This was an a great quarter for Cloudflare, and they gave a ton of detail in this call. To give a comparison, there was 25 minutes of prepared remarks compared with 10 minutes of remarks from Fastly. Also they mention Fastly a few times in the call as an egregious pricer who gave unexpected bills to many customers, and that they have gotten a lot of feedback and loyalty about the importance of a steady bill.
Matthew Prince CEO
- revenue 99.7M 48% YoY
- strength in all customer sizes
- 100k ARR customers saw 65% YoY growth
- strong growth across existing customer base
- covid concessions lower than expected
- raising Q3 and 2020 guidance
- predictable and consistent business model
- 95%+ revenue is billed up front on subscription basis
- usage basis is more volatile and other vendors are coming to Cloudflare for consistent pricing, this is building loyalty from customers and making their revenue model more predictable
- covid forced vendors into 2 categories: 1) nice to have 2) must have
- Cloudflare is a must have service
- customers which were previously slow to adopt cloud are joining rapidly now
- Q2 strength in Europe, industrials, and small businesses (unexpected strength)
- nimbleness of go to market team and shortness of sales cycle
- total increase in global internet traffic, although saw plateau in Q2
- cyber attacks are up 37% versus Q1 and Q2
- new customer growth in mitigated atttacks was 63%
- May was the busiest month ever for DDOS attacks
- June saw one attack last 4 days, peak at 750M packers per second, and the customer was not even aware until Cloudflare alerted them
- hired 257 team members in Q2
- 47,000 applicants for jobs, up 757% YoY, 96% acceptance for offers, and 99% within sales department
- progress towards profitability, 2,000 basis points to operating leverage YoY
- gross margins > 76%, within long term target model
- European financial services company, 3 year deal at 450k per year with Cloudflare Teams (replacement for VPN/Firewall), chosen for future proof roadmap, can further expand this customer as browser isolation technology is rolled out in 2nd half of year
- US based industrial, 350k per year, WAF solution replacing legacy on-prem
- Leading ID & access management company (Okta maybe?), 2 year deal at 500k per year, moved workloads away from AWS due to better speed and flexability of Cloudflare platform
- Born in the cloud gaming platform signed additional contract from 1.8M annually, using Cloudflare Workers
- Cloudflare workers launched three years ago, true Turing complete serverless platform that allowed devs to build sophisticated apps and run them edge to edge through entire network
- 10% of Cloudflare traffic is through Workers and 20% of new customer deals include Workers
- 22,000 devs wrote their first app using Workers up 44% YoY
- not satisified being a niche edge computing platform, want to be the go to serverless platform for devs/applications
- upgrading workers: CPU, pricing 75% less than AWS Lambda, supports many languages: JavaScript, C, C++, Python, Rust, Scala, Cobal
- customers picking Workers because fastest, consistent, secure, cost effective
Thomas Seifert CFO
- less headwinds than expected
- US revenue 49% of total, up 46% YoY
- International revenue 51%, 50% YoY, driven by EAMEA with 62% YoY growth
- 3 million total customers, 40% YoY
- shifted to revenue based KPI from billings
- total paying customers 96,000
- added more than 80 large customers (100k+ ARR) this quarter, 637 total with 100k+ ARR, up 65% YoY
- half of the 637 large customers are on the platform less than 1 year
- DBNRR 115%, 2% decline, churn in non-strategic accounts in asia pacific (I believe this unusually low number is from the bottom tier customers who switch on/off the solution)
- Q2 gross margin 76.8% down 150 basis points, long term target is 75-77%
- able to absord 30-40% increase in traffic levels with little impact to gross margins
- operating expenses decreasing
- increasing headcount, 1535 employees
- Sales & Marketing 48% of revenue, R&D 15%, G&A 17%
- seeing operating leverage in business
- net loss per share of 3 cents
- 1.1B in cash
- covid impacted segment which is about 10% of customers, grew sequentially but decreased as overall percentage of revenue
- uptick in sales productivity
- RPO 274M, 18% growth QoQ, 58% YoY
- 3Q guidance: 102.5-103.5M, 39-40% YoY growth
- 2020: 404-408M, 41-42% YoY, projecting -.18 to -.17 earnings for year
Questions section
- growth in large customers
- 15% of Fortune 1000 using
- replacing existing on prem solutions
- Cloudflare Unbound, edge computing for 3 years now, in this time learned devs don’t want to prematurely optimize, fast is the last thing you need (compares to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs and with fast being like self actualization)
- true serverless application, includes compliance, data localization, 100 countries, can write to one platform and still be compliant
- continue to move up market
- companies developing IP on platform which they can resell like IBM
- channel parterns can sell the full suite
- china revenue low single digits
- selling to US companies which sell in the Chinese market
- JD cloud center promising, 2 categories, Chinese companies selling outside China has more visibility and strength, companies selling into China is more uncertain
- JD turning on more in 1st half of 2021
- Baidu is impressive partner as well
- Migrating customers to use more and more of platform
- Analysis of bot traffic, then offering solution to the customer
- compelling ROI for customers on Cloudflare investment
- typically customer land with one product and expand in following Qs
- Cloudflare Teams on per seats basis, 2,000 companies signed up and free till September, many will convert
- Magic Transit sleeper product, directly connects your product into Cloudflare network
- Big fan of kubernetes but it’s just one step to tech nirvana of getting rid of techops team
- Goal is to be able to write code and have it scale up or down automatically
- Workers will enable the first company to become a billion dollar company without ever needing tech ops support
- Workers is winning workloads from AWS/Azure, because cheaper, faster, easier to use, compliant
- Scaling up containers on AWS Lambda is poor experience, Workers more effecient, nextgen, zero nano-second start time, pricing incredibly competitive and less overhead
- largest enterprise companies adopting and backlog is growing
- 9 out of 10 of the largest expansion deals were with existing customers
- customers saying they can no longer delay on migrating to the cloud
Overall impressions and comparisons
This was easily the most impressive conference call I have heard this quarter from a company yet. Seems covid impacts were minimal and big customer upticks. I cannot get over the contrast with the Fastly call where they gave scant details about any of the products and spent half the call discussing TikTok. While usage may be helping Fastly revenue in the short term, it’s not beneficial long term to have a pricing model which can shock customers. I have some Fastly shares as well, but after this call I am much more optimistic about Cloudflare going forward.
Also comparing to the DataDog call, there was little mention of cloud slowing down. It was spoken more of reaching a plateau but still seeing growth.
The mention of the 2 categories of nice to had versus must have made me think of AYX, and I believe AYX is a nice to have solution.