDB), Nordstrom (NYSE: JWN), Paramount (NASDAQ: PARA), Pilot Travel Centers, RACQ, Revlon, Sherwin-Williams (NYSE: SHW), Southwest Airlines (NYSE: LUV), Stagwell (NASDAQ: STGW), Target (NYSE: TGT), TUI Travel Group, and WPP (LSE: WPP).

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Risks

  • Traditional stock business experienced a "steeper decline than we expected," explicitly cited as impacting ARR growth and described as shifting "more quickly than we had planned for."
  • Management stated that the freemium model for creative and AI-first applications "dampens ARR in the short term," causing a phase-shifted revenue impact despite rising usage metrics.

Summary

Adobe (ADBE 1.43%) delivered double-digit growth in revenue, ARR, and EPS, while highlighting the rapid acceleration of its AI-first offerings and major expansion in active user adoption. The leadership transition was announced, with CEO Shantanu Narayen to step down following the search for his successor. The company experienced exceptional enterprise momentum with breakthrough growth in AI-powered enterprise platforms like AEP, GenStudio, and Firefly Enterprise, alongside notable enterprise wins and high-profile customer use during major events such as the Super Bowl. Adobe is implementing broad integrations and channel partnerships to reach both consumer and large enterprise segments, while guiding to continued high performance for the coming quarter despite citing ongoing ARR headwinds in its traditional stock business and a deliberate transition to freemium offerings.

  • Shantanu Narayen said, "if you take out the stock business like-for-like, instead of the 10.9% growth, it would have been approximately 11.2% growth," clarifying the quantitative headwind from the stock business contraction.
  • David Wadhwani described freemium MAU expansion as a delayed ARR driver, stating that "it's just going to take a little time for them to use the product, to hit the paywalls and then translate out" to monetization.
  • Exiting fiscal Q1, remaining buyback authorization stood at $3.89 billion following significant share repurchase activity.
  • Anil Chakravarthy highlighted that Adobe serves 99 of the Fortune 100 and is regarded as a "trusted partner for AI-powered customer experience orchestration."
  • Management reaffirmed expectations for total Adobe ARR growth of 10.2% for the fiscal year and restated full-year guidance.

Industry glossary

  • ARR (Annualized Recurring Revenue): The annualized value of all active subscription contracts as of the reporting date, excluding one-time and perpetual license revenue.
  • cRPO (Current Remaining Performance Obligations): The portion of Remaining Performance Obligations expected to be recognized as revenue over the next twelve months.
  • AEP (Adobe Experience Platform): Adobe's data platform for real-time customer experience management and activation.
  • GenStudio: An integrated content supply chain solution spanning ideation, creation, production, and marketing activation, built from Adobe’s creative and digital experience applications.
  • Firefly: Adobe’s suite of generative AI capabilities for image, video, and audio creation, available across various Creative Cloud applications and enterprise products.
  • MAU (Monthly Active Users): Number of unique users actively engaging with a product or platform in a given month.
  • RPO (Remaining Performance Obligations): Contracted revenue yet to be recognized, including deferred revenue and future contracted amounts.

Full Conference Call Transcript

Shantanu Narayen: Thanks, Doug. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. Earlier today, we announced that I will be transitioning from my role as CEO after over 18 years and 100 earnings calls. Over the coming months, I will be working with Frank Calderoni, Adobe's Lead Director and the Board of Directors to identify my successor and to ensure a smooth transition. Until then, I will continue to lead Adobe as CEO and will stay on as Chair of the Board to support my successor just as John and Chuck did when I took on this role.

What attracted me to Adobe 28 years ago remains unchanged: our leadership in creating new market categories, world-class products, a relentless drive to innovate in every functional area of the company and our employees who continue to invent the future. The privilege of leading this company has been the greatest honor of my career, and I'm committed to setting it up for its next decade of growth with the right leader and executive team in partnership with the Board while driving our fiscal '26 strategic priorities. Our mission to empower everyone to create represents an even larger opportunity in the AI era.

Let me outline what Adobe is doing to drive our top line growth, while maintaining a high level of profitability. As a company that has prided itself on creating categories, our AI transformation begins with a focus on customer-centric product strategy to anticipate and fulfill the diverse needs of a large and growing customer base. At Adobe, we are targeting business professionals and consumers and creative and marketing professionals through differentiated AI-infused and AI-first product offerings across various routes to market and different monetization models. With creativity at the core, we are expanding innovation in all our flagship applications as well as investing in new offerings.

These new products include Adobe Acrobat Studio with Adobe Express, Adobe Firefly and Adobe GenStudio. Our new AI-first offerings ending ARR more than tripled year-over-year, reflecting progress against this opportunity with individuals and enterprises alike. Adobe's continued success in AI will be underpinned by our deep understanding of creativity domains, the vast amount of data to which we have access, delivery of complex workflows driving business outcomes, and a great brand across individuals, small and medium businesses and enterprises. Content is at the heart of all Adobe solutions, which powers educational, social, marketing, brand, entertainment and business content.

Our growth has always been fueled by attracting new users, individual consumers, students and business professionals into our products, delighting them and driving adoption. We're ruthlessly focused on monthly active users as an indicator of adoption and success for Acrobat and Express, Creative Cloud applications and Adobe Firefly across different surfaces, including desktop, web, mobile and LLM platforms. In Q1, we surpassed 850 million monthly active users of Acrobat, Creative Cloud, Express and Firefly, achieving 17% year-over-year growth, a clear indication that we have both strong usage and a foundation for monetization.

In addition to broad end-user adoption, Adobe has always been a trusted partner for enterprises and we're increasingly being asked to help them drive their AI strategy across customer experience orchestration globally. Enterprises are looking to the combination of employees and automation to deliver on the demands of content and marketing at scale. Agentic AI will further enable outcome-focused enterprise workflows as customers look beyond speed to elevate creative differentiation, brand governance and personalized experiences across channels. Adobe's end-to-end solutions are uniquely designed to meet these needs at scale. Strong momentum across our enterprise offerings underscores our leadership and customer confidence in Adobe's ability to deliver AI-driven value.

In Q1, globally, we achieved over 30% year-over-year growth in AEP and apps as well as Adobe GenStudio ending ARR. Our goal has always been to meet customers wherever they work across the broad range of surfaces they use every day and emerging new platforms have always been additive to our market opportunity. In addition to Windows, Mac, iOS, Android, Chrome and Edge, we intend to integrate with leading AI platforms such as Anthropic, Google, Microsoft, NVIDIA and OpenAI, providing customers with access, choice and flexibility. We're jointly driving enterprise transformation at scale in collaboration with global leaders such as Accenture, Cognizant, Deloitte, Dentsu, EY, IBM, Infosys, Omnicom, Publicis, PwC, Stagwell, TCS and WPP.

Given the strategy, I'm pleased with how Adobe is transitioning to an AI-driven business. We had a strong start to the year achieving $6.4 billion in revenue in Q1, representing 11% year-over-year growth. GAAP earnings per share for the quarter was $4.60 and non-GAAP earnings per share was $6.06, representing 11% and 19% year-over-year growth, respectively. Driving this momentum were Acrobat and Express, Creative Cloud Pro, overall strength in the CXO enterprise solutions as well as in our AI-first applications. Importantly, we saw tremendous MAU growth in our new initiatives that dampens ARR in the short term but sets us up to deliver in the quarters ahead.

As we continue to transform the business to capitalize on the AI opportunity, our customer-focused strategy, rich product road map, innovation momentum and early success across all routes to market position us well to empower everyone to create. I'll now turn it over to David.

David Wadhwani: Thanks, Shantanu. Hello, everyone. AI is fundamentally reshaping how people create and work. As experiences become increasingly conversational and outcome-driven, more people than ever will benefit from our creativity and productivity tools. Our approach is to expand access to AI across our existing audiences in products like Creative Cloud and Acrobat, reach new audiences with products like Firefly and Express and help automate content production in enterprises with Firefly Enterprise. As we execute on our strategic initiatives, we're pleased with the progress we're making against 3 growth drivers. First, new user acquisition is gaining momentum and we are reaching more new users than ever before as measured through the growth of monthly active users.

Notably, creative freemium MAU crossed 80 million, growing 50% year-over-year and includes web and mobile versions of Firefly, Express, Premiere, Photoshop and Lightroom. Second, AI usage continues to grow quickly, as measured through record levels of generative credit consumption. Third, our content automation solutions continue to see strong enterprise adoption, as measured through record numbers of API calls. These metrics highlight that we're executing against our strategy to empower individuals and businesses to create content in new ways in the era of AI. In the first quarter, subscription revenue for Business Professionals & Consumers was $1.78 billion, growing 15% year-over-year.

Our vision for business professionals and consumers is to deliver AI-powered applications that reinvent how users comprehend, create and share content. PDF Spaces transforms collections of files and links into dynamic knowledge hubs that allow you to easily collaborate with others. Acrobat AI Assistant provides users conversational experiences that help them comprehend information faster and more accurately with an individual PDF or across documents in the PDF Space. Our Acrobat and Express integrations empower users to turn content they're consuming into generated presentations, infographics, audio summaries and more. It's clear that these AI-based capabilities are resonating with users as AI Assistant MAU doubled year-over-year and Express MAU tripled year-over-year. Express is now used in 99% of U.S. Fortune 500 companies.

In Q3, we introduced Adobe Acrobat Studio, a single offering that brings together all these AI creative capabilities with the PDF tools users know and rely on. Subscription upgrades to offerings that include Acrobat Studio value are off to a strong start across routes to market, including adobe.com and enterprise license renewals. We are embedding Adobe's capabilities directly into new conversational platforms. In Q1, we have launched Acrobat and Express for ChatGPT, significantly expanding the reach of our creativity and productivity workflows. You can expect to see similar integrations into Copilot, Claude and Gemini as those platforms support integrated application experiences.

We activated new Express partnerships, including Airtel in India, illustrating how our distribution strategy continues to accelerate new user acquisition at scale. Partnerships like these are helping to drive momentum across our Business Professional & Consumer offerings across individuals and businesses. Subscription revenue in Q1 for Creative & Marketing Professionals was $4.39 billion, growing 11% year-over-year. Our strategy for creators and creative professionals is to empower everyone to create, from first-time creators to seasoned professionals to large enterprises seeking to scale content production. Firefly, an all-in-one creative AI studio, is the right tool for the next generation of creators and creative professionals.

Creative Cloud with deeply infused AI capabilities continues to be the destination of choice for power and precision creation and enterprises are increasingly turning to Firefly Enterprise to unlock a new era of content automation. Firefly is quickly becoming the go-to destination for content generation, ideation and assembly. Users can generate with over 30 industry-leading models, including Adobe, Google and OpenAI. They can collaboratively ideate with stakeholders in Adobe Firefly Boards. They can edit and assemble image, video and audio using Firefly's prompt-based editing capabilities with integrated Photoshop and Express web journeys. Firefly momentum is strong with generative credit consumption growing over 45% quarter-over-quarter.

While that growth is broad-based, generations are skewing toward higher-value modalities with video generative actions growing more than 8x year-over-year and audio generative actions doubling year-over-year, reflecting customers moving deeper into AI-assisted creation across the full creative process. As a result, Firefly subscription and credit pack ending ARR grew 75% quarter-over-quarter. Creative Cloud applications continue to embed new AI capabilities, making users far more productive. Photoshop added new partner models and support for higher resolution image generation and editing Illustrator expanded its generative design capabilities with models from OpenAI, Ideogram and Google to support frequent vector workflows. Premiere added AI Object Masks, which quickly became one of the most used AI features in the application.

As Creative Cloud users increase AI usage, we're seeing purchases of Firefly credit packs ramp nicely. Firefly Enterprise, the combination of Firefly Services and Firefly Foundry is empowering the world's largest brands to scale content production to unprecedented levels. Firefly Services provide enterprise-grade APIs, giving businesses more than 30 content production capabilities, which can be run in automated workflows. These include 3D digital twin workflows showcasing physical products, image and video resizing across every social and digital channel and campaign variant generation and assembly for personalized marketing content. Firefly Foundry enables the world's largest marketing teams and media companies to build private, deeply tuned AI models trained on their own IP.

Unlike generic AI models, Firefly Foundry gives enterprises a commercially safe model that understands and is able to accurately generate their branded assets. Together, these products are driving measurable business outcomes by increasing production scale, accelerating velocity and reducing cost. Firefly Enterprise new customer acquisition grew 50% year-over-year. Additional Q1 Creators & Creative Professionals highlights include: Photoshop launched a conversational editing experience in ChatGPT. 85% Of films premiering at the 2026 Sundance Film Festival were made using Adobe Creative Cloud tools. Frame is emerging as the cross-media work-in-progress repository to manage the rapidly increasing volume of content being created, and doubled the number of assets under management year-over-year.

And Firefly Foundry continues to build momentum in the media and entertainment vertical, with partnerships, including B5 Studios, Cantina Creative, Creative Artists Agency, United Talent Agency and WME. While Q1 had many highlights, our traditional stock business saw a steeper decline than we expected. This shift is playing out more quickly than we had planned for, and our focus remains on giving customers meaningful choice between stock and generative AI as they build their creative and marketing workflows. Q1 reinforced our confidence in the strategy and opportunity across creativity and productivity. We're thrilled with the new user acquisition and usage growth for creative freemium offerings.

We're excited to see the momentum continue with workflow and automation capabilities, driving incredible efficiencies in enterprises. I'll now turn it over to Anil.

Anil Chakravarthy: Thanks, David. Hello, everyone. Adobe provides the leading AI-powered solutions for creative and marketing professionals to deliver personalized customer experiences at scale. AI remains a tailwind for our enterprise business, enabling us to deliver Creative & Marketing Professionals subscription revenue of $4.39 billion in Q1, growing 11% year-over-year. Adobe pioneered the category of customer experience management. Enterprises around the world rely on our software to identify prospects, acquire new customers, engage and delight them with personalized experiences and grow customer lifetime value. We are the leading provider of content management systems for websites and mobile apps and the leading customer data platform that serves as the foundation in enterprises for digital customer engagement.

We serve 99 of the Fortune 100 and are the digital platform of choice for Chief Marketing Officers and Chief Digital Officers for their ongoing campaigns and for major marketing moments like the Olympics and Super Bowl. During the 2026 Super Bowl, Adobe-enabled experiences peaked with more than 8 billion analytics server hits, 21 million concurrent viewers, 34 million page views, 1.5 million video requests per minute and 216 million e-mails delivered. In the era of AI, every enterprise needs to drive their current business while harnessing AI to address new trends in consumer behavior and expectations.

Companies must ensure their brands remain front and center, even as consumers are increasingly discovering new information, engaging with businesses and buying products through LLMs and agents. These trends vary significantly by geography and consumer segment, adding complexity for global companies that need to provide personalized experiences through well-established channels like websites, e-mail and mobile apps, while ramping up new channels like LLMs. Adobe has become the trusted partner for AI-powered customer experience orchestration through our thought leadership, rapid innovation and omnichannel capabilities, while providing the security, reliability, data governance, global scale and partner ecosystem that enterprises require. Adobe's unified CXO platform provides solutions for brand visibility, content supply chain and customer engagement.

Adobe Experience Platform is a leading platform for digital customer engagement and brings together new AI-powered apps and agents to transform how businesses build, deliver and optimize marketing campaigns and customer experiences as well as reduce costs. In Q1, we introduced new AEP agents along with expanded agent orchestrator capabilities now available to all AEP customers via a try-and-buy program. The scale of our platform has grown to over 35 trillion segment evaluations and more than 70 billion profile activations per day. Subscription revenue for AEP and native apps grew over 30% year-over-year, demonstrating continued momentum and value realization.

As consumers increasingly use LLMs and agents to discover brands and purchase products, brand visibility has become critical to success in the agentic web. According to Adobe Digital Insights, during the 2025 holiday season, traffic to retail sites from LLMs increased nearly 7x, bringing qualified referrals that convert 31% higher and generate 254% more revenue per visit. Adobe's brand visibility solution, which includes Adobe Experience Manager, Adobe LLM Optimizer and Adobe Brand Concierge empowers brands to engage consumers across their own properties, search, social media, LLMs and agentic channels. Adobe LLM Optimizer enables enterprises to enhance the discoverability of their websites by LLMs and significantly increase their organic traffic.

Adobe Brand Concierge is an AI-first application, enabling businesses to configure and manage agentic AI experiences on their websites and mobile apps to guide consumers from exploration to purchase decisions using immersive and conversational experiences. We expect our pending acquisition of Semrush will expand our offering to provide marketers with a comprehensive solution to shape how their brands appear across their own websites, LLMs, traditional search and the wider web. Content is at the heart of delivering personalized customer experiences, and the demand for high-quality on-brand content has exploded. GenStudio is our comprehensive content supply chain offering, spanning content ideation, creation, production and activation.

GenStudio is highly differentiated by integrating best-in-class capabilities across Adobe's creativity and marketing applications, including Creative Cloud, Firefly Enterprise, Frame, Adobe Experience Manager and Workfront. In Q1, we delivered breakthrough innovations, enabling GenStudio-created assets to flow directly into activation workflows across the Adobe stack and a broad ecosystem of advertising platforms, including Amazon Ads, Google, LinkedIn and Meta. Ending ARR for the Adobe GenStudio family of products grew over 30% year-over-year as the world's leading brands and agencies increasingly turn to Adobe to power their content supply chain. Q1 accomplishments and business highlights include: Strong customer demand for our agentic web offerings with over 650 customer trials underway for Adobe LLM Optimizer, Sites Optimizer and Brand Concierge.

Continued adoption and momentum for AEP AI Assistant with 70% of all AEP customers using the agentic capabilities. Partnership in the OpenAI initiative to enable brands to create ads for ChatGPT. Accelerating momentum for Firefly Services and custom models as part of the GenStudio solution with over 2,500 custom models since launch and Q1 industry analyst recognition, including being named the Leader in 2 Forrester Waves for Digital Asset Management Solutions and Revenue Marketing Platforms for B2B as well as the Gartner Magic Quadrant for Personalization Engines. Adobe's unique value is helping enterprises solve their comprehensive customer experience and content supply chain needs, balancing creativity, automation and costs.

Global customer wins in the enterprise in Q1 included Centene, Danske Bank, Deutsche Bank, Heineken, HP, MongoDB, Nordstrom, Paramount, Pilot Travel Centers, RACQ, Revlon, Sherwin-Williams, Southwest Airlines, Stagwell, Target, TUI Travel Group and WPP. Customer experience orchestration is a critical imperative for every business to drive both top line and bottom line growth. Our unique vision, comprehensive offerings, rapid pace of innovation, extensive partner ecosystem and laser focus on delivering business value position Adobe as the partner of choice for AI-powered customer experience orchestration. We look forward to unveiling significant innovations and partnerships that will further advance our leadership position at Adobe Summit in April. I'll now pass it to Dan.

Daniel Durn: Thanks, Anil. Today, I'll start by summarizing Adobe's performance in Q1 fiscal 2026, highlighting growth drivers across our customer groups and I'll finish with our financial targets. In Q1, Adobe achieved revenue of $6.40 billion, growing 12% year-over-year as reported and 11% in constant currency. GAAP EPS was $4.60 and non-GAAP EPS was $6.06, increasing 11% and 19% year-over-year, respectively. GAAP operating margin was 37.8%, and non-GAAP operating margin was 47.4%. Q1 financial highlights included total Adobe ending ARR of $26.06 billion, growing 10.9% year-over-year. Total customer group subscription revenue of $6.17 billion, growing 13% year-over-year or 12% in constant currency.

RPO of $22.22 billion exiting the quarter, growing 13% year-over-year or 12% in constant currency and cRPO growing 12% as reported or 11% in constant currency. Cash flows from operations in the quarter were a Q1 record of $2.96 billion and ending cash and short-term investment positions exiting Q1 was $6.89 billion and repurchasing approximately 8.1 million shares of our stock during the quarter. Exiting Q1, we have $3.89 billion remaining of our $25 billion authorization granted in March 2024. Business Professionals & Consumers subscription revenue was $1.78 billion, increasing 16% year-over-year as reported or 15% in constant currency. Q1 growth drivers for Business Professionals & Consumers included sustained double-digit ending ARR growth across all geographies.

Acrobat and Express MAU grew approximately 20% year-over-year. Acrobat AI Assistant ARR grew approximately 3x year-over-year and strong upgrades to Acrobat Studio as part of enterprise license renewals. Creative & Marketing Professionals subscription revenue was $4.39 billion, increasing 12% year-over-year or 11% in constant currency. Q1 growth drivers for Creative & Marketing Professionals included growth in Creative Cloud driven by the CC Pro offering, creative freemium MAU crossed 80 million, growing over 50% year-over-year and includes web and mobile versions of Firefly, Express, Premiere, Photoshop and Lightroom. Generative credit consumption increased more than 45% quarter-over-quarter. Firefly ending ARR across Firefly app, Firefly credit packs and Firefly Enterprise exceeded $250 million.

GenStudio and AEP and apps ending ARR each grew over 30% year-over-year. Strong pipeline momentum for new AI offerings across LLM Optimizer, Sites Optimizer and Brand Concierge. Continued strength and retention across the enterprise customer base, and continued success in the enterprise as total customers with ARR over $10 million grew greater than 20% year-over-year. As we transform our business, we continue to deliver double-digit total Adobe ARR growth at scale, driven by innovative technology, the breadth of our solutions and strong go-to-market motions.

From a product perspective, Q1 ARR growth was driven by Acrobat and Express, Creative Cloud Pro and AEP and apps and GenStudio in the Enterprise as well as growing momentum in our expanding portfolio of AI-first applications, including Firefly app and Firefly Enterprise. In total, ARR from AI-first applications more than tripled year-over-year. In Q1, we drove significant MAU growth for our new creative web and mobile freemium offerings, including Express, Firefly, Photoshop and Premiere. While this freemium approach is intentionally designed to serve the next generation of creators, build the Adobe brand and set the foundation for accelerated growth over time, these offerings have a near-term impact on ARR.

In addition, we continue to monitor and drive utilization of AI functionality across our products. In Q1, this AI functionality drove significantly greater credit consumption quarter-over-quarter. However, in Q1, we experienced a greater-than-anticipated decline in our traditional stand-alone stock book of business. While this is happening faster than expected, our strategy is to provide customers with the choice to use stock or generative AI offerings for creative and marketing workflows. We expect strength for our core Acrobat and CC products and enterprise demand for our CXO solutions, coupled with new MAU growth for Firefly and Express and increasing AI usage and monetization to gain momentum as we move through the year.

We continue to expect total Adobe ARR growth of 10.2% for FY '26. Let me now turn to our financial targets, which assume current macroeconomic conditions and do not include the contribution of Semrush, which we continue to expect to close in Q2, subject to regulatory approvals and closing conditions. For Q2 fiscal 2026, we're targeting total Adobe revenue of $6.43 billion to $6.48 billion, Business Professionals & Consumers subscription revenue of $1.80 billion to $1.82 billion, Creative & Marketing Professionals subscription revenue of $4.41 billion to $4.44 billion, GAAP EPS of $4.35 to $4.40 and non-GAAP EPS of $5.80 to $5.85. For Q2, we expect non-GAAP operating margin of approximately 44.5% and non-GAAP tax rate of approximately 18%.

In addition, we are reaffirming our FY '26 targets. Adobe remains focused on executing our growth strategy in a period of profound technological change. As customer behavior evolves, the strength of our platforms and the rapid pace of our AI-driven innovation and creativity, productivity and customer experience orchestration workflows, position us to drive profitable growth and seize the opportunities ahead. Shantanu, back to you.

Shantanu Narayen: Thanks, Dan. Q1 represented a strong start to the year, both for our existing platforms where we've been innovative with AI as well as the new strategic initiatives that will drive future growth. Adobe remains steadfast in its commitment to innovation and delivering value to our customers, partners and shareholders. We're confident that our customer-centric approach, groundbreaking product innovations, passionate employees and unwavering execution will continue to drive growth and create durable value. Thank you, and we will now take your questions. Operator?

Operator: [Operator Instructions] And we will take our first question from Jay Vleeschhouwer with Griffin Securities.

Jay Vleeschhouwer: Shantanu, first, for you, I just want to say how much I have appreciated our 3-decade relationship. And I do want to commend you, if that's a strong enough word, for the multiple transformations at the company that we've seen over that long period of time. So I just wanted to make that personal and professional remark before I ask my question, which this evening is actually for Dan, not a product question. One of your most important metrics, I think, is and will be the progression of your current RPO.

The constant currency growth rate for cRPO was about 1 point better than Q4 and also, over the last number of years, we've seen that cRPO has fairly consistently been somewhere around 51%, 52% of your estimated next 12-month revenue on a rolling quarterly basis. Is there any reason to believe that your revenue visibility via cRPO coverage might proportionately increase over the next number of years. Maybe just talk about that perhaps structural change that you foresee, if any, in your cRPO?

Daniel Durn: Yes. Thanks, Jay. I appreciate the question. We're pleased with the momentum that we exited the year last year 2025, strong progression across all 3 customer audiences, and the business performed well. As we window into this year, you can see the strength in terms of our enterprise business and the way we're combining solutions from creativity to marketing to create those content automation solutions and help brands drive their business in this environment. So we're pleased with the progression and the performance and the strategy and the execution against that strategy.

I don't see any reason why the trends we've seen in the business historically would inflect to drive a different dynamic as it relates to RPO, cRPO and translation to revenue.

Shantanu Narayen: And Jay, I just wanted to say thank you for those kind thoughts. And I have to -- I'd be remiss if I didn't say that I'm even more excited about what we've been accomplishing as it relates to the AI transformation and the opportunity ahead of us. So we're going to stay really focused on capitalizing on that opportunity.

Operator: We will take our next question from Saket Kalia with Barclays.

Saket Kalia: Shantanu, I just want to start by echoing Jay's comments. I mean clearly, this has been a very dynamic space, but you've helped build one of the largest SaaS businesses in the world over the years. So let me just start by saying congrats. But maybe on that point, I was wondering just a bit of a broad question. What is the Board looking for in Adobe's next CEO?

Shantanu Narayen: Well, thanks again, Saket. I think at our core, we're always going to be a product company. And I think taking advantage and looking around the corner as it relates to the immense opportunity that AI has across creativity and marketing is the real opportunity for not just the CEO, but the company as well. And I think from my perspective, it's a massively scaled business right now. And so just continuing to have a growth agenda. And we're all about our people. And so the values associated with it. And I'm actually really confident that the Board and the Special Committee will do a great job of shepherding that search.

Operator: We will take our next question from Brad Zelnick with Deutsche Bank.

Brad Zelnick: Firstly, Shantanu congrats on an epic run. Your impact on Adobe and the industry at large, I know will be enduring for decades to come. But my question is for David. David, it's great to hear the generative credit consumption is ramping so meaningfully up 45% sequentially and much of the expansion has been skewing towards video and audio. Would love to understand what use cases you're seeing consume credit so meaningfully in video and audio. Are we still in more of an exploration stage or maybe asked differently, what are the use cases you're seeing from leading-edge customers that are driving this type of consumption?

David Wadhwani: Yes. I think that's a really important question and indicator in terms of where we're going. If you take a step back, I think when you look at the evolution of AI, it has gone from a fun thing to play with to something that's evolving and being integrated more and more into existing workflows. And now I think people are very much relying specifically on the need for AI to be part of their creative process. And so you can -- for those who haven't been tracking, you can think about generative credits like tokens for our creative applications. Obviously, we do a lot of generations across the entire business, but that's effectively what that is.

The net of what you're seeing here is we have more people generating than ever before. You saw that monthly active users of our freemium creative software, as an example, is up to over 80 million, 50% year-over-year. So we have more people generating. They're generating higher resolution because it's not just a fun thing to play with. It's actually part of their existing workflows. And they're generating higher modalities, things like video, audio, design. And so you see all of that pushing generative credits up. The second thing is they're actually generating in more places, right?

We've certainly started the process by having them create and use generative AI in our core flagship applications, and that continues to grow nicely. Firefly is becoming really more of a destination. We talked about how that grew -- that business grew 75% sequentially quarter-over-quarter. Express Boards for broad-based ideation and stakeholder value. So lots of reasons to look at this as the right leading indicator. And the last thing I'll say is we're starting to see a nice ramp in terms of existing creative professionals adding on additional creative packs as a result of this.

Operator: We will take our next question from Mark Murphy with JPMorgan.

Mark Murphy: Shantanu, congrats on one of the greatest and longest CEO tenures and growing Adobe to $26 billion in revenue. I want to ask you and also the others, it's remarkable to see 13% subscription revenue growth. We haven't seen that in quite some time. It's intriguing that total revenue growth accelerated in constant currency to 11% or maybe I should say, upticked, but can you speak to the revenue acceleration, we were not expecting to see revenue accelerate quite yet. And I'm just trying to understand, should we assume the stock business is pretty small.

And therefore, whatever minor setback you saw, it's just being more than offset by tripling in AI revenue and the step-up in credit consumption that Brad asked about. And that maybe -- is it that kind of netting out that drove this top line acceleration during the quarter?

Shantanu Narayen: Yes. A couple of things, Mark. I mean if you take a step back and really look at, as we've been going through this transition, what we've been focused on. First and foremost, it's about are we driving the right product innovation with great new customer audiences in sight. And the way I tend to think about that, it's on the user side, as we have been saying, really driving a huge amount of new user adoption and usage is the early indicator for us that we are driving success with the next generation of creators and business professionals and consumers because our strength with the creative professional continues.

And so I think we've done a really good job of -- with Firefly and Acrobat and Express continuing to drive innovation in those particular areas. And then on the other side of the spectrum, I mean, we've always said one of our sustainable differentiation is what we do within the enterprise. And so the enterprise pipeline and continuing to make sure that we deliver, you saw both GenStudio as well as AEP and apps growing 30%. I think as it relates to the revenue, we're doing a better job of really making sure that as it relates to translating ARR to revenue that we're really focused on it.

That continues to be both a focus on making sure that we drive retention. And just looking at linearity. So the linearity also associated with the business tends to help with that. So we're pleased with revenue as well as EPS. But I think bigger picture, we just look at it and say the fact that we're driving AI across the individual user segment and the enterprise, which was a really strong quarter. I think as it relates to your question around stock or order of magnitude, it's about a $450 million book of business.

And maybe just to talk a little bit about that, if you had -- if you take out the stock business like-for-like, instead of the 10.9% growth, it would have been approximately 11.2% growth. So just to give you a flavor. Now we still look at that entire business as an opportunity because people do like to start any creation or marketing workflow with a piece of content. That's increasingly become generative. That's why you saw the scale, I think, in how we are doing generations. But hopefully, that gives you a flavor of how we think of that business.

And we want to make sure that we offer a combined royalty-free stock, plus generative AI offering to take advantage of that opportunity.

Operator: We will take our next question from Keith Weiss with Morgan Stanley.

Keith Weiss: Shantanu, I don't think we can start a question without congratulating you on what was really an amazing career. I think it's pretty safe to say that you've been a North Star of leadership for the entire careers of probably most of the people on this call and your stewardship of Adobe has just been legendary. So you'll be sorely missed. So it's been a pleasure working with you. So thank you for all of that. And best of luck on your future endeavors. Maybe as a little bit of an advertisement for your future successor, you talked a lot about laying foundation for future growth.

You talked about some of the initiatives in the near term that -- near term ARR, but sets us up for success in the longer term. Can you talk to us a little bit more about those initiatives and a little bit more about those foundations and how you expect that to evolve? And maybe just the time frame for what today is a foundation-building initiative to when that becomes more of a ARR-driving initiative when that becomes more of the acceleration story within Adobe.

Shantanu Narayen: Yes. Sure. Keith, and again, thank you all for the kind remarks. I'm not done yet. I just want to make sure -- make no mistake, I'm going to be laser-focused on continuing to drive the company until we have a new CEO and to make sure they are successful. But the things that we tried to outline as strategic priorities. I mean first, creativity is at the core on the DNA and as it relates to the business professional and consumers, we just believe that the combination of creativity and marketing, creativity and productivity with the Acrobat plus Express is what's going to drive both usage as well as an ARR.

And so I think in terms of how we look at that particular business that's driving good mid-teens growth, and we want to, as we continue to drive applicability of Express in that, accelerate that business. And so the good news is the early indicators, which is MAU, is really increasing. Same thing with the freemium. I think in our prepared remarks, we talked about the 80 million that we're seeing as it relates to the creative freemium MAU. And so I think even that's driving the business. The slight difference, Keith, in those businesses tend to be that in the traditional business when somebody came and bought it, you would just immediately translate that into ARR.

And here, they have to see a little bit of the paywall and they have to get -- so it's a little face-shifted is how I think about it. But for that particular customer segment, the fact that we're driving MAU, that is the right early indicator for us to focus on, much like we did with Reader for so many years, which is you get the adoption and you get the usage. And Reader ubiquity even in new environments like Chrome as well as Edge are really what's driving the revenue. So that's sort of the early indicator in driving that.

The core creative professional, I think the ARR will continue to be driven by adding more value to the products, Creative Pro, which is the offering there. It's good to see the success associated with that. And I think on the enterprise side, hopefully, both from our prepared remarks and from the answers to your question, that's really an area of strength for us because people are looking at it and with AI, everybody wants to know how you transform your business.

Every CEO that I talk to wants to ensure that they deal with the next generation of consumers and attract them as well as what they want to do then is say, how do I ensure that from my marketing spend, I'm getting as much breadth as I can as well as how much automation and productivity in terms of revenue. And so I think the fact that we have all these new offerings, specifically, Firefly. Dan, I think, talked about a $250 million book of business for Firefly, that didn't exist a few years ago. As we talk about what's happening with GenStudio, 30% growth, AEP and apps.

And I would venture to say, Keith, that we should hopefully see what we had identified as the AI-first sort of book of business. That tripled, but that should be our next billion-dollar business. So that's -- we're ruthlessly focused on all of those. So hopefully, that gives you some color on why we're excited about the performance that we put up.

Operator: We will take our next question from Alex Zukin with Wolfe Research.

Aleksandr Zukin: And again, echoing everybody's praise, Shantanu on the call, it's truly been a special opportunity to work with you and follow your progress. I guess maybe a quick 2-parter, which is, if I think about the impact of AI MAU growth on ARR growth in the quarter, can you maybe just unpack exactly why it was dampened. And as consumption trends improve, how do we think about that kind of impact as we head through Q2, Q3, Q4, when does net new ARR growth start to maybe go positive? And then maybe just anything on the timeline that we and investors should expect around the CEO search. Is this something that is a quarter, multiple quarters?

Any timing there would be helpful.

Shantanu Narayen: Maybe I'll cover the second part and start, which is if I take a step back, actually, because this is a question that is on people's minds, I just wanted to actually say that there never would have been a good time given how much Adobe is part of me. So I do want to start off with that. And in many ways, I've always believed that my role is looking around the corner, whether it's positioning the company for the future or about product and leadership.

And as we've said many times, on product, I feel really good about how we've transformed our road map based on this AI and customer audiences, the new products are both exciting and groundbreaking. On leadership, we've always invested in developing a really deep bench of outstanding execs. But timing-wise, part of it is it was really important for me to be transparent about my decision and communicate and allow the Board to take ownership for the selection. So I would suspect it will take a few months. This is not because I have just notified them. So hopefully gives you that a little flavor for that.

And I'll start on the other question, Alex, a little bit and then ask David and Dan, which is, the way you have to think about it is our traffic patterns in terms of creativity at adobe.com is only going up and to the right. We have 2 options in terms of how we guide that traffic. We can guide that to ARR that comes immediately or we can guide it to a long-term value and what drives greater long-term value in terms of getting the right product. And increasingly, we're ensuring that we transition.

So top line traffic is good, and that's why when we say dampen, I like phase shift also a little bit because that sort of moves out. If you think about the fact that we reaffirmed our targets, I mean, that would imply that we would expect double-digit ending book of business growth for the remaining 3 quarters. So hopefully, that gives you some flavor. But David?

David Wadhwani: Yes. I'm happy to just add on a little bit there. So as Shantanu indicated, we look at creativity as a whole as bigger than it's ever been. And if we look forward, we couldn't be more excited about the fact that literally everyone in the world is going to be creating. They're going to be creating visually. They're going to be creating images, the videos, designs, and that's really our wheelhouse, right? And if we think about the shape of that broader creative audience, that is evolving, right? So we have creators now representing basically anyone in the world that wants to create visually.

We have creative professionals who are under more and more pressure to create more prolifically and more content and we have enterprises that are looking to automate more of that creativity. And so as we think about that creativity infusing itself into everything, we think about it in 2 columns. The first is around the end user, right? And if you think about that, it really is about reaching the end user where they are. And so we have freemium offers like Firefly and Express. We have power and precision by embedding AI in our existing creative products. And we have more and more products for businesses around automation with Firefly Foundry and Firefly Services now part of GenStudio.

So as we think about the growth algorithm for growth, we're going to see more traffic to adobe.com. We continue to see record traffic levels, traffic continues to grow very nicely. And how we route that traffic to freemium offers is going to be really the evolution that Shantanu is talking about in terms of the change that we should expect to see. And as that traffic goes to these new offers, it's just going to take a little time for them to use the product, to hit the paywalls and then translate out. So again, as we said on the prepared remarks, this is really on strategy to drive MAU, drive credit consumption, drive enterprise usage.

And we should expect to see that start to accelerate in the back half.

Operator: We will take our next question from Matt Swanson with RBC Capital Markets.

Matthew Swanson: Shantanu, I'd echo my congratulations, I guess, as I work for this, too. I want to talk to you about the partnerships that we've had announced the last 2 quarters. So last quarter, with all the embedded models and then this quarter, building on even more so with a lot of the advertising platforms, Amazon Ads, Google, Meta. It's a lot of different companies that I think over the last year on this GenAI journey, investors have brought up to us as potential competitors or maybe almost a risk to Adobe that are now kind of part of the ecosystem.

So can you talk a little bit more about kind of how you're evolving in this role of orchestration to really help monetize all this new creative content for all these stakeholders.

Shantanu Narayen: And so maybe I'll touch on the enterprise one first, and then I'll touch on the models. I mean I think as it relates to the enterprise, I mean what's completely clear is as we are helping people with customer experience orchestration, and Anil can certainly add to that. I mean people are looking to us from everything. They're looking to us for brand visibility, acquiring customers, serving them and then ensuring that they create a long-term engagement.

So if you think of it that way, there's just no question that from the perspective of a CMO or CIO or the Head of Business, they're looking to Adobe because in this LLM world, it's going to become even more important to them that they actually have a direct engagement with their customers and their own sites actually take way more importance in terms of the value. And so as a multichannel work -- multichannel world emerges in the LLM space, our ability to support it. So those specifically are like the partnerships with Google and Amazon, Meta as well as the other ad places.

I think to your point, all of them may have an offering because they have to allow a self-serve offering, those typically tend to be geared towards the small and medium business and maybe even smaller part because it's important, but they value the fact that we can actually help them get campaigns faster and understand the efficacy of those campaigns by closing the loop, and they would like to work with us to jointly go to a customer and say, see, if you advertise on our channel, your return on investment is much better. So that's as it relates to that side.

Same thing with the agencies because the agencies are partnering with us to say, we need more automation. We need more technology to help deal with how AI is going to impact marketing spends. Let's partner with you. And so that's why a partnership with Publicis or WPP accomplishes that. I think on the model side, my take on the model side would be as follows, which is there are going to be 2 or 3 really large language models that actually succeed.

All of these individual models that exist, small model companies in 1 part of a media ecosystem, I just don't see how long term they survive because people aren't interested in just the model, they're interested in the workflow. And so for us, offering customers with that choice was actually very strategic because we can actually then provide for all of our creative customers the right model for the right case because these all have different brands. And so I think as it relates to the support of all these models, I think it's a win-win. They would like access to customers, which Adobe has, and we would like access to these different models because they have different brand attributes.

And I think if you look at the larger companies like Google, we're actually with them and with Nano Banana, it's been a great partnership because we are providing them with a lot of customers and they're providing us with great technology. And so -- and to some degree, I look at that, and I think I may have said that in my prepared remarks. I definitely look at that as I looked at when iOS came along or Android came along or the browser came along, whether that's Edge or Chrome, or Mac and PC, frankly, every single environment in which people want to engage is additive to the opportunity.

And if we don't think it's additive to the opportunity, we're just unnecessarily ignoring that. So that's the way I look at it. And frankly, you'll continue to see more partnerships. So stay tuned. I mean that's something that we continue to work on.

Operator: We will take our next question from Brent Thill with Jefferies.

Brent Thill: The dampening of ARR with new premium offerings, I guess, what gives you confidence on the back side that you can monetize this?

Daniel Durn: Yes. So I would say, first of all, we already are monetizing it. You see the momentum we have with Express. You see the momentum we have with Firefly. And we've got a long history. Acrobat, I think, is the first freemium funnel around software, and it's the one of the most performing parts of our business. And so we feel good about the journey we've been on which takes a large surface area of highly engaged users, takes them on journeys where they dive deeper from a feature functionality standpoint, hit pay walls and bring them down the funnel.

And once they are paying customers in these freemium models, and frankly, this is where customers' preferences and behaviors are going. They want to try before they buy. And so it's meeting the customers where they are. But we've got an incredible ecosystem that's pervasive. And once they become deeper customers around those freemium entry points, the opportunity to more deeply monetize that over time with a well-worn notion around upsell and cross-sell is one of the historical strengths of the company and will continue to be.

So we feel confident that it is on strategy, meet the customers where they are, allow them to engage in the way in which they want to engage and then continue to bring them deeper into the Adobe ecosystem, which becomes an effective monetization lever over time. So we feel good about the strategy and how we're executing against it.

Brent Thill: And then Dan, one quick follow-up just on capital allocation. From an M&A perspective, I know you backed off quite a bit, but the environment has changed considerably where other large companies are feeling things are easier to get done. Have you shifted your view at all on the buyback versus M&A?

Daniel Durn: Yes. I won't say there's a change in our philosophy. We've always said there's 3 elements to our capital allocation strategy. First pillar is to grow the company, grow it organically by investing in game-changing category-defining innovation, but also complement it from time to time with inorganic activity that maintain a flexible, strong balance sheet and return excess capital to shareholders. That framework is standing the test of time. We've announced Semrush, great asset, great acquisition, complements the business well and allows us to engage from a brand visibility standpoint in an evolving environment where you're layering in LLMs next to search engine optimization, and we'll have the industry's best leadership product -- category defining products.

And so we continue to look, but we won't be cavalier about M&A. We've got great innovation in flight. We've got an organic engine that we're pleased with the innovation we're bringing and the strategy that we're executing against. But we continue to look to see how we complement that organic growth engine within organic and the bar is going to be high. But when we see something that's interesting and attractive, we will absolutely go out and action it. And so I would say there's really no change to the approach, Brent.

Operator: We will take our next question from Michael Turrin with Wells Fargo Securities.

Michael Turrin: This one's for the broader team. The company is still delivering greater than 47% operating margin. It's an impressive number, but the net new ARR number was down a touch this quarter. So I'm just wondering what the team's thoughts are on potentially taking margin down to grow faster. It's the question we're getting from investors across software. So is that something you think you could do with some of the newer revenue streams and engagement levels you're seeing? Or maybe talk to us around how you're evaluating the trade-offs there just given the current environment.

Shantanu Narayen: Sure. I'll start. And then, I mean, we are always looking to make sure that we spend money to drive long-term value. And on some of the businesses, namely, I would say, Firefly and Express, you're absolutely right, which is the more marketing we spend on it, the more with our data-driven operating model, we continue to see it. I think you'll see as it relates to the Q2, there's a slight degradation that has as much to do with the Summit and the other events.

But maybe what's not well understood is how below the surface, we're actually constantly getting more efficient as it relates to our spend and making sure that we spend that more on marketing as well as on the COGS associated with what's happening. So we now track tokens and token usage within the company, and it's nice to see that token usage increase because that means that our AI products are seeing great value associated with it, and we will continue to do that. We will continue to do that. And given we have the best customer experience orchestration solutions, we know where that ROI is helpful and where that ROI can be wasteful. But it's a good question.

And be assured that we're spending on the newer initiatives, and that's why tripling that revenue, and you're right. I mean we will continue to see how we can accelerate that as well. I mean given that is the last question, maybe, again, in summary, what I would say is that, as it relates to our business, a strong start to the fiscal year.

And as we think about where the company is focused, namely AI products and ensuring that at the user level, we continue to see accelerated acquisition and usage and, on the enterprise, making sure that we combine the power of our creative tools to enable them to accomplish their business objectives with customer experience orchestration, we feel really good about that. So thank you for joining us, and hope to see all of you at Summit. Doug?

Douglas Clark: Thank you, everyone, for joining.

Operator: Thank you. And this does conclude today's question-and-answer session. I would now like to turn the call back to Shantanu for any additional or closing remarks.

Shantanu Narayen: I think we actually closed. Thank you very much.

Operator: And this does conclude today's call. Thank you for your participation, and you may now disconnect.